Tag Archives: nancy duarte

How Nancy Duarte prepares for a TED-esque talk

 

Nancy Duarte delivering a presentation

Source: duarte.com

10 Ways to Prepare for a TED-format Talk

It’s kind of reassuring to know that even a public-speaking icon like Nancy Duarte can run over time (even if it did take a nasty chest cold to make it happen). But reading through these tips, it’s hard to imagine much short of a ferocious virus forcing you off-schedule if you followed them.

But that’s not what really stood out for me in this list (although I’ll definitely be adding a few of these to my repertoire). It was point number four:

A lot of times, as the presenter, you know your material so well that you think you’re making each key point clear. You might not be. Your coach should make sure you are telling people why. It’s the “why” around our ideas that make them spread, not the “how”. Articulate the why so your audience understands what’s magnificent about your big idea.

Whether I’m writing speeches or delivering them, I’ve always found that’s what cracks the nut. Everything else falls into place (sometimes with some shoving, I’ll admit) when you have the “why”.

Filed under: Craft, Presentation Design, Speaking, Speechwriting Tagged: nancy duarte, ted, timing

Social Speech Podcast, Episode 8: Nancy Duarte

It’s hard to say just where Nancy Duarte has had the biggest impact: as the architect of Al Gore‘s presentation on climate change in An Inconvenient Truth

…as the author of two profoundly powerful books on crafting and delivering presentations, slide:ology and Resonate

…as the co-creator of Duarte Design, a firm that has been redefining the art and science of presentations for nearly a quarter-century…

…or as a pioneer in integrating social media and public speaking around the central driving idea of story.

Our conversation lasts less than 10 minutes, but Nancy packs a lot of insight into

  • how the backchannel changes the balance of power between speaker and audience
  • how speeches can take on a life of their own as social objects
  • how even harsh criticism can make you a better speaker
  • and how dramatic tension and release can lend your next speech the power and impact your ideas have been waiting for.

Listen in – and then explore more deeply: