Communication skills are needed to be able to provide an excellent presentation. Without being able to verbalize your ideas and opinions there is very little chance of having a successful presentation. We will begin by looking at listening and hearing skills, asking the correct questions and finish with communicating with more power.
Listening and Hearing: They Aren’t the Same Thing
Hearing is the act of perceiving sound by the ear. Assuming an individual is not hearing-impaired, hearing simply happens. Listening, however, is something that one consciously chooses to do. Consequently, Listening requires concentration so that the brain processes the meaning of words and sentences. Listening leads to learning.
This is not always an easy task. The normal adult rate of speech is 100-150 words per minute, but the brain can think at a rate of 400-500 words per minute, leaving extra time for daydreaming, or anticipating the speaker’s or the recipient’s next words. Listening skills, however, can be learned and refined.Â
Asking Questions
Three types of questions are useful in a presentation; open questions, clarifying questions, and closed questions.
Open Questions: Open questions stimulate thinking and discussion or responses including opinions or feelings. They pass control of the conversation to the respondent. Leading words in open questions include: Why, what, or how. A statement such as “describe the characteristics of the car” is really an open question.
Asking questions is both an art and a science. Your questions in a presentation should be:
- Clear and concise, covering a single issue
- Reasonable, based on what participants are expected to knowÂ
- Challenging, to provoke thought
- Honest and relevant, eliciting logical answers
Clarifying Questions: A clarifying question helps to remove ambiguity, elicits additional detail, and guides you as you answer a question.
Closed Questions: Closed questions usually require a one-word answer, and shut off discussion. Closed questions provide facts, allow the questioner to maintain control of the conversation, and are easy to answer. Typical leading words are: Is, can, how many, or does.
Phrasing: To evoke an answer, your question should use phrasing that is:
- Clear and concise, covering a single issue
- Reasonable, based on what participants are expected to know
- Challenging, to provoke thought
- Honest and relevant, directing participants to logical answers.
Directing Questions appropriately: Should you direct your questions to individuals or to an entire group? When you direct a question to an individual, you:
- Stimulate one participant to think and respond
- Tap the known resources of an “expert” in the room
If you choose to direct your question to the group instead, you:
- Stimulate the thinking of all participants
- Provide participants the opportunity to respond voluntarily
- Avoid putting any one person on the spot.
The following exercise provides practice with questioning concepts and techniques to perfect your Communication skills.
Communicating with Power
It’s been said that you have between thirty seconds and two minutes to capture your participants’ attention. It’s critical to engage people from the beginning.
Voice: 38% of the message received by a listener is governed by the tone and quality of your voice. The pitch, volume, and control of your voice all make a difference in audience perception.
Command: Selecting a good opener is an important way to take command of an audience. Making judicious use of certain types of remarks will endear you to the audience from the moment the program starts.
- A dramatic story
- A reference to a current or well-known news story
- A personal experience
- A rhetorical question
- A historical event
- Adventure, either past or present.
More Tips on Communication Skills
- Did we say practice? And practice again?
- Smile
- Stand up straight and tall
- Rivet your participants with eye contact
- Dress like your audience, or one level above it.
This post on Verbal Communication skills is from March’s topic on Presentation Skills, which is also a course on our Mini-MBA program online from Harvard Square.
Verbal communication skills are essential in both personal and professional settings. The ability to express oneself clearly and effectively through speech is crucial in conveying ideas, opinions, and emotions. It involves not just the words used but also the tone, inflection, and body language. How To Improve Your Communication Skills, it is important to practice active listening, speaking slowly and clearly, using appropriate vocabulary, and adjusting communication style to suit the audience. Good verbal communication skills can help build stronger relationships, improve collaboration, and advance one’s career.