Are you seeking to get a good round of applause? Or are you seeking to change someone’s mind …
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Transcript
Getting applause for your talk and having an impact with your talk are two very
Speaker:different goals for a presentation.
Speaker:A good round of applause feels great, that's for sure.
Speaker:But the enthusiasm of the moment is no guarantee that your message
Speaker:will stick or even have a longterm impact by changing someone's mind.
Speaker:Even worse, applause is seductive.
Speaker:When you get some, you want more.
Speaker:When you get a lot, you want even more.
Speaker:And it's quite possible that you do get more because once you get the hang of
Speaker:it, you’ll have a good sense of what makes your audience cheer for you.
Speaker:The temptation to strive for that applause is not a small one.
Speaker:And yet, the talks that resonate the most are often the ones that caused
Speaker:the audience to become quiet, right?
Speaker:To pause.
Speaker:To reflect upon what they just heard.
Speaker:Applause and impact.
Speaker:Are by no means mutually exclusive.
Speaker:But they also don't necessarily come together.
Speaker:Faced with a choice, I’d always prefer the talk that makes a
Speaker:difference rather than the one that makes for a good round of applause.
Speaker:But let's look at it from a different perspective.
Speaker:If the audience is still resonating with our talk a month, or even a year after
Speaker:we've given the talk, because that taught made a profound difference in their life
Speaker:… now that's a reason to be really proud of.