Deliberate Practice in Public Speaking

Jan 10

As Malcolm Gladwell writes about in his popular book, “Outliers: The Story of Success,” an intensive practice regimen can result in people becoming stunning experts in surprising ways. There has been a lot of criticism of his points, most notably treating “10,000 hours of practice” as a magic number (and not simply an average of how long many...

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Table Topics Timing Discrepencies

Nov 15

Not many Toastmasters know this, but Toastmasters International is inconsistent on how to time Table Topics. The back of the Competent Communication manual provides instructions for different roles. In the Timer section (page 70 in the edition I have), it says: Generally topic speakers should be more or less 15 seconds of allowed time; prepared speakers must be more...

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Don’t Wish Contestants “Good Luck”

Sep 20

Around contest season, I often find people wishing me “good luck” or hear them saying it to other contestants. That always seemed strange to me, especially when a contest Toastmaster announced it to every contestant in the room at once. That’s as silly as telling every contestant that you hope they can win. Obviously, they can’t all...

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Avoid These Common Speech Contest Mistakes

Sep 17

Over the years, I’m sorry to say I’ve seen certain easily preventable challenges occur time and again. Don’t get me wrong: I know running a contest is very hard work. It takes a lot of effort from a lot of people, and so much can go wrong. I’ve ran the most efficient triple-area contest in District 55. I’ve ran the largest club contest...

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The Five Minute Rule

Sep 17

How long does it take after the meeting starts before your prepared speaker begins? How long after the first opening sound of a conference keynote before the keynote speaker begins talking? How long after a speech contest opens before the first contestant begins? IMHO, five minutes should be a hard and fast maximum. In my experience, however, often it climbs up to 15...

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