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6 Common Mistakes Motivational Speakers Frequently Make

Start with a mind-blowing statistic, a provocative comment!

By Nuhin Ansary NabilPublished 4 years ago 4 min read
6 Common Mistakes Motivational Speakers Frequently Make
Photo by Kane Reinholdtsen on Unsplash

There are several ways to lose your audience and destroy the impression you make on them, even if they are a bunch of health science students. It's pointless to be overly serious. To be taken seriously, motivational speakers do not have to be serious.

You might appear wooden, rigid, and indifferent if you are extremely restrained. A simple grin may go a long way. Demonstrate that you can take a joke or deal with pressure with grace and kindness.

Are you a motivational speaker, or have you been tasked with delivering a motivating speech? People love to hear and follow you for their motivation. If that's the case, make sure to avoid these typical blunders made by ineffective motivational speakers.

1. No attention-getting introduction

Starting with a strong introduction is the greatest method to capture your audience's attention. Start with a mind-blowing statistic, a provocative comment, a motivating and inspirational phrase, or a current and controversial headline to grab your audience's attention.

Begin with something that will provoke thought in your audience and will not be easily forgotten. The most effective motivational speakers begin and conclude their speeches with a boom!

2. Lack of clarity

Of course, what you say matters as well. You'll project an image of efficiency by speaking with clarity of thought and message, while a teacher who rambles or speaks incoherently will not.

Your listeners will tune out if your message is imprecise and non-specific, assuming you don't know what you're talking about. The phrase "those who can, do" holds true in many situations. Those who are unable to teach." An expert in the field cannot always teach others how to do what he or she does!

It might also be due to a lack of communication abilities. People in today's media-driven environment recognize an excellent speaker when they hear one.

It will not be accepted if you speak in a flat or monotonous voice, or if you use an unsuitable volume or have bad diction. Pay attention to how you talk, not simply what you say, whether you're speaking one-on-one or to a group as if a great personality is talking in front of them.

3. Inability of storytelling

Failure to relate stories and/or excessive moralizing is common for many speakers. Make your argument by presenting engaging tales, ideally about your own experiences or ones you've heard that have piqued your curiosity. Teaching ideas can be conveyed through stories rather than moralizing, which can be off-putting to certain individuals.

Instead of "I am above this," relate to your audience from the standpoint of "we are all in this together and we may be motivated to do better." On Sundays, leave the preaching to the church pastors.

4. Inability to deliver the Right pitch

Failing to tailor messages to the needs of the audience is very common to many motivational speakers. Behave like their intimate friend who is talking with fun and ownership. Many motivational speakers have a subject that can be used to a variety of audiences, but the finest motivational speakers tailor their speeches to the specific audience.

Before your lecture, do some research on your audience's demographics and tailor your presentation to the group you'll be speaking to. Motivational speeches that were well received by corporate leaders will not be well received by college students.

So research your target audience and find out what they want to know. Instead of the broad presentations of some speakers, adapting your motivational speeches to the audience will give them the impression that the presentation was created just for them and their interests.

5. Information dump

Presenting an excessive number of or excessively convoluted number of points is unnecessary. One of the most common errors public speakers make when planning a speech or presentation is to treat it like an information dump and try to give the audience a lot of information at once.

A speech is a terrible medium for conveying information. Keep your key arguments to five or less, and stay away from complex statistics or hypotheses. Motivational speakers' audiences can generally recall three to five primary ideas and are turned off by things that are overly convoluted.

A motivational speech's primary goal is to inspire and motivate others to want something better or to accomplish more for a specific cause. To do this, keep the primary concepts basic and limited to a number that your audience can readily comprehend.

6. Inability to shut with force

The conclusion of your presentation is equally as critical as the opening. Finish with a compliment or a response to the statistic, remark, quotation, or news story you provided in your introduction. It will demonstrate that you have completed a full circle and remind the audience of your key argument.

The opening, a few key elements, and the conclusion are what most people remember. Try to tie these elements together in your motivating speech, and conclude with something that makes the audience feel good.

The most effective motivating speeches begin and conclude on a high note.

Take away

Keep in mind that motivational speaking is a learned talent that requires time and effort to master. However, with experience, you may learn to make presentations that both you and your audience will like. You have to understand, people listen to you in order for their life to change.

If you're aware of the most common motivational speaking blunders, you can easily avoid them. By avoiding these blunders, you will put yourself in an advantageous position among your peers.

Seeing oneself through the eyes of others is an excellent method to kickstart a shift in your image. Request input on how you come across to coworkers, bosses, or direct reports from a coworker, boss, or direct report.

Most importantly, be teachable. The ancient Greek term for "unteachable" is the same as the word for "heretic" today!

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About the Creator

Nuhin Ansary Nabil

I am a creative writer, who loves to share, network and learn

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