Speaking with impact: A guide about powerful stage presence
Elizabeth Van Den Bergh
Speaker Coach ?? Keynote Speaker ?? For entrepreneurs and executives ?? From good to great ?? Speak well to lead well ?? Podcast: Powerful Presence ?? Book a clarity call ??
When it comes to speaking with impact, I usually show one of my favourite TED(x) talks. It’s one that you can view again and again.
The crazy thing is: absolutely nothing is said in it.
The title of this talk is How to sound smart in your TED talk. But the title could just as well be How to engage an audience when you have nothing to say. Because that’s the fascinating thing about this video: this Will Stephen says absolutely nothing, and yet you can’t take his eye off him for six minutes.
How is that possible?
Why is it that you take great pleasure in listening to ‘nothing’, and at the same time have dozed away at a lecture that had content that was actually interesting? (Most people only have to think back to their school days to remember those.) stage presence, or: how you appear on stage, the way you bring your story.
Why is powerful stage presence so crucial for speaking with impact?
There is interesting research on this by Dr Albert Mehrabian (1), Professor Emeritus at UCLA (University of California). He did several studies on verbal and non-verbal communication.
Mehrabian concluded that there are three elements of face-to-face communication:
He makes the following point. How communication ‘lands’ with an audience depends much more on elements 2 and 3 — tone of voice and non-verbal signals — than element 1, the words themselves.
It’s easy to verify for yourself that there’s some truth to that. Think of a “bad liar” you know. Their words make no impression because their body, facial expression and voice betray them.
Mehrabian goes so far as to claim that words only make up 7% of your communication. I personally think that’s an exaggeration. But other studies, such as one by Allen and Barbara Pease (2), show that 60 to 80% of the impact in meetings is caused by body language. And that’s my experience, too.
How do you get powerful stage presence?
Some people are naturals. Others, not so much.
The good news is: stage presence can be developed and cultivated. Something I’d certainly recommend, looking at why public speaking is so important.
The first step is to know which factors determine your stage presence.
The elements that determine your powerful stage presence (and whether you’re speaking with impact)
For this list, I’m assuming that you have a healthy amount of self-confidence. Because if you are very insecure when speaking in front of groups, of course, that undermines your entire stage presence. In that case, you better work on boosting your self-confidence first.
I recommend you read: Bye Bye imposter syndrome, hello solid confidence.
I’m also assuming that you have properly prepared your speech. If you don’t have a clear idea of the story you want to tell, that will also come at the expense of your stage presence.
What exactly is stage presence? At its core, it’s your energy.
Energy is an emotional thing. People can emit ‘high energy’ or ‘low energy’. And energy influences other people.
You experience other people’s energy every day:
You could think that people’s energies are fixed. Fortunately, they’re not! Your energy varies throughout the day:
When you speak in front of groups, you start with a certain energy level. Hopefully, a high level!
After that, there are several possible energy leaks:
Those energy leaks hinder you from speaking with impact. Because:
Your energy is the single determining factor in the impact you make
There is research on that, by the way. Olivier Oullier (3), professor of behavioral and brain sciences at the University of Aix-Marseille, calls this social coordination dynamics.
In his studies, people facing each other had to make random movements.
First, with their eyes closed — of course, little similarities in movement could be found. Then, with their eyes open. As it turned out, people started to mimic each other’s movements. Even after the experiment, the subjects remained influenced by the movements made by the other person.
Have you ever seen someone yawn, only to do it yourself shortly after? That is the same principle at work.
Click on the Powerful Presence image above to access my podcast show Powerful Presence, full of inspiration and practical tips for leaders who want to inspire.
Back to your energy when you speak
Your energy determines the energy of your audience, which determines how well they listen, how inspired they become, how excited they become, and so on.
Body language expert Vanessa van Edwards proved that in another experiment. She analysed a large amount of similar TED talks to discover why some talks were hugely popular, while others were viewed just a few hundred times in total.
Her conclusion: people created their opinion about a speaker within seven seconds, and that opinion was the most positive for speakers who radiated the most energy.
Another striking conclusion was this: when people rated a talk highly with the sound off, it was also rated highly with the sound on.
So it is essential to manage your energy and keep it high
How high? Higher than you think ??. Think of the first date with your dream partner.
Note: don’t confuse ‘high energy’ with ‘hyper’. High energy can also mean relaxed, comfortable, content, self-confident.
The good news is: you have a lot of control over your energy. Are you aware of your energy? Then you can ‘turn it up’ as you please to start speaking with impact.
It doesn’t take magical thinking at all. We may think that for the most, our mind controls our bodies, but the opposite is also true. What you do with your body also influences your mind and therefore your energy.
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A classic example are power poses: for example, if you stand upright, with your legs slightly apart, and your hands in your hips, you can feel your energy level rise with every minute.
The following five non-verbal areas play the biggest role when it comes to speaking with impact:
1. Your posture
Your body communicates much more than you would suspect. This makes sense: we are descended from apes that cannot speak (neither could homo sapiens in their first phase of evolution), and yet they could communicate efficiently.
Here are a few ways your body ‘reveals’ you, and where you can make adjustments for higher energy levels:
This is just a concise list — there are, of course, dozens of other ways your body communicates with your audience.
What are things not to do when it comes to posture?
What are things to do when it comes to posture?
Note when it comes to your hands: most people use their hands very well in comfortable situations, for example at a dinner party with friends. Chances are, you do know how to do it — you just have to recreate the unconsciously correct use of your hands!
2. Your gestures
Gestures are the most expressive element of our body language. They are the more explicit movements of the head, shoulders, arms, the hands.
Gestures have a clear function within speaking with impact:
Do you experience a moment of ‘low energy’? Then a few powerful gestures will get you back on top.
Pay attention to the following to make your gestures effective, both for your audience and for yourself:
3. Your facial expression
Your face communicates a lot about what you think and feel. This happens through your eyes, your eye movements, eyebrows, mouth, … Anthropologist Ray Birdwhistell estimates that we humans can distinguish as many as 250,000 facial expressions!
The biggest ‘danger’ is that emotions or thoughts inside you ‘leak’ outside through your facial expressions. If they’re not consistent with what you’re saying, you’re missing impact on your audience.
For example, many novice speakers suffer from small tics in their faces, because they are nervous. I don’t have to tell you that’s a great distraction from what they’re actually saying.
Some important tips on facial expression:
4. Your voice
If you listen to the radio or a podcast every once in a while, you know how much character is found in a voice alone. You don’t see who’s talking, but you still take away much of who someone is, or how they feel at that moment.
Your voice is like a musical instrument, and there are countless ways in which it ‘communicates’:
How do you use your voice for speaking with impact?
5. Eye contact
A notorious energy leak is the lack of real contact between you and your audience. You’ll feel a sense of isolation, of being alone, of ‘you against them’.
Creating contact with your audience prevents that from happening. How do you do that? With eye contact.
The principle is simple
Look people in the eye individually, one by one. Connect directly with each of them. When it gets uncomfortable, move on to the next one.
It’s a bit like watering the plants. Instead of spraying all your garden at once, you give each plant water and then continue to the next one.
Sounds uncomfortable? Try it out. For most speakers, this technique has a reassuring effect. Instead of speaking to a large group, you speak to one person at a time. Exactly what you’re used to doing for the rest of your life ??
Prefer to work on stage presence with an experienced coach?
Finding your powerful stage presence by yourself can be challenging. As a speaker coach, I have helped countless clients perform on stage with powerful presence.
If you have an important keynote to deliver in the coming months and need someone to chat with, I’d love to help.
Click on the image below to book your free 30 min. coaching call.
(1) Albert Mehrabian, Silent Messages, 1971.
(2) Allen and Barbara Pease, The Definitive Guide of Body Language: The Secret Meaning Behind People's Gestures
(3) Olivier Ouillier et al., 'Social coordination dynamics: Measuring human bonding', 2007
Speaker Coach ?? Keynote Speaker ?? For entrepreneurs and executives ?? From good to great ?? Speak well to lead well ?? Podcast: Powerful Presence ?? Book a clarity call ??
1 年Marine Dehossay.