Times speakers should be stubborn
If you walk into a room where you’re giving a presentation and don’t like the setup, say so.
If you walk into a room where you’re giving a presentation and don’t like the setup, say so.
Whether you’re speaking at an in-house meeting or delivering your wisdom at a high-profile conference, keep in mind these pet peeves that can undermine your efforts.
In preparing your wardrobe for that upcoming talk, consider your audience and the location—and for everyone’s sake, don’t constrict yourself.
Whether it’s a blog post or text for a live presentation, you shouldn’t mess around with a torpid beginning. Launch into it with pizzazz. Here are some bold techniques.
PR Daily readers were looking for hints this week, for better public speaking, content marketing, and more. They were also interested in affirmation of reporter habits that tick them off.
Communications pros can excite and impress their audiences with these public speaking musts.
PR pros often make public speaking mistakes that would make them cringe if they saw their clients committing them. Don’t let that happen to you.
These three clichés have irritated and worried good speakers and able speechwriters more than deadlines—even more than ceremonial speeches.
Over the past few years, corporate apologies have become more and more common. That may have reduced their value, but they’re still a necessity, experts say.
Print out these instructions, save the page somewhere useful, and refer to it the next time you draft a document.
Is the word “utilize” on your résumé? How about a list of your college classes? If so, they have to go.
This cultural icon knew a thing or two about PR, and you’d be wise to heed his advice.
One of the best ways to capture and keep your audience’s attention is to pepper some humor into your presentation. Here’s how to do it.
Get inspired with these thought-provoking utterances from Henry Kissinger, Jerry Seinfeld, Mark Twain, and others.
Anticipate, prepare, clarify, and practice. If you do those things and a few others, you’ll give reporters a reason to use what you have to say—and use it correctly.