Stupid Mistakes That Sabotage Your Speech and Business Presentation

It’s hard to believe that speaking before an audience is more frightful than dying, but reports indicate people consistently rank public speaking as their #1 fear.

One reason presenting in public is frightening is that we feel exposed on a platform in front of a crowd. We worry that we’ll do something stupid to embarrass ourselves or to sabotage our careers. After all, we’ve seen other people stand before a crowd and do stupid things.

Fortunately, we can learn from the mistakes of others, and we can avoid them. This article describes mistakes I’ve seen people make to sabotage their own success. I share these examples with you so you don’t make the same mistakes. You can set your fear aside today!

Make Negative Jokes about Your Competence

A consultant was asked to address a group for a potential client. The consultant had 30 minutes to say something useful and make an impression in order to be asked back for a fee. Following the introduction, audience members clapped.

The speaker responded to the applause with this statement, “It’s nice to receive applause before you start a presentation-because you never know what will happen afterwards.” Good grief, what was he thinking?!

Audience members form an opinion of a speaker in the first seconds of a presentation. This speaker used those precious first seconds to say he might lose control of the speech. Who would want to listen to him, let alone hire him?!

Self-deprecating humor is fine, and sometimes it’s desirable-but NOT as you introduce your speech and NOT about your competence. As you begin a speech, strive to grab the audience’s attention, establish a connection with them, and show you are qualified to address the topic.

Tell the Entire Story-Except How It Applies to the Audience

An accomplished physician and medical researcher told me about a presentation she had recently made. “I gave too much background and had to rush when explaining the clinical implications.” “Who was the audience?” I asked. The answer: “It was a conference for clinicians.”

It’s natural for a researcher, sales person or executive to structure a presentation chronologically. It’s natural to expect the background information to lend weight to the finale-the conclusion or recommendation. It’s natural, that is, if you’re thinking from a speaker’s perspective.

From an audience member’s perspective, this “natural” approach can be a boring put-off. Chances are you’ve had the experience-as an audience member-of feeling your eyes glaze over when a presenter droned on about background or technical details that were entirely irrelevant to you.

Audience members come for the finale. They are interested in background details only to the point that the details clarify or support the recommendation or results. Limit background to information audience members must know to understand how the material applies to them.

Start with the finale-even give the punch line-and you’ll grab the audience’s attention and provide a framework to put the details that follow into perspective. Provide a web link for those interested in more detail.

Try to Cram Two Pounds of Material into a One-Pound Time Slot

When you try to cram 60 minutes of material in a 20 minute time slot, you’ve made a stupid mistake. In presentations, a simple equation applies: less content equals more power.
This is not to say that the quality of your content doesn’t count or that superficial equals successful. It does mean the following:

*Audience members are more likely to retain one well-developed point than five points that you rush through.

*Rush speed is exhausting for the speaker and overwhelming for the audience. When you deliver an appropriate amount of material for your time slot, you’ll have time for dramatic pauses and other delivery techniques that increase audience interest and retention.

*When you try to cram 60 minutes into a 20 minute time slot, it often means you haven’t done your homework. You haven’t thought about what your audience needs to hear as opposed to what you’d like to say. Cramming is a mistake of the lazy speaker-don’t do it!

Presenting the Best Home You Know How

Today, more than ever, the presentation of a home that is on the market is important to the sale of that home. According to a recent study, more than 63% of home buyers choose a home that is ready to move in versus one that requires a little more work. While the price of the move in ready home will be higher, the couples are seeing the chance to live in a pretty decent home without the NEED to renovate right away as being a strong benefit. For the real estate agent, this means presenting the home as move in ready. If the home is in need of repair or renovation, the market may be dry for that home. But, there are always means to push the home as the perfect one for your clients.

Connect With the Buyer’s Emotions

When showing a home that is not move in ready to a potential buyer, make sure you choose a renovation that offers some emotional connection for the buyer. This could mean a full basement or an attic space if those are the things they want the most in a home. If there is a fenced in yard, but the painting needs to be redone, give them a monetary comparison of how much the paint will cost versus the fence.

When talking about emotions, it is also important to convince the home seller that all personal effects need to be removed from the home prior to showing. The potential buyer wants to visualize their life in that home, not the life of another family. The emotional connection between a home and the small children that live there is strong and the potential buyer may immediately feel they don’t want to put the small children out on the street.

Make Simple but Powerful Changes

Of course, the best solution is to prepare the home for showing before the potential buyers walk through the door. Throw a fresh coat of paint on the walls, change out any dead plants in the front of the home, dress up the entryway with a few bright flowers and tidy up the law and walkways. Inside, make sure the home smells good and the carpets and floors are fresh and clean.

Presenting a home for sale can be about more than just making sure the home is ready to sell. The potential buyer walks into every home hoping this will THE ONE and too many times the home is just not ready for a buyer.

Six Tips To Present Your Visiting Card In A Professional Way

Is there a preferred way of handing out a visiting card? What impression do you create in your customer’s mind while you hand over your visiting card? Read on to find the answers.

Your objective in handing out your card:

If you are making a sales visit, your objective is more than just introducing yourself with your visiting card. Your objective is to accord enough value to your card, that your prospect finds it worthy enough to be filed in his rolodex. He should see your name in his choice set, every time he considers using a service offered by you.

It is essential to follow a certain simple rules to achieve that objective. Here are the 6 rules:

1. Your visiting card is YOU:

Your visiting card represents you. This is not just because it bears your name, designation and your organization details but because it represents far more than the material written on the card. Your prospect will treat you with the same respect that you treat your visiting card. Take a moment to reflect how you handover your card now.

2. Invest in a good quality visiting card holder:

If your card is crumpled, it reflects as a poor self identity. A crisp card taken out of a professional looking card holder leaves a good first impression. It tells your prospect that you deserve to be treated with the same respect. So, invest some money to get yourself a good quality visiting card holder. Make it a habit to pull out your card only from that case.

3. Keep it readily accessible:

Searching for your visiting card reflects poorly on your organizing skills. Allocate a certain place where you keep your visiting cards, and you should be able to access it in less than 2 seconds. The time you are with your prospect is valuable. Do not waste it in searching for your card.

4. Present it with your name facing the customer:

Your customer should be able to read the material written on the visiting card. Do not cover any portion of your card with your fingers. Hold the card on its sides and present with your name facing the customer.

5. Stand up while extending your card:

This gesture tells that you accord value to your card. This also increases the chance of your card being read and later being filed in your prospect’s rolodex.

6. Give a ten seconds introduction of the service you provide:

Very few prospects actually read what is written on your card. So, it is always a good idea to tell them about how you can add value to your prospect with your service. Read our blog on how to create a 2 minute pitch to introduce your service effectively. This pitch comes in handy to make a quick presentation with just your card as a visual aid.

Follow these simple rules and see a visible difference in the way you are treated by your prospects. They will listen with far more interest to the presentation that you make later.