As a speech coach, I get this question often.
A
person decides to change some aspect of his speech. He tries to say a
word differently, and sometimes sounds better. Then when he has a
conversation, he sounds like he always does.
Does this sound familiar?
Here's
what's wrong with this approach. A baby does not go directly from
babbling to having a conversation, and neither should anyone else
changing his speech.
Instead, make sure you are working on the right skills to change your speech.
(Many
people don't know exactly what to change.) Then practice the skill in
the same sequence as when you learned to talk: sounds, words, sentences,
short and longer conversations. (Reading aloud can fit in well before
conversations.) Over-practice each step, and listen to yourself on a
recording, to make sure the skill is truly learned well.
How
does having a speech coach help? An expert speech coach knows the
right skills you need to develop, uses correct exercises to do it
efficiently, and gives you sufficient feedback on how well you are
doing. A speech coach has the expertise to get you through the process
as efficiently as possible, so you don't waste time and effort, and has
the experience to know alternatives to use when needed.
Business Speech Improvement
provides intensive speech coaching, customized to your specific needs.
If your own efforts to improve your speech didn't work, visit Business Speech Improvement for expert help!
1 comment:
Interesting and engaging post. Each point you mentioned is noteworthy. thanks for sharing. I enjoyed reading your post.
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