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Index » Self Help » Public Speaking & Oration
 

Credibility: 15 Facets to Speaking Professionalism: #3 - Eye Contact

 
Author: Rich Hopkins

For aspiring and experienced speakers alike, each aspect of credibility is to be closely guarded and continually built upon. This series of articles will focus on 15 facets of credibility that must exist for all speakers to succeed over the long run. "Instant Credibility" through celebrity or notoriety must be nurtured for a career to flourish. If you are building from the ground up, each point must be examined and properly attended to in order to build deep roots on the speaking circuit.

Facet #3: Eye Contact Its mid-afternoon during day two of your annual conference. Youre hearing your 6th speaker of the weekend, and they are making some good points, you think but you are tuned out. Until she stares right at you! Your head pops up, you sit up straighter, and you are laser-focused, listening to each point, hoping not to be caught "napping" again.

Eye contact is a critical tool for all speakers in front of any size of group. Even if you are working from notes (see Facet #4: Notes), eye contact must be a part of your speaking arsenal if you expect to be taken seriously.

5 Ways to Use Eye Contact to Win the Audience:

1. Maintain audience interest. If you wont look at them, why should they look at you? If they arent looking at you, theyre losing a significant portion of the message, or are becoming engrossed in something else, from your hand-outs to a game of hangman with their neighbor.

2. Make a point. When you make a point, stare at one person for at least 2 beats. It will create intensity and exclusivity, forcing the audience to listen closely to be sure they hear what you are telling that one person.

3. Gesture with your eyes. Wide eyes. Rolling eyes. Squinted eyes. Distracted eyes. Closed eyes. Your eyes must reflect the feelings in your words. What they see in your eyes, they feel in their hearts.

4. Inspire trust. When you look at the audience instead of looking at notes, they know YOU know your stuff. That the stories are true. That you are the expert. That you have invested the time in preparation to speak to them.

5. Show strength and vulnerability. When your eyes are on the audience, they know you arent afraid of them. If you are personally revealing, they see the emotion in your eyes. Either way, they are closer to you, and your message.

Practicing eye contact requires that you know your material well, and know when to use each tool mentioned. Just as you plan gestures and vocal variety, plan eye contact. Mix with your audience ahead of time, and find out whos friendly, and where they sit. Play to all parts of the audience even split them up in your mind. If your speech presents pros and cons pick which part of the audience you speak to for each.

Eye contact adds to your credibility to a greater extent than most realize. Think about itwho do you trust? Someone who looks at you, or their shoes? The number one rule of job interviews? Thats right look them in the eye. When your eye contact becomes smooth and authentic, your message grows exponentially stronger!

Author Bio:

Rich Hopkins

Told by doctors he'd be wheelchair bound by 30, Rich continues to beat the odds, using his formula of Perspective, Passion & Persistence to create a life of joy and success. From his childhood days as Dickie Jr. to his teens and twenties facing personal turmoil of every sort, to his current role as a husband and father to a family of seven, Rich continues to live life with a steadfast, never-say-die attitude.

Rich has experienced tremendous successes as well as crushing setbacks - and draws from all areas of his life to share with his audiences how to avoid the pitfalls we all come across, and how to see the success we all experience, but often are unable to recognize and celebrate.

Rich's mission is to bring humor, insight, and inspiration to his audiences, whether he is speaking on the intricacies of sales and customer service, self-promotion and marketing, personal motivation and goal setting, family dynamics, or coaching speakers of every type.

You can search for this article using: public speaking, fear of public speaking, public speaking coach, public speaking training
 
 
 

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