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Resurrection Of The Handwritten Letter
That's an interesting point: keeping some of the ums and ahhs so as to sound
natural. I see your point, but I think there are other, better ways to sound
natural. One, in particular, is to have the speaker deliver the content with
a truly personal, meaningful narrative. You can tell when people have
passion and when they don't. I'm an example of someone that's gotten away
witih unrefined presenter skills -- precisely because I injected a little
passion. If you care about what you're communicating, it shows.
Max
Some speakers use the Francophone trick of simply extending their words to cover the gaps. So instead of "I think that, um, you should try something new," they say "I think thaaaaat yooouuuu should try something new." That's the best solution, but if it's overused it makes speech sound unnatural. (A high-ranking Merrill Lynch exec - now retired - abused this trick to the point that he sounded like he was drunk, which is bad.)
The best solution is to think faster. I've found that fish oil and vitamin B-12 are dietary supplements that help me do that, and I've mostly eliminated dairy (casein) and gluten from my diet, too. (People should get screened for food allergies.) Sleep is also really important. Other people report good results from taking kava kava an hour or two before a speaking engagement, to reduce anxiety and help focus the mind.
Also remember that as we get older, the problem gets worse because it takes longer to sort through larger amounts of information to find the tidbit we're looking for.
flip side, I'm sure there are a lot of toxins and other bad ingredients we
put in our bodies, which have the effect of making our thinking sub-par.
Whenever one of us says anything to the effect of "and to be honest with you" in any of our conversations (or any of its filthy cousins, like "in all honesty" or "truthfully"), we call that person out.
Using anything like "honestly" in a sentence makes people pause (without really pausing) to think, 'Well, if he's being honest with me now, what about the other three things he just said. Were those dishonest?' And thus, this little verbal snafu decreases message value – not only are people considering what you just said ('Now he's being honest'), but perhaps more importantly, they're spending time thinking about what you just said, rather than paying attention and being invested in your originally intended message.
Honestly, pay attention to this in your daily activities. I promise you'll be surprised how many people use this term – and how pervasive it is. :)
Great point! "You know?" :-)
If a speaker knows his audience, he can guess which sense they're most likely to respond to - sight, touch, hearing, taste, smell - and craft the metaphor accordingly.
training is so useful -- the kind where you get video-taped, and critiqued
to excruciating levels. I included this link in my original post, but here
it is again...be sure to view the video of my presentation coach, on how I
personally need to improve:
http://www.attentionmax.com/blog/2008/05/we_can...