According
to one survey, more adult Americans fear giving a speech more than
dying. Some show their fear by their inability to make eye contact with
their audiences during the presentation. They look down at their notes,
or up at the ceiling, instead.
Poor
eye contact in the American culture conveys a lack of openness, of
connection. The audience looks at the speaker, and the speaker looks
elsewhere. The audience wonders why, and the message loses value
quickly.
The
audience wants the speaker to succeed; who wants to sit through another
awful speech? Practice your presentation enough so that you are not
reading it. (Can you give it if the technology and lighting failed?) Try
choosing a few friendly faces throughout the audience and looking
briefly at each one. If that is too hard for you, look slightly above
their eyes at the tops of their heads, and be sure to look around the
room when doing this. While it is not quite as good as looking at their
eyes, it is better than not looking at them at all.
For more tips on public speaking, from writing to delivering powerful speeches, get the e-book "Public Speaking: You Can Do It!" by Business Speech Improvement.
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