SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> IT Workplace >> Careers and the Job Market

CIOs share public speaking secrets

CIOs share public speaking secrets

By:  Maryfran Johnson  On: 17 Jun 2009 For: CIO (US)(NA) Creator

Before striding out onto the stage, rock stars, actors, 10-year-olds and CIOs do one thing in common – practice. Successful public speakers in the corporate world share their secrets

Rock stars do it before striding on stage. Actors do it before gazing into the camera. Even nervous 10-year-olds do it before arriving at their piano recitals. (Of course, their mothers make them.)

What these performers all have in common is rehearsal. They practice. They polish their delivery. If there is any single premise that professional speech coaches everywhere hold universally dear, it's that practice matters--and preferably it's done out loud, in front of other human beings.

Public speaking ranks number three in the list of top business and soft skills that IT professionals need to thrive in the industry.

"A truly effective presentation is practically impossible without this magic ingredient," writes Jerry Weissman in Presenting to Win: The Art of Telling Your Story. Just talking about your presentation instead of practicing it out loud is no more effective, he argues, "than talking about tennis would be a good method of improving your backhand."

Yet despite the professional chorus in favor of rehearsing out loud, when I asked some very fine speakers I know about their personal practice methods, a variety of approaches stepped out of the wings.

For Andre Mendes, global CIO of Special Olympics International and a recent keynoter at our CIO Leadership Event in Florida, rehearsing out loud would unnerve him rather than reassure him. "I would be worried about repeating myself and losing the flow," he explains. "I am totally extemporaneous and always have been, even back to standing in front of my class when I was seven years old." More tips How to groom yourself to become the company's next CIO

His rehearsal method is more like preparing a dissertation. He develops his big themes, gathers related materials, considers his audience makeup and ultimately maps everything into PowerPoint slides outlining the entire story. "I time the slides to move exactly at my pace, so I rehearse the mechanics and make sure those are right."

Another excellent speaker is CIO Tom Murphy of AmerisourceBergen, whose approach is the opposite of Andre's--largely unscripted and PowerPoint-free.

Murphy's practice method is to work out a rough outline of the big points he wants to make and think through the transitions. "For a long time, I thought I did my best work when completely unscripted," he notes. "But I found I'm better when I do practice."

Taking the classic approach to rehearsing out loud is CIO magazine's "Career Strategist" columnist and a popular speaker at our events, Martha Heller. "Of course, you do have to love the sound of your voice," she jokes. Heller not only rehearses her presentations as though a live audience was listening in, but paces the room like a stage. As a former editor, she can't help but tinker with her slides to fine-tune various points, but she doesn't count editing as real rehearsal time.


Sign up for our Newsletters
Tags: speakers












Print |  Views: 2343   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Maryfran Johnson Maryfran Johnson is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

BLACK HAT: Cisco vulnerability posted to Internet
BLACK HAT: Cisco vulnerability posted to InternetOne day after a security researcher and organizers of the Black Hat USA conference agreed not to post details of vulnerabilities in Cisco Systems Inc.'s router software, the information has been published on the Internet.
The MP3 Show: no actors, no host
The MP3 Show: no actors, no hostCharlie Todd, the founder of New York’s Improv Everywhere collective, recently presented The MP3 Experiment, the first live theatrical performance experienced by audience members exclusively through headphones.
Stop annoying your audience
Stop annoying your audienceSooner or later in any career, perhaps especially in IT, you're going to have to stand up in front of an audience and give a presentation - so do it right.
Dan Swanson's Security Resources: #18
this week’s resources will help support your quality, strategy, knowledge management, and process improvement effort. consider sharing this leading practice information with your management and staff.
Use a fog index to clear up enterprise content confusion
if the word processor i’m using to write this has a fog index, i can’t find it.a colleague recently asked me about fox indexes, believing that it used to be a feature embedded in an early version of corel’s wordperfect. for the uninitiated, a fog index refers to a way to measure the reading level required to understand a piece
YouTube Fridays: Google's best cloud computing pitch
as a followup to my post yesterday about the cloud computing conference going on in toronto feb. 11, i thought i'd post this recent clip from a u.s. event with google apps senior product manager rajen sheth. the slides are a little blurry but you can get a pretty good sense of where google sees cloud computing going.

Comments (0)

No Comments!
Name: (required) eMail: (optional)

Your email address will not appear online and will be used only if the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comments.