Patricia Fripp, keynote speaker, speech coaching, sales trainerFrippcom HomeKeynote Speaker Patricia FrippSpeech CoachSales TrainerAuthor Patricia Fripp  
     Fripp Articles > Prepare to be Frippercised
415-753-6556
Search the Site
Information for Meeting Planners
navigation graphic navigation graphic
Executive Speech Coach
navigation graphic navigation graphic
Sales Presentation Training
navigation graphic navigation graphic
Keynotes and Programs
navigation graphic navigation graphic
Public Speaking Help
navigation graphic navigation graphic
CDs, DVDs and Books
navigation graphic navigation graphic
Fripp Events
Contact Us
navigation graphic navigation graphic
Articles
navigation graphic navigation graphic
Public Speaking School
navigation graphic navigation graphic
Seminar for Speakers, Consultants & Coaches
navigation graphic navigation graphic
Video eBrochure
navigation graphic navigation graphic
Fripp Public Speaking Blog
navigation graphic navigation graphic
Fripp Ezine Speaker News
navigation graphic navigation graphic
More About Fripp
navigation graphic navigation graphic
Fripp and Associates
navigation graphic navigation graphic
Frippcom Website Home Page
navigation graphic
 
Prepare to be Frippercised
From the IAMC Dispatch, Vol. 5, No. 11, November 2006, a Newsletter for Corporate Real Estate Executives

"How many life-changing, career-building, awe-inspiring business presentations have you heard or delivered?" Patricia Fripp asked her audience at the IAMC Professional Forum Leadership Development workshop in early October.

"Zero," said someone in the room.

Fripp Tips

Always stand still to open your presentation — it literally conveys the stability of your message.

No one will disagree with themselves.

A confused mind will always say no."And an MBA, PhD, Harvard-educated president isn't going to go back to school to understand you," said Fripp."He's going to
say, 'Next.' "

Keep your hands above your waist."Putting hands in pockets sends a message of nonchalance, but it could be interpreted as disrespectful," said Fripp.

You'll never go wrong in appealing to another person's rational self-interest.

Fripp immediately set out to 1) deliver something memorable, and 2) help her audience learn to do the same. And from the evidence apparent in member remarks from the podium at meetings following the workshop, she achieved both goals.

"What you do for a living is a whole lot more complex than giving a presentation," she said, "but that doesn't mean you have a natural talent for it."

How do you convey that you're a thought leader and build credibility and trust through your presentation? More concretely, how do you get your points across to your board of directors or teams without "regurgitating your Powerpoint," as one attendee said?

Whether it's going to be a good sermon or powerful sales presentation, said Fripp, "If you do not know what you're going to say, put together in an orderly and organized way, you can't focus."

There are two ways to connect, says Fripp: emotion and intellect. And in speaking, that emotional connection begins by adopting a physical and verbal empathy with your audience. "If you want to be persuasive to your point of view, you will never go wrong when you report what you're saying from the point of view of the listener," she said. That means more "you"s and fewer "I"s. It also means direct eye contact, best made when timed with a thought, idea or phrase. And it means savoring the power of the pause, when you want the audience to think about something.

"The enemy of the speaker is sameness," said Fripp, noting a professional speaker she had observed who was "entertaining, fabulous and dynamic," but ineffective because she maintained a high-energy delivery from start to finish. "Find ways to add variety," Fripp reminded her IAMC audience, ways to be "thoughtful, serious, soft, loud, funny then profound."

Rehearse to Be Remembered

Like an acting teacher, time and again Fripp returned to the theme of preparation, whether it be writing out your presentation in prose, going through an actually rehearsed delivery or the uncommon practice of arriving so early that you can meet your audience personally. Such a practice only reinforces the emphasis on the listener's point of view that the speaker hopes to communicate in the forthcoming presentation:

"The law of reciprocation was built into us all," said Fripp. "If you extend yourself to somebody else, there is something in their DNA that will give you the benefit of the doubt even if they were initially adversarial."

It's also a chance to get the mouth working, she added, comparing the muscle memory of a presenter to that of her rock-star brother's guitar-playing fingers, which he often warms up on the fretboard while watching a movie. Paradoxically, like a great guitar solo, your speech ought to be so practiced that its delivery sounds like it's the first time you've ever done it.

Two other reinforcing tools: Deliver your opening line to one person in the audience (after all, the first 30 seconds are the most important), and maintain that "I-you" ratio in heavy favor of the "you"s.

Stories are a third way to be remembered and repeated, said Fripp, what screenwriter Robert McKee calls "the creative conversion of life itself." If you want to tell one, make it real, not a joke. (Likewise, let your quotations be powerful, not overused.) The formula for story success comes down to this: Situation, solution, success. And the best delivery vehicle is a third-person endorsement case history that is, like your speech, short on "I"s and strong on character and dialogue.

Humility can be a presenter's greatest tool of all. "You are not speaking to compete with the PhDs in the room," said Fripp. "You are speaking to communicate for the audience's benefit." Sending the message that you've always known what you know is not exactly inspiring to younger members of your organization. In fact, when it's a sales presentation, it may be those younger members who ought to be presenting: "They do their homework," said Fripp.

Finally, you want a big finish? Then don't ask a question, says Fripp. Instead, close the circle you began drawing with your opening premise. And let those last words ... that "Columbo" kicker ... linger.

Industrial Asset Management Council"One major problem with business leaders," she observed, is that "they are good when they're in their element, but they have no idea how to start and no idea how to stop on a high."

Copyright © 2004-2005 Industrial Asset Management Council (IAMC)

Why not learn from Patricia Fripp yourself?

Patricia Fripp's Public Speaking & Presentation Skills Schools

Take advantage of the speaking school Kiplinger's magazine recommended as one of the best ways to invest in your career. If you are a novice, intermediate, or even advanced business presenter or professional speaker, you can benefit from Fripp's unique ability to demystify the process of what it takes to design and deliver a great presentation.

Click here for more information on Fripp's Presentation & Speaking Skills School.

Executive Speech Coaching

For years, when meeting planners wanted a strong-content keynote speaker with impeccable platform skills, they called Fripp; they still do. However, other top speakers and corporate executives have discovered a little known secret - Fripp teaches it as well as she does it! If you want to investigate how you can benefit from coaching from Fripp or her expert associates, consider your options. Coaching can be delivered in person, one-on-one, or a small group setting. Even on the telephone! We can help you take years off your learning.

Click here for more information on Patricia Fripp's Executive Speech Coaching.

Help I Have to Give a Speech, DVD, CD & MoreFripp's Public Speaking Resources

CDs, DVDs, digital downloads, multi-dimensional learning, and books on public speaking and presentation skills.

Click here for a complete selection.

navigation graphic
navigation graphic
 

Keynote Speaker | Executive Speech Coach | Sales Presentation Skills Trainer
Fripp Events | CDs, DVDs & Books | Fripp Podcasts
Public Speaking Blog| More About Fripp | Fripp on Twitter
Contact Us | Back to Top | Site Map | Home

Patricia Fripp
527 Hugo Street — San Francisco — California 94122
US: 800-634-3035 — Phone: 415-753-6556
Fax: 415-753-0914 — Email: PFripp@Fripp.com
http://www.fripp.com

    © 1995 - 2010 Patricia Fripp, CSP, CPAE - A Speaker For All Reasons - All Rights Reserved.