Your speaking rate

Know your speaking rate. Frequently, we have to give a speech within strict time limits. Speech contests are a good example. If a speaker goes over time by even one second, she is disqualified. Other examples include being given a 30-minute slot at a conference or 15 minutes to do an after-dinner speech. Those who speak longer than they should do […]
TED – Ideas Worth Spreading

To become adept at public speaking, we need to practise. However, we can also improve our skills by watching and learning from other speakers. Today’s post provides you with a great resource to do just that: TED. TED (which stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design) began in 1984 as a conference to bring together people from these three […]
Word Clouds

I have to thank my brother Greg for giving me the idea for this post. Greg sent me an email about an application called Wordle. It was created by Jonathan Feinberg, a Senior Software Engineer at IBM Research. You use it to create a word cloud like the one below. The Wordle website describes the application as “a toy for […]
You'll go bananas over this

There’s more to life than public speaking and blogging. One of my passions is long-distance cycling. In fact, I just got back from a three-hour 75 km ride up in the mountains. Every cyclist knows is the importance of eating right – before, during and after a long ride. A mainstay of any cyclist’s diet is […]
A Good Tip, Hands Down

Have you ever been empty-handed in a conversation at a cocktail party? No drink or plate of canapés to hold? Did you suddenly become acutely aware of your hands? So much so, that you were not sure what to do with them? Me too. Thank heavens for wine. And canapés. When we are on stage, […]
Speech Evaluations

While the adrenalin is still flowing from the District 59 Toastmasters Conference (on which I reported in my previous post), I thought that I would pen a few words about the “other” contest that featured there – the Speech Evaluation Contest. I think that it is the trickiest of all Toastmasters contests. Speech evaluations require you to be rigorously analytical in […]
Back from the Toastmasters District Conference
OK, after a hiatus of several days (during which I did not turn on a computer or watch TV – heaven!) I am back from the District 59 Toastmasters Conference. The venue was the Intercontinental Hotel in Düsseldorf, Germany. As usual, it was a great time. So, how did I do? Second place in the International Speech Contest. As the contest […]
The pause that refreshes

Today’s post is inspired by a 1929 ad from Coca-Cola. In that year, the company came up with a truly great slogan that you still sometimes hear today: “The pause that refreshes.” As speakers, we can learn a lot from that slogan. Knowing when and how to pause is a great skill, and one that will […]
Toastmasters

There is an old joke about a tourist who is visiting New York City. He wants to see a concert at the famous Carnegie Hall. The tourist stops a man on the street and asks, “How do you get to Carnegie Hall?” The man replies, “Practice!” It is the same with public speaking and, indeed, […]
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