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June 14th, 2010
Angela Lansbury and Cate Blanchett spoke briefly at last night’s TONY AWARDS ceremony. They both have magnificent speaking voices.
They were not alone. Most Broadway actors have strong speaking voices. The question is: did they become successful because they were gifted with such speaking voices, or did they work to develop their instruments?
The answer? Who knows? Some of us are born with a distinctive speaking voice, some of us are not, and others work their butts off to develop their speaking voice so they can have the career they want.
You are not an actor, and yet like an actor, your success depends on the impression you create and on how you perform on the job. In fact, the sound of your speaking voice is arguably the most memorable thing about you: it echoes in the minds of those who have met you and worked with you. Yet most of us get no training on how to use our speaking voices.
That’s too bad, because the speaking voice is perfectly trainable. It can be tuned, like a guitar or a piano. And training your speaking voice can be incredibly fun.
Here in New Jersey, training the speaking voice is a personal and professional goal for many. Whether they are young women seeking to increase their image of authority and gravitas when they speak, or men with successful careers who want to minimize the stigma of an accent, they seek out private or group instruction in training the speaking voice as a passport to success.
Training the speaking voice covers:
Because New York and New Jersey are melting pots of ambitious and successful people—people who see opportunity and want to take advantage of it—many of them want to develop their speaking voices as their number one calling card.
Also a large number of major corporations in New York and New Jersey want to retain highly skilled knowledge workers who must interact with teams and present their specialized knowledge to others. Helping these people to contribute to the organization is one of the many reasons why companies seek out training for voice and speech.
The speaking voice is the world’s greatest instrument—of leadership, change, and communication. Tune your instrument. Practice your instrument. Become a master of your instrument.
The rewards, for you and your company, will be positively resounding.
Sims Wyeth is an executive speech coach in Montclair, NJ specializing in presentation skills and public speaking training in order to give accomplished people the knowledge and skill they need to become accomplished speakers. Learn more public speaking tips at www.SimsWyeth.com.
Tags: effective speaking, public speaking, speech training, training the speaking voice, voice and speech training, voice coach, voice projection, voice training
Posted in communication skills, public speaking skills, training the speaking voice, voice and speech training |
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March 14th, 2010
My friend and colleague Patricia Fripp, one of the finest speakers and teachers in this world or the next, has a wonderful phrase. “Sameness is the enemy.”
What does she mean by this? Here’s my take on it.
She means that speakers can’t hold the attention of a room full of people when they get stuck on the same channel for too long.
What is a channel? Well, it’s something physical, mental, vocal, or verbal that you are doing too much of.
For instance, if your voice springs forth at the same volume all the time, your audience will tire.
If you plod or speed at the same pace for the duration, they will grow weary.
If you lack variety of pitch, and fail to make important words stand out from the less important, they will struggle to follow your reasoning.
If you stand in the same place for too long, your listeners will get fidgety.
If you move constantly back and forth across the floor like a shark, they will get distracted. Such movement is noise, not signal. It distracts from what you’re saying.
If you gesture too much, they will be drawn away from your content.
If you don’t gesture at all, they will struggle to understand your point of view, or how you feel about the issues, and will be less focused.
If you talk about yourself ad infinitum, their eyes will glaze over.
If slide after slide shows data, they will fatigue.
If you use fat words too often (big fancy ones) some listeners will withdraw in shame, and others will attack in a rage.
If you use skinny words (simple everyday ones) you may lose the more sophisticated members of your audience.
If you spend too much time in the world of the general and abstract, they will lust for particulars and stories.
On the other hand, if you deal exclusively in facts, they will wonder what your point is.
And if you make a theoretical case for action, they will drop out of listening because they hunger for a real world example to help them SEE what you SAY.
To paraphrase Adlai Stevenson, the way of the speaker is hard, requiring constant channel surfing in order to retain the attention of the viewer.
Sameness is your enemy. Variety, diversity, and surprise are your greatest allies.
Bring them with you to your next presentation.
Sims Wyeth is a speech coach in Montclair, NJ specializing in presentation skills and public speaking training in order to give accomplished people the knowledge and skill they need to become accomplished speakers. Learn more public speaking tips at www.SimsWyeth.com.
Tags: communication coaching, communication coaching nj, effective communication, effective communication training, effective powerpoint presentation, gesture, hold attention, presentation skills trainin nj, presentation skills training, public speaking, public speaking nj, public speaking training, public speaking training in new, voice and speech training, voice and speech training new jersey
Posted in presentation skills, public speaking skills, voice and speech training |
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October 14th, 2009
Henry Higgins was right. The moment we open our mouths to speak, people judge us. If we have New York accents, we get stereotyped. If we speak with a southern drawl, same thing, different stereotype. And if we speak like a
professor, I would bet that many people avoid us like the plague.
Of course, we can overcome these stereotypes with the positive qualities of our character. We can sound like
Tony Soprano and act like Mr. Rogers. But the lingering effect of the stereotype remains.
In our practice at Sims Wyeth & Co. we are asked to improve the voice and speech of employees whose are having trouble being heard. This takes several different forms.
First, there are those who have difficulty getting to the point. This is most likely a thinking problem and a habit with obscure roots, not a voice and speech problem.
Then there are those who speak English as a second language. We are a country of immigrants, but when 12 individuals in one department come from 10 different countries, there are many accents and many sets of ears trying to listen to many different pronunciations of English. If the conversations are crucial to strategic business issues, it’s a problem.
Then we have some good old American mumblers. These people need to learn how to use their articulators.
And then there are fast talkers, slow talkers, close talkers, soft talkers, and too-loud talkers. And up-talkers, nose-talkers, and talkers who sound like they have marbles in their mouths.
Sims Wyeth is a private speech coach in Montclair, NJ specializing in executive speech coaching and public speaking training in order to give accomplished people the knowledge and skill they need to become accomplished speakers. Learn more public speaking tips at www.SimsWyeth.com.
Tags: character, nj presentation coach, nj speech coach, nj voice training, presentation coach, speaking coach, speaking coach nj, speech coach, voice and speech, voice and speech coaching, voice and speech coaching nj, voice and speech training, voice and speech training nj, voice training
Posted in training the speaking voice, voice and speech training |
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