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Today Dave and Erik take a look at What Cops Watch. Hollywood continues to tell tales on the Silver and smaller HD screens.
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Today we look at Curious Goods a show that takes a deep dive in the Friday the 13th television series and looks at the storytelling aspects and other areas that made this a great show. Audio Player at the bottom of the page The Stuff We Liked We enjoyed the sarcasm and entertainment as you...
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Wake Up Eager Workforce Description: Helping senior leaders build and sustain an energetic, committed and drama-free workforce, including tools and resources for hiring and promoting the right people. Information to reduce turnover and improve productivity. You’ll learn everything you need to know about building a high performing and successful Wake Up Eager Workforce: Insightful insider...
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Description Corporate access and investing insights for the value investor. Investing with the Buyside is a podcast that was founded on the idea that all investors should have the opportunity to hear management teams from public companies talk about their companies, industry outlook, capital allocation philosophy, and their perspective on the valuation of their company...
info_outlineHowever you felt about your first speech, don’t wait to do your second.
You may feel like you bombed. You may have gone over time, under time, mumbled, wanted to vomit, couldn’t breathe, had the shakes… Stage fright. But don’t wait. Do your next speech as soon as you can get on the schedule. If you wait, you’re more likely to work up a worse case of nerves for the next speech.
How to Organize Your Speech
Start at the end. What do you want the audience to do?
By starting at the end, you’ll prevent three critical problems:
- You’ll keep on track as you’re writing your speech.
- You’ll have a strong ending that can motivate your audience to act
- You’ll find your introduction practically writes itself.
To organize a speech, determine your topic and what format will inform your audience. Stories are best chronologically, but material with lots of numbers may be better presented in related groups or categories. You’ll develop the ability to determine if you’re going to do a comparison or a straight narrative with time and experience. The key with this speech is less about the material, more about the methods of presenting it. You don’t have to dive deep into the library or Google for material to organize – the more specific you are, the easier a speech is to write. Consider your audience’s expertise and organize the material at their level.
Organize Your Speech to Speed Up Your Speech Writing
When you have lots of material to cover, having a plan will make your writing simpler and quicker. Organize your material in only three categories. If you have more than three, eliminate the excess. A five to seven-minute speech doesn’t give you enough time to cover more material effectively. Be very choosy and deliberate in the decision-making process. It’s easier to add material if you’re short than it is to edit it out later. That sounds backward, but it’s often true. You’ll practice and practice, trying to cut the time down but all you’ll do is end up going too fast.
The Introduction Writes Itself
A well-organized, backward-written speech will probably inspire a good introduction. You’ll want something that will give the listeners a good idea of your topic and your purpose, but you don’t want to be boring and tell them what you’re going to tell them. Try for some mystery! Try to whet their appetite with a good story or question before you begin the body of your speech.
Next episode – exploding snowman! You don’t want to miss it! Subscribe to our podcast through your favorite podcast app. If you’d go to iTunes and give us a review, we’ll be ever so grateful!

Our music is from
Cool Blast Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
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