8 Tips To Keep Your Audience Engaged

speaking

Holding the attention of an audience is a challenge for any speaker or presenter due to the short attention span of the audience and other factors such as time of the day, topic of the presentation and the visual aids used.

Fortunately, there are several tips you can follow to draw the audiences’ attention and get them actively involved. In the article below Olivia Mitchell of Effective Speaking Skills, http://www.effectivespeaking.co.nz,  provides 8 tips.

Ahmed Abbas
BPIR.com


What to do when you’re losing your audience
by Olivia Mitchell

Your audience’s attention will fade over time unless you take specific steps to keep them engaged.

Here’s a graph showing the attention of university students during a 50 minute lecture – where the lecturer lost his audience (Reference: Hartley J and Davies I “Note taking: A critical review” Programmed Learning and Educational technology, 1978,15, 207-224).

attention-graph

Notice how at 40 minutes the attention seems to go up again (just a little!). I’m guessing that this is the point where the lecturer started his sentence with “In summary…”

And the students perked up their ears again and refocused to get the gist of the lecture. Here’s what happened – the lecturer stumbled upon the audience’s Attention Reset Button. Although our attention span is limited, we do have the ability to refocus on a task. When you push the Attention Reset Button you’re giving your audience that opportunity to refocus.

So that’s what you need to do when you’re losing your audience. Push your audience’s Attention Reset Button. Instead of fading to near zero, your audience’s attention will spring back.
How often should you push the Attention Reset Button
Plan to push the Attention Reset Button about every 10 minutes. This is a practical rule of thumb which seems to work for most audiences. For example, John Medina says in his book Brain Rules:

 “I decided that every lecture I’d ever give would come in discrete modules. Since the 10 minute rule had been known for many years, I decided the modules would last only 10 minutes.”

attention-graph-10min

But be aware that your audience’s attention span will vary according to many factors – warmth of the room, time of day, how much sleep they had the night before, how intrinsically interested they are in the topic. Be prepared to adjust to the needs of your audience. For instance in the morning you might plan for intervals of 15 minutes between each Attention Reset. During the potentially sleepy after-lunch slot you might decrease that to 5 minutes.

How to push the Attention Reset Button

  1. Tell a story: We’re hardwired to listen to stories. They instantly engage us and require very little effort to stay focused. Even the sleepiest audience-member will perk up when you say “I’ll tell you about a time when this happened to me.”
  2. Make them laugh: Nobody can not pay attention when the rest of the audience is laughing. We want to know what’s funny. The critical caveat is that your humor should be relevant to your presentation.
  3. Make a transition: In the first graph I showed, the students’ attention rose near the end, and I’ve suggested that that was because the lecturer said “In summary…” Now, I’m not suggesting that you should say “In summary…” when you’re not planning to summarize, but you can use transition statements as a signal to the audience that they should refocus. They may have got distracted for a couple of minutes and then found it hard to get back on track with what you’re saying. But if you make a transition statement such as: “So that’s the problem we’re facing, now I’ll go onto my recommendation to address it" it gives them an opportunity to get back on board.
  4. Break for Q&A: The traditional method of ending your presentation with Q&A is a waste of a great way of re-engaging your audience. A short Q&A session during your presentation is engaging because:
    • It’s a change from just you talking
    • Audience members can ask you questions about what they are interested in
    • There’s a live element to a Q&A session that keeps people hooked.
    • Build Q&A into your presentation, rather than leaving it till the end.
  5. Change something…anything: We pay attention to change. You’re probably not aware of the air conditioning hum running in the background, but as soon as it stops you’ll notice it. Here’s what you can change in a presentation:
    • Change the type of visual aid you’re using eg: from PowerPoint to a flipchart or whiteboard
    • Change the spot that you’re presenting from eg: stage to floor, part of stage
    • Change presenters
    • Change where people are sitting in the room
    • Change what audience members are doing eg: from sitting down to standing up.
  6. Get them to talk: Allowing people to process your ideas by asking them to talk to the person sitting next to them is an excellent way of re-engaging them. For example, you could ask them to share with their neighbour “What are three things you’ve learnt so far in my presentation”.
  7. Get them to write: Asking people to reflect by writing is also useful. For example “Write down three things you’ll do differently as a result of my presentation”.
  8. Take a microbreak: In a longer session (anything more than 50 minutes) take a 2-3 minute break for people to stretch their legs, use the restroom and refresh their drinks.

Receive Our Newsletter

Keep informed on best practice research and business improvement events from around
the globe - be the first to read our Best Practice Reports



Share
Posted by:-
Author:-
Source :-
BPIR Category : -
Latest News Categories: Latest News, Other
X
X