We've all sat through those presentations. You know the ones.
Slide after slide of charts, bar graphs, and statistically significant snooze-fests.
Hereâs the thing: data doesnât move people. Emotions do.
If you're a speakerâwhether on a stage, in a boardroom, or pitching to a potential clientâyour goal isnât to transfer information. Itâs to inspire action. And that happens when your audience feels something.
đ Swap Stats for Stories đźď¸ Trade Graphs for Gut Punches đŻ Use Visuals that Move, Not Just Inform
In the short video above (taken from my course "How to Add Creativity, Humor and Audience Engagement to Your Speech"), I break down exactly how to use emotionally-charged visuals in your slides to create connectionâand convert audiences from passive listeners to raving fans. I show some of my ACTUAL slides, as an FYI. (AKA - You'll want to click and watch.)
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Letâs break this down:
đšÂ Why Stats Often Fail: Numbers donât stick. What sticks is the emotion behind the message. A...
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Iâm going to be honestâI donât think everyone can be funny. Weâve all sat through someone trying to be funny, and it was awkward and painful, like watching a slow-motion car crash. ShootâIâve even been awkward and painful at times when trying out a new joke.
But there is one technique I believe anyone can do. And even if it doesnât make you hilarious, it will at least make your storytelling dramatically more engagingâwhether humor is your goal or not.
 Whatâs at Stake?
 This is a question actors ask themselves almost immediately when given a role. A story must have conflict in order to be a story. What a character stands to lose or gain shapes how they reactâand thatâs where the magic happens.
 There are different levels of stakes:
Because I speak for a living, I watch a lot of other speakers at the same event. The one thing many of these speakers have in common is: they're boring. Intelligent content....but so hard to pay attention to for a full hour.
When I watch these speakers, the fact they are boring is easily fixable. They seem to make the same mistakes in regards to "engagement".
Here's how you'll know if you are accidentally a snoozer on stage.
You have graphs and a lot of words on your slides. No-one will remember all of your stats. No-one. Slides are valuable real estate for making an emotional connection with your audience, as well as reaching your visual learners. One image or one powerful statement is way more impactful than 6 points with numbers on the same slide. One powerful piece of art - hits you emotionally. One powerful quote - hits you emotionally. Facts and data make many wonder when lunch and recess is.
You think your job is to educate and inform. If I ask you to name 3 presiden
...Yes, yes and maybe.
Weâve all experienced it. That cozy safe podium that separates us from the audience. Nice little microphone and what feels like a wall to protect our bodies from THEM (the audience).
Weâve also all experienced the dreary drudgery of trying to pay attention to a speaker who stands behind a podium for an hour and doesnât move. For us visual learners who canât learn just by hearing â we lose interest almost immediately.
 On the opposite end, weâve seen the speaker who acts like theyâre on crack rushing to all edges of the stage frantically pacing, moving and causing us in the audience â anxiety.
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YES, YOU SHOULD MOVEâŚbut only with a purpose.
 First, get out from behind the podium. I know itâs safe back there. Especially if your pants donât fit, but itâs a barrier between you and the audience. Itâs a physical barrier, visual barrier and emotional barrier. Time to get naked and step out so everyone can see you.
 DONâT MOVE for movement sake. We all âleakâ energy....
https://youtu.be/DvYPAdH2_WQ?si=iHyQwhcKKgnigmu0
Slides are some of the most misused valuable real estate you own as a speaker. There's a lot to that statement. I'll do a whole other video on slides and why they should never be covered in stats or re-iterating what it is you've already said.
In the video above, I have a small segment in one of my speeches where I make fun of slides. In other words, the slide becomes my punch line.
The reason it works is it is completely unexpected for the audience.Â
You will notice me looking a little too much at the remote. There was a slight delay and some issues with connectivity in the ballroom between their laptop and the remote and the screen. This is nothing unusual and you should always be prepared for anything technical to not run smoothly.
I encourage you to re-think what's possible when it comes to your slides.
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I had so much fun shooting this with the fabulous, Corey, and the RVS Small Business Network Show.
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You can watch the full episode here: https://rvasbn.com/featured-interviews/boost-your-business-speaking-with-humor-and-authenticity/
Below is a recap:
Welcome to another episode of The RVA Small Business Show with your host Cory Mosley. In todayâs segment, we are joined by Stacy Pederson, Speaker Coach, and Funny Motivational Keynote Speaker.
Stacy is a well-known expert who helps speakers add entertainment value to their speeches.
WHEN IT COMES TO AUTHENTICITY, FOR ME, ON STAGE IS BEING COMFORTABLE ENOUGH IN FRONT OF THE AUDIENCE TO MAKE MISTAKES, TO BE MYSELF, TO SHARE MY STORY, TO NOT ACT LIKE I HAVE MY LIFE ALTOGETHER. -STACY PEDERSON
Youâve probably attended dozens of seminars or business events. Remember that one speech or presentation that had you hooked? The odds are that it wasnât just the content but the speakerâs delivery that made ...
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