Archive for August 30th, 2007

Tips on Improving Your Public Speaking

Every system administrator should hone their public speaking skills for those times when you have to present your projects to the higher ups or train the staff on the new software.

Today, there are a variety of excellent sources of how to improve your public speaking - several from Guy Kawasaki. Guy has some tips that he received from his buddy Doug Lawrence. One he titled “Speaking as a Performing Art“, and a week later “Bite Your Tongue: Eight More Ways to Improve Your Presentations“.

Some tips that stood out to me (not in any particular order) are:

Don’t overwhelm the audience. Be entertaining but use moments of silence, soft speech, and slow cadence.

Skip the tea. Tea is an astringent and will close your voice down.

Use your eyes all the time. Hand gestures, pacing around the platform can all be useful tools in presentation, but the eyes…ah, the eyes have it!

Move away from center to make your point. When you come to a place in your presentation where you really want people’s attention, move to the left or right of your primary speaking position.

If those 15+8 tips from Guy Kawasaki weren’t enough, from Ian’s Messy Desk, Ian McKenzie has 10 ways to improve your public speaking.

As always, the ultimate place to practice public speaking is with your local Toastmasters organization. Why not join today?


1 comment 30 August 2007


David Douthitt

David is an experienced UNIX and Linux system administrator, a former Linux distribution maintainer, and author of two books ("Advanced Topics in System Administration" and "GNU Screen: A Comprehensive Manual"). View David Douthitt's profile on LinkedIn

Recent Posts

Top Posts

RSS Sharky's Column!

Calendar

August 2007
M T W T F S S
« Jul   Sep »
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Recent Comments

bharat on The Demise of the HP-UX System…
H4mm3r on Avoiding catastrophe!
Vladimir on Argument list too long?
ddouthitt on The UNIX find command and…
Mihir G joshi on The UNIX find command and…

Category Cloud

BSD Career Debian Debugging Fedora FreeBSD HPUX Learning Linux MacOS X Mind Hacks Mobile Computing NetBSD Networking OpenBSD OpenSolaris Open Source OpenVMS Personal Notes Portable Presentations Red Hat Scripting Security Solaris Tips Ubuntu UNIX Wheel Group Windows

Archives

Feeds

Links