“Let all speakers who 'wing it' prepare for a painful crash. There are more winds that harm speakers than help them.”
--Gene Griessman
“Extemporaneous speaking should be practiced and cultivated,” Lincoln wrote. “It is the lawyer’s avenue to the public. However able and faithful he may be in other respects, people are slow to bring him business, if he cannot make a speech.”
When Lincoln spoke of extemporaneous speaking, he did not mean making totally unprepared speeches. Few speakers can trust the moment or their wits alone for a good speech. Very, very few.
Years ago I knew a woman who had a brief career as a keynote speaker. Several times she boasted to me that she never gave a prepared speech. She told me the audience deserved something new every time. She liked to believe that it was a good thing that her every utterance was something new, something never heard before, never thought of before. I sometimes thought that she had never thought of some of the things she said before she said them. So they were new to her, too.
For a while she was in demand because she was a high-energy speaker, witty and intelligent and well informed about corporate life.
But she relied entirely on her wits, and the moment. Gradually she acquired a reputation for comments that showed poor judgment. Clients became nervous because they never knew what kind of speech they would get. Sometimes it would be brilliant. Other times a failure.
Today she is out of the speaking business.
I know another speaker who took a different path. He is witty and intelligent and well informed too, but he prepares carefully-- even when he gives an announcement at a local meeting or introduces a relatively unknown guest speaker.
“You never know who’s forming an opinion of you,” he once told me. “I never have been able to understand how a professional speaker could get up unprepared and ramble and make ridiculous mistakes.” Not surprisingly, this speaker is in demand year after year.
In case you’d like to acquire the reputation for giving great extemporaneous speeches, here’s a checklist of what to do if you are called upon to make a short presentation. (A keynote presentation has somewhat different rules; I’ll discuss that in a later issue.)
One. Know what your opening sentence will be. If it is witty and short and tested, good. If not witty, then short and tested.
Two. Create a script, if not on paper at least in your head. Know the main points that you need to cover—when, where, and why it’s important if an announcement. Who the speaker is, what are his/her credentials, and why his/her message is worth hearing if an introduction. If you are called upon to acknowledge or recognize people, for god’s sake prepare a list in advance. You will almost certainly omit someone important if you don’t.
Three. Know how you will conclude. When you are getting up to speak, have in mind how you will end. For the short presentation, the close is more important than the beginning. Don’t just trail off or abandon control with Q & A. If you do Q & A, keep back something strong for your conclusion-- a thought-out sentence or quote or a very short and apt story to illustrate your point.
Lincoln observed those rules. We know because some of his notes that he used in the courtroom have been preserved. Lincoln would prepare a rough script—how he would open, illustrations he would use, points he would make, and how he would conclude.
Moreover, Lincoln spent a lifetime acquiring material that he could plug into his speeches—ready-made modules to fit the moment. He memorized poems and Bible passages. He immersed himself in newspapers and books and written sermons. He knew thousands of jokes and humorous stories and even carried a joke book with him so that he could adapt traditional stories to local situations.
Lincoln spent hours, sometimes years preparing for his "extemporaneous" presentations.
Author Resource:
Bio: Gene Griessman, Ph.D. is an internationally recognized Lincoln author and presenter. He produced the training video 'Lincoln on Communication" and is author of the book Lincoln SpeaksTo Leaders. He is editor of The Achievement Digest. His website is www.presidentlincoln.com