Give your great ideas the verbal boost they deserve with these six tips. -Inc.com
Even if you have great ideas, nobody will listen to them if you
sound like a wimp when you open your mouth. By contrast, even mediocre
ideas seem profound when spoken with confidence.
Fortunately, it's not difficult to sound confident if you follow these simple rules:
1. Imagine yourself as your audience's equal.
If you're speaking with a CEO, imagine yourself as a CEO. If you're
speaking to engineers, imagine yourself as an engineer. Find and focus
on the commonalities between yourself and your audience. If you're not a
supplicant you won't sound like one.
2. Mentally rehearse each sentence.
You'll seem massively less confident if you trip over your own words
or half-articulate a half-baked sentence. Before you speak, take a brief
moment to imagine, in brief, what you're about say aloud. That pause
makes you seem thoughtful and wise, BTW.
3. Speak from your chest not your throat or nose.
When people get nervous, their voices tend to move upwards so that
the sound emerges from the throat or nose, which can make even deep
wisdom sound like a whine. If you move your voice down into your chest,
you'll sound (and feel) more confident.
4. Speak 20 percent slower than seems natural.
Many people also express nervousness by talking fast. (Hence the
hoary archetype of the "fast-talking" salesperson.) People with real
expertise tend to speak a bit slowly, as if they expect their listeners
to hang on every word.
5. Eliminate your verbal ticks.
Some people use verbal ticks ("Uhhh....," "you know...," "I mean...,
etc.) while thinking of what to say next. This makes you sound like
you're unsure of yourself, so it's better simply to silently pause in
midsentence. Record yourself and practice, if needed.
6. Never articulate a statement as a question.
A little uptick at the end of a sentence transforms even a definitive
statement into a plea for approval. If you're confident, you make
statements that reflect your knowledge and opinion. If you've got a
question, you ask a question. No mixing the two.
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