Manager Skills And Management Development - http://www.greatmanagement.org
Make Your Message Memorable! Darren as a Prop?
http://www.greatmanagement.org/articles/1378/1/Make-Your-Message-Memorable-Darren-as-a-Prop/Page1.html
Darren LaCroix
In 2001, Darren LaCroix, The World Champion of Public Speaking, outspoke 25,000 contestants from 14 countries to win that title. Since that victory, Darren has traveled the world demystifying the process of creating a powerful speech.

Co-author
of the latest multi-media step-by-step Public Speaking Course Get Applause Now!

Check out the facts by clicking here and “Eliminate Your Fear of Public Speaking Forever...Then Easily Deliver A Dazzling Presentation"




 
By Darren LaCroix
Published on 06/27/2009
 
When you give a presentation, what do people remember three days later?

When you give a presentation, what do people remember three days later? I always try to teach speakers that is it not about what they "hear" today, it is what it remembered and acted upon three days after you speak. I will probably forever be remembered in the speech contest as "the guy who fell on his face." In that memory, there is the essence of my message. If you remember that, you remember my message.

Is your message remembered three days later?

Why am I on keynote speaker, Dr. Janet Lapp's back? We'll get to that. Many new speakers have this challenge. They think they're writing a speech. The speech is just the delivery mechanism for the message. We must ask ourselves, "How will we stand out form other speakers?"

When I studied 10 years of previous World Championship contests on video, I was amazed! I thought, "How will I stand out at that level?" I searched for the answer. Standing out and being memorable is the key to marketing yourself in the professional speaking world. You want to be so good that audience members say, "I know some people who need to hear that message! WOW!"

My home NSA Chapter in Las Vegas recently hosted CSP, CPAE, Dr. Janet Lapp. I was there in the audience, learning from a Hall of Fame speaker along with my fellow NSA members.

Right in the middle of her presentation, Dr. Lapp invited me up to help her. Then, she proceeded to pick me up and carry me around the stage on her back. THAT was memorable! It was also the essence of her message. A few months from now, I won't be able to tell you exactly what she said... but I assure you, her message about "letting go" of the baggage we each carry around with us will stay with me for a very long time!

Her message was powerful -- and memorable. It's one of her signature stories, as we call it in the business. Never use someone else's story. This is a small industry... it won't take long for the 'owner' to find out. After doing my "Ouch!" speech at NSA a few years ago, it was copied by somebody overseas just a couple of months later. One of my mentors happened to be in the audience, and called the speaker on it. At first, he denied it. But later, he admitted it. As speakers, we can be inspired by others -- but it's important that we be original in our own messages, techniques, and stories.

Dr. Janet Lapp is known for that story and her technique of using an audience member to demonstrate her point.

What will you be known for?

For me, it started with asking myself the question, and then searching until I found the answer.

Will your message be remembered three days after you speak? How?