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Delivery

As we know, words communicate meaning. But the way we say words also communicates meaning. This is why effective speakers devote time to improving their delivery.

So what exactly is delivery? Delivery is the speaker鈥檚 physical (vocal and bodily) actions during a speech. The main purpose of delivery is to enhance, not distract from, the message. In order to help you avoid distracting from your message, we鈥檝e created a document about what not to do while delivering a speech.

We consider several aspects of delivery: controlling speech anxiety, vocal variety, body language, and practice.

It鈥檚 important to thoughtfully consider both the organization and oral style of the speech before discussing the principles of delivery. It doesn鈥檛 matter how great your delivery is if the speech is disorganized and hard to understand.

If you鈥檙e confident about organization and oral style, it鈥檚 time to work on delivery!

Controlling speech anxiety

To control your speech anxiety the first step is simple: practice. The better you know your speech, the more comfortable you鈥檒l feel. Comfort generally helps reduce anxiety.

In addition, it would be incredibly helpful to practice in the same room you鈥檒l be giving the speech or to practice in front of other people. Both of these situations will simulate the speaking experience, and make the actual speaking experience feel less foreign, and less anxiety provoking.

You鈥檒l be most anxious in the first minute of the speech. After the first minute (or so) anxiety levels tend to stabilize and decrease. Since the first minute can be the most challenging, it may be wise to memorize your opening.

For additional methods to deal with speech anxiety, will prove useful.听If you鈥檙e in a rush, here are a few quick tips summarized:

  • Visualize your success.
  • Find a friendly face.
  • Take a few calming breaths.

Even the best orators still get nervous when speaking; it鈥檚 normal, so don鈥檛 worry about it.

Please contact the Center for Counseling and Wellness if your anxiety is daily and inhibiting.

Vocal variety

Vocal variety is essential to a captivating delivery. In oral rhetoric classes, you鈥檒l learn about effective vocal variety. You may have an excellently written speech, but if delivered without vocal variety, it will be boring and dry. However, not every speech assignment at Calvin is for an oral rhetoric class. So what is vocal variety and how does one use it?

Vocal variety includes elements such as pitch, tone, volume, and rate.

How do I speak with vocal variety?

To learn about pitch, tone, volume, and rate variation, watch this video by听Florida International University's Comm Art Studio from 1:10 to 6:09.

Additional tips related to vocal variety:

  • Practice in everyday conversation to make vocal changes second nature.
  • If you鈥檙e using a notecard, use slash marks or asterisks to mark cardinal places to vary pitch or slow down.
  • Tone conveys emotion and emphasis. When in doubt, remember to demonstrate in your voice what you want your audience to feel or think about your speech. Here are some tips to use tone effectively:
    • Pause or slow down to emphasize important words or concepts.
    • Speed up to solicit excitement or energy.
    • Use a lower pitch to create an authoritative tone.

Many extraordinary speakers rely heavily on vocal variation. Listen to Meghan Markle, now the Duchess of Sussex, in her 2015 address to the United Nations. Markle frequently changes pitch and rate--pitch to make the speech interesting and rate to emphasize different points. (At 5:20-6:05 she slows down to emphasize her message; this is an effective rate change.)

Sometimes our voices sound scratchy when we speak. This may be vocal fry.

What is vocal fry and how to avoid it?

Vocal fry is the lowest voice register of the human voice. It sounds muffled and unclear. Speaking professionals recommend you avoid it during public speaking. If you think vocal fry may be a problem for you, watch .

If you need help or someone to listen, come to the Rhetoric Center!

Notecards

Many speakers use notecards for guidance through speech delivery. Notecards aren鈥檛 the same as the outline. Normally, the outline is turned in to the teacher and consists of complete sentences. The notecards would be the reverse: they are guideposts for the speaker, normally written as single words, phrases, or bullet points that are easy to glance read during a speech.

Note cards can also be used for notes about the delivery. Many speakers use slash marks to signal places where a pause would help. If you sound monotone or struggle with vocal variety, note places where vocal variation would be appropriate.

For a deeper look on how to use notecards, check out from Oral Communication Center, Hamilton College.

Some people recommend using only one or two notecards. Typically, we at the Rhetoric Center don鈥檛 recommend that it鈥檚 better to have more cards to make sure you don鈥檛 get lost.

While you鈥檙e using notecards, it鈥檚 tempting to forget to make eye contact with the audience; remember, eye contact will communicate confidence.

For an example, look at this notecard for a speech about the Orlando shooting.

For further direction, check out or visit the Rhetoric Center.

Body language

Body language communicates meaning just like your words and how you say them. Consider what your body language says about you and your message while you鈥檙e speaking. For instance, your body language can affect your tone, your audience鈥檚 attention, and your audience perception of you.听

Tone

Body language and movement affects the tone of your speech or presentation. For instance, how much moving should take place during a eulogy? Probably none. In a eulogy you want to be more composed. However, in a more energetic environment, such as an informative speech, it would be more acceptable to use movement. For example, Michelle Obama,听in her , uses energetic body language to excite voters about voting for her preferred candidate.

Attention

Body language can either gain or lose the attention of your audience over the course of a speech. If used conservatively and properly, it can make your speech more interesting and engaging. If used excessively and carelessly, it can distract your audience from your message.

Confidence or insecurity

Body language communicates confidence or insecurity. If your back is turned to the audience, you鈥檙e pacing back and forth, or your hands are in your pockets, you鈥檒l probably come off as insecure. On the other hand, walking with confidence and using hand gestures meaningfully will communicate confidence.

Now that you鈥檙e aware of how body language can affect your speeches, let鈥檚 consider how to use our body language while speaking.

What do I move and how?

Need some options for body movement? Watch from (6:52-9:55) for fundamental body movement concepts during a speech. Pay attention, but also put it to practice!

A few suggestions on body movement:

  • Face the audience and don鈥檛 turn your back to them.
  • Be in the center of room and don鈥檛 walk to near to the edges.
  • Don鈥檛 put your hands in your pockets or on your hips; this creates emotional barriers.

Practicing and preparation

Practicing is critical to the performance and success of the speech. When practicing, it鈥檚 normal to touch up and fix slight wording issues, but at this point in the writing process the speech should be pretty much finished. If you still have more to write, we recommend the speech writing and organization pages.

How do you practice for a speech?

Keep practicing and don鈥檛 always start at the beginning; change where you start practicing.

If you always start with the beginning, then you鈥檒l know the beginning best, and the rest will get progressively harder. You should know every part of the speech equally well if you keep changing your starting location. However, memorizing the first few lines isn鈥檛 a bad idea because the first few lines will be the hardest to recite when confronted by speech anxiety.

This resource from will prove helpful when practicing speeches. Read the 鈥淒o鈥檚鈥 and 鈥淒on'ts鈥 carefully.

It鈥檚 also beneficial to imitate the environment of the speech. This can be done by practicing in front of people and in the real space you鈥檒l be giving the speech in. It鈥檒l be easier to deliver if it鈥檚 not your first time seeing the space.

Watch two examples related to preparation:one bad and one good.

General delivery tips

  • Avoid filler words. Filler words, such as 鈥渦mm鈥 and 鈥渓ike,鈥 take away from your credibility as a speaker, affecting how the audience receives your message.
  • Maintain eye contact; it demonstrates confidence!
  • If you slip up, don鈥檛 apologize. Apologizing makes you appear insecure and affects your credibility as a speaker.
  • Pauses help. They can make a speech somber and serious. President Obama used pauses for effective emotional measures in , particularly in his introduction.
  • Slow down; you deliver the speech faster than your practiced it. Even if your practice trials were perfectly timed, it鈥檚 common for speakers to speed up the actual delivery.

For additional tips, check out on general guidelines for speech delivery (The Writing Resources Center, Swem Library, College of William & Mary).

If you have any questions or would like a Rhetoric Center consultant to listen to your speech, schedule an appointment.

In this presentation, business tycoon Elon Musk appears extremely nervous and unprepared. This probably results from the fact that听 .听To see how fragmented and clustered the speech is watch the first 1:30. In addition to being fragmented and clustered, Musk uses filler words, such as 鈥渦m鈥 and 鈥渆h,鈥 like air. This makes him appear insecure. Ironically, this is an important speech updating the world on a possible mission to Mars, delivered by an important man who needs no introduction, yet the beginning of the speech sounds amateur because of his lack of preparation. Further practice would鈥檝e made him seem more natural and effective, and therefore would鈥檝e reduced his anxiety.

Practice helps, even for Elon Musk.

On the other hand, practice puts the most nervous speakers at peace during their presentations.

Winston Churchill, on June 18 1940, delivered one of the most enduring speeches in English history: 鈥淭heir Finest Hour.鈥 This World War II speech was given via broadcast to the British people and just after France had accepted the German armistice.

It was only a month into Churchill鈥檚 ministership, and he was terrified of public speaking because of his speech impediment. However, , Churchill鈥檚 practice helped him overcome his anxiety. If you listen to 26:55-30:02 of Churchill鈥檚 speech, you can clearly identify his rhythm and diction; this would be impossible to achieve without considerable preparation and knowledge of his own speech.

Michael Bay, the famous film director, didn鈥檛 prepare sufficiently for this speech. This embarrassing mess resulted from a miscommunication between Bay and the teleprompt person. However, this could鈥檝e been prevented with preparation. For starters, Bay should have had a backup, hard copy version of the speech. This may not have been ideal, but it would鈥檝e prevented the disaster.

Make sure you have a backup plan.

Bay鈥檚 problems didn鈥檛 end with his miscommunication; he also didn鈥檛 know when to begin the speech. He started before his introducer asked him the first question. If prepared, he would鈥檝e known how to start. In addition, the final question about his movies was a simple throw away by the interviewer in attempt to save Bay. Bay said he couldn鈥檛 read the teleprompter, apologized, and left. He didn鈥檛 need the teleprompter to answer this question about his movies (that he has spend hundreds or thousands of hours working on). This demonstrates unpreparedness; If he knew the speech, rather than just relying on the teleprompter, he would鈥檝e been able to answer the last question.

On the other hand, careful preparation can make for a great speech. For Monica Lewinsky's Ted Talk on 鈥淭he Price of Shame鈥 she had no teleprompter, so she used paper notes, which can be seen on the small podium in front of her. Even though she used paper notes, her speech was well practiced. This is evident in her consistent eye-contact, lack of mistakes, and how she carried the room with evidently prepared diction and vocal variety.