Why Being A Confident Speaker May Not Be Enough
When giving a presentation in front of an audience do you worry if you are able to inspire confidence in the audience? After all, it is often said that if the speaker is not confident, the audience won’t believe the “content” of what’s being presented.
This sounds logical; it rings
true. But for the most part, audiences are rarely convinced by the confidence a
speaker gives off. The average audience is just not that easily impressed. Most
audiences can easily distinguish between the veracity of what a speaker
presents and how that speaker presents it. In fact, it’s not confidence from a
speaker audiences are really looking for, but rather, trust. They want to know
if they can trust the person in front of them. Indeed, the confidence many
novice presenters think they need to project often has the opposite effect,
especially if it’s too much. It can come across as inauthentic, as fake. This
ends up creating a wall between the speaker and listener; it impedes trust.
Trust comes from sensing you
listening to someone who is honest, authentic and truly competent in what he or
she is talking about. How you speak will have an effect, but it has less to do
with an overt display of confidence, and much more to do with if you can
communicate authenticity and expertise.
5 levels of
Presentation Speakers: which one are you?
Level 1 (the lowest) - The nervous reader
The speaker uses notes, but is not able to use them discretely, in a genuinely
supportive way. Rather, he stumbles verbally, pauses in the wrong places to look for his ideas, needs to repeat
sentences, and comes off as unorganized and terribly unprepared. It’s
uncomfortable for the audience who suffers through the talk and also agonizes
on behalf of the speaker. The audience, at the subconscious level, thinks that
this person cannot in anyway be an expert. For all they know, and genuinely
suspect, the talk may belong to this speaker’s colleague - who is absent for
some reason – and turned the presentation over to him to give in his absence.
The nervous reader tells the audience, “I’m the stand in”.
Level 2 – The not-so-nervous reader
This is definitely better than a nervous reader. The reading flows and the
audience feels the speaker is better prepared.
However, the speaker is still JUST READING, albeit more competently. And
usually, he’s reading from a PowerPoint slide that is full of text. The fact
that he can read fluidly does not mean that the knowledge is truly
internalized. It could be a case of just having a better stand in than a level
1 reader. Level 2 is a classic case of PowerPoint Karaoke. Though this speaker
doesn’t provoke mistrust, he doesn’t establish trust either. In the final
analysis, reading gets a thumbs-down, because it is incapable of igniting the
fuse of trust when your input is coming from some external text.
Level 3 - The polished presenter
There is a saying in Hollywood often given to young actors: “never get caught
acting.” When the audience can see an actor playing the role - then it means
their career will probably be doomed. Likewise, there are some speakers, fresh
from a presentation
skills seminar that are doing all the right things they learned in
that seminar (i.e. speaking fluidly, standing up straight, making eye contact,
punctuating words, using clean gestures, etc. but it is still not very
convincing. Why? Because the audience can see them acting. It is a little too
contrived, too polished. The speaker is caught up in his own world,
concentrating too hard on the performance. One
can imagine that if the audience were to quietly leave, the speaker
wouldn’t notice. The polished speaker is for sure better than the either of the
two readers. But connecting with his
audience still falls way short of its potential.
Level 4 – The authentic speaker
The authentic speaker doesn’t “present”. Rather,
he talks with his audience in an
authentic manner. He also stands straight, speaks with an easy flow, punctuates
words, pauses, has eye contact and all the rest. But it comes from within;
there is no forced energy or contrived conviction. The authentic speaker has
also broken free of PowerPoint, using it sparingly. When he does use a slide,
it’s only for visual support, almost always for the purpose of making a complex
or complicated idea easier to understand. On a subconscious level, the audience
trusts the authentic speaker – precisely because he is authentic. He is one
with what he is saying – and it comes across in his words and body language.
Level 5 – The authentic expert
With the authentic expert we have reached the summit. He is everything
described in at level 4 - and more. Paradoxically, this more is really less.
The speaker knows how to filter his information. He can tell you what’s
important, and what’s not important. Why? Because only an expert
(usually due to lots of experience) can make that distinction. He may say that
there are numerous arguments for a position (or features of a product), but he
will only talk about the few that are relevant.
Those with little expertise and less experience think they need to say
everything – which can be burdensome for the audience. He knows what he’s
talking about because he’s probably made a few mistakes in the past and has
learned from them. His experience comes through. That ability to be authentic
and demonstrate your expertise through filtering
establishes the deepest form of trust possible with an audience.
In conclusion, some confidence is
important of course, but it is often more important for the speaker and less so
for the audience. To cross the line into the realm of your audience, you will
need to build the trust that naturally comes from being one with yourself and
your topic, authentically.
At the International Presentation Academy
when it comes to a good Presentation Skills Course for Leaders in Munich,
Germany – or a Presentations Skills In-house Course in English, we will guide
guide you on how to make a powerful and memorable presentation. The seminar
will also work with you, step-by-step, to help you write and deliver a
presentation authentically, like a pro. For more information, contact us at info@ip-academy.de.
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