Eyes, Hands, Face, Toes and Energy in Presenting: Episode #297 The Presentations Japan Series
Dr. Greg Story Leadership-Sales-Presentations-TOKYO, Japan
Global Master Trainer, Executive Coach, 3 x Best Selling Author, Japan Business Expert - Leadership, Sales, Presentations and Communication, President Dale Carnegie Tokyo Training
Eyes, Hands, Face, Toes and Energy in Presenting: Episode #297 (Audio here for multi-taskers!!) The Presentations Japan Series
Recently I have been coaching people on their presentation skills.?It is always amazing to me how some small changes can balloon into major improvements.??If these things are so simple, then why aren’t they making the changes themselves??Why do they need coaching??Basically, we all wander through life with a minimum level of self-awareness about anything, let alone how we appear when we present.?The other problem is the zone of vision when we are presenting is in an arc in front of us. It takes some organising to be able to see how we are doing in the eyes of the audience. Most of us are just not that well organised.?So we wind up giving the presentations into the void and are not really sure what needs improving.?Enter the coach.
?I found I was focusing on a few items to help the participants in my class improve their persuasion power.?The six elements were eyes, hands, face, voice, toes and energy.?Let's dig in a bit deeper with each of them.
As a presenter, our hands have only one purpose – to strengthen the verbal point we are making.?To find where your hands should be held, just hold your arms out about a shoulder height, then drop them – where they land is where you should keep them until you need to bring them up to bolster some thesis you are promoting.
3. Dr. Albert Mehrabian’s research at UCLA found that we get the maximum concentration from our audience on the words we are saying, when what we say is matched by how we say it.?This sounds simple enough, but what I found when?coaching the class was that they tended to have one expression on their face throughout the talk, regardless of the content of the message.?People put a lot of attention into the visuals for their presentation, slaving over the slide deck preparation, but forget the most powerful visual medium they have, which is their face.?If it is good news, then smile when you tell us.?If it is bad news, then look serious.?If it is exciting news then look excited.?I think you get the idea.
4. ??Having a deep DJ style voice is definitely an advantage.?I remember when I met fellow Aussie Chris Glenn in Nagoya.?He was a local DJ there and out of this tall, slender frame came this astonishingly deep voice.?I didn’t get issued with one of those and have probably fried my vocal cords, with a million karate kiai over my career, so I have a rather husky number.?Folks, we go with what we have.?
?We do our best though, to make the most of it by having a good vocal range around tone, speed and strength.?The monotone delivery is the killer of audience attention.?Side note: Japanese is a monotone language!?Uh oh.?Does that mean Japanese speakers are forever doomed to be the denizens of the boredom zone??Not all. Japanese speakers can create variety through speed and strength changes, which will be enough to keep the attention on them when presenting.
5. What on earth is he doing talking about toes when presenting??More correctly, I am talking about the angle you are pointing your toes.?Without thinking about it, I noticed a number of presenters would stand with their toes pointing off at an angle, rather than at ninety degrees to the front.?This alters the body mechanics making it difficult to turn in the other direction.?The result is we don’t turn, so effectively we are now speaking with only one half of our audience.
6. Passion, commitment, belief, enthusiasm for our subject are all communicated by the amount of energy we pump out.?We cannot turn the throttle up to maximum output for the whole talk though. We have to release it in bursts, so that we don’t wear out our audience.?On the other hand, if we turn that throttle right down, we will not be projecting enough energy to grab attention and the entire audience will be leaping onto their phones to find something more interesting happening on the internet at that moment.?The key is the energy output has to match the content of what we are saying.?
?Think of the key points in the talk where you want to place emphasis and then marshal your energy to help you highlight that part of the talk. A very common error is that speakers allow their energy to drop right off at the end of their talk.?Don’t fade out.?Finish with a bang – remember final impressions are the lasting impressions and we want to be recalled in the right way.
?These six points are so simple, but when corrected each of them made a significant impact on the quality of the talk.?I would make the correction and then ask the audience to compare with what the speaker had been doing.?When you see this before and after it is convincing.
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About The Author?
Dr. Greg Story, President Dale Carnegie Training Japan
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The bestselling author of “Japan Sales Mastery”, “Japan Business Mastery” and "Japan Presentations Mastery" and his new book "The Eigyo" (The営業), Dr. Greg Story is an international keynote speaker, an executive coach, and a thought leader in the four critical areas for business people: leadership, communication, sales and presentations.?
He publishes daily blogs on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter
Has 6 weekly podcasts:
1.?????Mondays -??The Leadership Japan Series,
2.????Tuesdays – The Presentations Japan Series?
Every second Tuesday - ビジネス達人の教え
3.????Wednesdays - The Sales Japan Series?
4.????Thursdays – The Leadership Japan Series
Also every second Thursday - ビジネスプロポッドキャスト
5.????Fridays - The Japan Business Mastery Show
6.????Saturdays – Japan’s Top Business Interviews
Has 3 weekly TV shows on YouTube:
1.?????Mondays - The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show
Also every Second Thursday - ビジネスプロTV
2.????Fridays – Japan Business Mastery
3.????Saturdays – Japan Top Business Interviews
In the course of his career Dr. Greg Story has moved from the academic world, to consulting, investments, trade representation, international diplomacy, retail banking and people development.
Growing up in Brisbane, Australia he never imagined he would have a Ph.D. in Japanese decision-making, become a 37 year veteran of Japan and run his own company in Tokyo.?
Since 1971, he has been a disciple of traditional Shitoryu Karate (糸東流) and is currently a 6th Dan.?
Bunbu Ryodo (文武両道-both pen & sword) is his mantra and he applies martial art philosophies and strategies to business.