When presenting a public speech, it is quite natural for a speaker to make sure that his or her most persuasive arguments and facts are presented. It is important to communicate your message in a way that resonates with the audience, and that truly underlines the importance and validity of your position.
This leads many speakers to make use of statistics in their presentations. It is almost an intuitive decision.
The facts and numbers that you discovered during your research may have been the very pieces of information that led to the development of your particular viewpoint in the first place. The discovery of trends, the startling revelations revealed in a statistical report and the recognition of a problem as revealed by numbers can be the very evidence upon which a claim is built.
Unfortunately, this great idea of using numbers to improve a presentation can often be a recipe for a public speaking disaster. No matter how persuasive statistical facts may be to a researcher or to someone reading up on a subject of interest, I am afraid to say that they tend to fall very flat on public speaking audiences.
A speech riddled with numbers and statistics, no matter what they really prove and how impressive the speaker originally found them, will often be lost on an audience, even if they do happen to be very interested in the subject.
Why is it that facts and figures translate so poorly in public speaking? There are a few reasons.
Initially, there is the issue of expectations. Public speaking audiences expect to hear well-crafted words, not numbers. Even if the numbers provide some great insight, they do not match with what people generally expect to hear from a presenter. We are all creatures of habit and we tend to respond poorly to those things that do not meet our expectations. That is why the best public speakers adhere to certain conventions that have developed over the centuries. A speech heavy on numbers defies convention and can leave an audience confused on one level, and disinterested on another.
Additionally, numbers tend to translate better for us in visual terms. We read numbers, look at charts and graphs, perform calculations with calculators, and spreadsheets we can see. Numbers, for most people are a visual entity. They work for us visually, they can even inspire us when we discover them.
However, from the aural point of view, numbers fall flat. The mind translates numbers when we hear them, but not at the same rate or with the same level of efficacy as it does when we see them. Talking about numbers is like writing about music. You can make a point, but the message is a lot stronger if you experience it via the minds preferred methodology.
Does this mean that a public speaker should abandon statistical information and facts altogether? Numbers and statistics are often too important to neglect completely. Additionally, an adept public speaker can use them successfully. The solution to the limitations of statistical information in public speeches is not to simply give up on numbers altogether. The real answer is to find a way to use the numbers effectively.
Developing this skill requires some level of understanding regarding the whole of the public speaking process. It also necessitates a particularized knowledge of the best possible ways to use statistics in a speech. These types of information can be gleaned from a solid guide to the realm of public speaking. One need only find a strong and reliable resource and then use the tactics outlined within it for public speaking as a whole and for the presentation of statistics, specifically.
You can use numbers in your speech. You just need to know how to do it. If you are to be called upon to give a public speech and are considering providing a wealth of statistical information to your audience, you should first avail yourself of resources to help you manage this task successfully.