hodu.com Your Gateway to Better Communication Skills
Home   Everyday Social Skills  Business Communication   Resource Guide   About Azriel   Videos  Blog

COMMUNICATION
IN EVERYDAY LIFE
Assertiveness skills
Body language
Communicating with
your children

Conversation skills
Difficult People
Emotional Maturity
Enhancing your marriage
Family Life
Interpersonal relationships
Speaking skills
Writing skills

BUSINESS COMMUNICATION
Business ethics
Business etiquette
Business writing
Communication in
the workplace

Cross-cultural communication
Conflict resolution
Creative thinking
Crisis management
Customer relations
Effective meetings
Job-hunting skills
Management strategies
Marketing communication
Negotiating skills
Networking in business
Presentation skills
Team building
Technology and communication
Telephone marketing


SITE
UPDATES


Sign up to receive updates by email of new articles added to this site.
To subscribe, click on the button below:



We're proud of our ethical standards and take your privacy seriously

SEE SAMPLE ISSUE



Write English like a professional with unique writing and editing software

Always lost for the right word or phrase when writing your emails, business letters, memos, essays or reports?
This is the solution!




For Better Body Language:
Put First Things First

When speaking in public, paying too much attention to your every gesture and body movement could detract from your message rather than enhancing it. Learn why.

by Susan Berkley

In my library there's a little book called Postures and Gestures. Written by a famous speech coach who has worked with executives at some of the largest multinational companies in the world, Postures and Gestures is filled with photos illustrating the proper body language one should use to express ideas.

To show union, interlace the fingers in front of the body. To indicate separation, make a chopping motion across an upturned palm. To convey power, clench your fist and so on.

Unfortunately, such advice, if taken to heart, can make the speaker look robotic and even ridiculous. The novice speaker might mistakenly believe that if he can manage to control his body language, he will look confident and poised and no one will notice his nerves or worse yet, no one will notice that he really doesn't have much to say.

Think again.

Most people rarely focus on how they hold their body when speaking casually. Yet, put an inexperienced speaker on the platform and he immediately wonders what to do with his hands, arms, legs-how to stand, handle his props and move about the stage.

Yes, body language is important. Get it wrong and your audience will focus on your movement, not your message.

Why do well trained politicians and executives give presentations with 'perfect' technique, yet look like fools?

But to approach public speaking from the outside in, mask over message, will only make matters worse. You'll look phony and wooden, a caricature of yourself.

I have seen some of the least polished, untrained speakers give incredible presentations. Why? Because they spoke the truth and their intention was pure. And we've all seen well-trained politicians and executives give presentations with "perfect" technique yet look like fools. Why? Because the lesser (our gestures) must serve the greater (our message), and not the other way around.

If you've ever taken a public speaking class where the presentations, were videotaped you've probably noticed that just about everyone has habits and mannerisms about which they are unaware.---hair twirling, distracting eye movements, rocking back and forth, um's , uh's and so forth. It can be quite shocking to see how unaware we are of ourselves and most people resist being videotaped.

Why is this so?

What we try to hide, only becomes larger

Psychoanalyst Dr. Norberto Keppe, author of The Origin of Illness (Campbell Hall Press, $14.95, 800-333-8108) writes "We think consciousness, the perception of our problems, is dangerous." Yet consciousness, although we resist it the most, is our most precious asset. Awareness, even of something negative and embarrassing, is the first step to correcting our mistakes and perfecting our skills.

That being said, what makes a well-prepared speaker suddenly go wooden on stage?

Stepping into the public eye is a consciousness raising experience. We are flooded with awareness of the audience and of ourselves. Accepting this awareness is vital to the speaker. We need that feedback loop to tell us if we are making contact with the audience or not and how we must adjust ourselves to get the message across.

A wooden posture and unnatural body language is an indication that the speaker is trying to hide the awareness of his imperfections behind an overly perfect delivery, a futile attempt. What we try to hide only becomes larger and everyone sees it but us.

When you have to give a talk, align yourself with goodness, truth and beauty first. Pay attention to who you are on the inside and then attend to the external details -- where you put your hands, how you stand and so on.

In speaking, as in life, don't give the inferior more attention than it deserves.

Veteran voice coach Susan Berkley of The Great Voice Company is a former radio personality and a well-known voice on TV and radio commercials and phone lines. She is the author of Speak to Influence™: How to Unlock the Hidden Power of Your Voice and numerous magazine and trade journal articles. Subscribe to Susan's informative free ezines here.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Some Related Articles:

Guidelines for Gesturing When You Speak in Public
Avoid the Most Common Pronounciation Mistakes
How to Be More Charismatic When You Speak
Voice Too High? How to Safely Lower Your Pitch
Word Stress: Does It Really Matter?
Debunking the 55%, 38%, 7% Rule
Speaking With Confidence: How to Manage the Butterflies

Can't find it? Search Your Communication Skills Portal or the entire web:
Google
  Web Hodu.com

Writing a report or business email? Feeling short on words?
Revolutionary software takes your writing skills to an expert level


View demo now and see how it works!

Home   Effective Communication Skills  Business Communication   Resource Guide    About Azriel