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Public Speaking
Training On How To Handle Blunders & Mistakes
On Stage
There you are on stage - you're doing public
speaking, training, or even a seminar, and you
make a mistake.
You trip over something.
Or you spill your water.
Or you click the wrong button losing your place
in your presentation.
Or your PowerPoint is somehow screwed up and
looks very different than when you created it
yesterday.
What should you do?
Okay, this public speaking training article comes
to you from me having done 1,893 workshops, seminars,
and public speaking engagements since 1982 - and
I have made all the above mistakes and many, many
more.
So I can tell you from experience exactly what
to do if you "make a mistake" or things just don't
go right.
You have 2 simple options:
Strategy #1:
Ignore the mistake. This is a very good strategy
for handling many kinds of public speaking blunders.
For example, if the "mistake" is something like
your PowerPoint presentation looks wrong to you,
remember that the audience has no idea how it
was supposed to look. Making apologies or comments
about how it looks different than when you created
it last night just makes you look ruffled and
nervous.
Or let's say you forget a portion of your talk,
or you accidentally screwed up the sequence of
your speech: why point it out when the audience
A. doesn't know that's true and B. doesn't really
care.
In such cases, you're better off not saying anything
and just ignoring it.
Strategy #2:
Point out the mistake and make fun of it or joke
about it. If you spill your water, you could ignore
that, and that's just fine. Or if you trip over
a cord on the floor, you could ignore that too.
But in this case the audience has for sure seen
this "blunder" or mistake.
So make fun of it!
You spill your water and say "does anyone else
want some water" and everyone will laugh.
Or you trip over a cord and you say "okay, whoever
put that there is fired" or "that's the best trip
I've taken in years!" and people will laugh.
Summary and Super-Important Bonus Tip:
If you make a mistake or blunder, the audience
cares less about that than you do. You may need
to get a number of public speaking engagements
under your belt to fully realize this, but it's
100% true - in most cases the audience just does
not care.
Here's the bonus tip: you should never be afraid
of mistakes and blunders because when you make
a mistake it proves to the group that you are
human, you're one of them. We all make mistakes.
The biggest mistake you can make on stage is to
try to be perfect, a legend, a hero. People don't
want that, they want to hear from human beings,
not perfect super-heroes! Knowing this, you might
even want to plan a mistake or two in your presentation!
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