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Chris Bates, Overcome Fear of Public Speaking Retreat Canterbury, UK runner-up in the BBC's Apprentice 2010 will be our special guest and lead judge at the Corporate Challenge 2011.

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Location

Based in London, the College of Public Speaking offers its scheduled courses and workshops throughout central London, the south-east and across the UK. We cater for staff at all levels, whether it be for supervisors, managers, busy executives and right up to Board level. We also offer instruction for the effective delivery of technical material.

Trainers

Our lead trainers Michael Ronayne, Vince Stevenson, Richard Johnson and Alistair Divall have years of experience in the world of speaking and training across some of largest companies in the UK and abroad. We understand the issues involved in influencing people, whether it be senior management or the promotion board in accepting that you are ready for that next major challenge. We all belong to prestigious speakers clubs and regulary deliver speeches. We also participate in National Competitions and therefore ensure that we keep our skills up to date. We work as a cohesive team and support each other in delivering top quality courses and workshops.

Community

The College of Public Speaking also has strong links with the Community having run free workshops at Oxfam, Medicins sans Frontieres, Breast Cancer Care, Marie Curie Cancer Care, Cancer Research UK, The Rainbow Trust, Skoll Emerge Social Entrepreneurship - Oxford, Oxford Hub, Kings College London, Stephen Lawrence Trust, 2Care Dementia Charity, Media Trust London, Addaction London, Bromley Field Study Centre and Gordon House, a residential home for people with a gambling addiction.

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Courses

Training Qualification
Train The Trainer
Interview Techniques

Talking Business


Talking business is what you are about. So talk business in style.

Time is money and when speaking in public having a clear objective is even more important with business talks.

The key question is - what is the purpose of your presentation? What do you want to achieve?

Do you want to inform, persuade, inspire, entertain?

Make the context crystal clear. Spend a long time considering your subject and gathering appropriate material that will punch your key messages home. How long will you be speaking for? What is your place on the speaking programme? Do you have to tie in with someone else's contribution? Consider the number of people in the audience and the auditorium itself - who'll be there - and who they are? Could they have an impact on your speaking career?

What visual aids equipment will be there? (or do you want to be there)? Know how to use it properly - and carry spares! Liaise with the organizers and make sure that there are no loose ends on the day.

Get the sequence of your talk right. Would an agenda help? You will need a logical and 'signposted' structure with a definite conclusion (do not leave it in the air!). Have a strong opening with impact, something that the audience will remember long after. Similarly, the ending should be memorable. Research shows that your audience will probably remember the beginning and the ending if they are delivered convincingly.

Establish your audience's level of knowledge by research before the event. The army has an interesting saying: ‘Good reconnaissance is never wasted.' Ensure you adapt your presentation to their level of knowledge and interest.

Involve your audience right at the start - including getting their agreement to your key messages early. Win them over. Smile, talk of 'we/us', and never talk down or patronize your audience.

Keep them awake. It's better without a written script (unless you have to). Aim for variety of voice - word pictures can be highlighted within a long talk - visual aids, maybe (with pie charts rather than tables) or break it up with a 2 man act.

Circulate handouts before the event, not during. Or tell them at the start if they'll get notes at the end. Be prepared for questions. Note and remember who asked the question. Remember to repeat the question before answering in case somebody in the audience didn't catch the question.

If you don't know the answer, never flannel - it will show!

There are three keys to success: preparation - preparation - preparation.

Explore all three in great detail and you will probably succeed in your assignment.

Talking business is what you are about. So talk business in style.