Public Speaking
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17 minute read
Most people fear public speaking more than death. That’s ridiculous, but it’s also real.
If you’re reading this, you probably get nervous speaking in front of groups. Maybe your heart races. Your hands shake. Your mind goes blank. You avoid raising your hand in class or speaking up in meetings.
That’s normal. Every great speaker started there.
Public speaking is a learnable skill. It’s not a talent you’re born with. With practice and the right techniques, you can become confident and effective at speaking in front of others.
This guide covers everything you need to know.
Why This Matters
Public speaking isn’t just about giving speeches. It’s a foundational skill for:
Career advancement:
- Job interviews are public speaking
- Leading meetings and presenting ideas
- Pitching projects or proposals
- Networking events and conferences
Leadership:
- Leading a team requires clarity and presence
- Inspiring others through vision
- Representing your organization or cause
Personal confidence:
- Speaking up in groups
- Advocating for yourself
- Advocating for others, standing up for what you believe in
- Making toasts at weddings
- Teaching or mentoring others
The ability to speak clearly and confidently in front of others opens doors. People who can communicate ideas effectively get promoted faster, earn more, and lead more.
The Fear Is Normal (And Useful)
Your body treats public speaking like a threat. Your ancestors survived by fearing predators. Your brain still activates that same fight-or-flight response when you stand in front of a group.
Physical symptoms:
- Racing heart
- Sweating
- Shaking hands
- Dry mouth
- Upset stomach
- Mind going blank
These aren’t signs you’re bad at public speaking. They’re signs your body is preparing you to perform. Elite athletes feel the same way before competition. The key is channeling that energy, not eliminating it.
Why the Fear Is Real
Public speaking puts you in front of many people who are actively judging you. From a primal perspective, this matters. In caveman times, social standing determined survival - and mate selection. Being judged negatively by the group had real consequences.
Today those consequences are different but still real. A bad presentation can affect:
- Your reputation
- Career opportunities
- How others perceive your competence
- Your confidence going forward
So yes, the fear is legitimate. Your brain is right to take it seriously.
But Here’s the Truth
You’re not performing brain surgery. Even a terrible presentation isn’t the end of the world. Nobody will die. Most people will forget about it within days.
And if you get back on the horse and give several more presentations, they’ll be better. Each one teaches you something. The fear lessens. The skill builds.
The first presentation might be rough. The tenth will be better. The hundredth will feel natural.
The goal isn’t to stop feeling nervous. The goal is to speak well despite the nerves. Even experienced speakers get nervous - they’ve just learned to use that energy.
Preparation: The Foundation
The best way to reduce fear is preparation. When you know your material cold, confidence follows.
Know Your Material Inside Out
You should know your content so well that you could present it in any order, answer questions easily, and adapt on the fly.
How to prepare:
- Write out key points (not a full script)
- Create an outline or structure
- Practice explaining each point in your own words
- Anticipate questions and prepare answers
- Practice until you can do it without notes
You don’t truly know a topic until you teach it. When you prepare to present something, you’re forced to understand it deeply - every detail, every connection, every potential question. This is why teaching is one of the most effective learning techniques. Public speaking makes you an expert in your subject.
Don’t memorize a script word-for-word. If you forget a line, you’ll panic. Instead, memorize the structure and key points. Let the exact words vary each time you practice.
Structure Your Talk
Every good talk has a clear structure. Here’s the simplest framework:
Opening (10% of time)
Hook them immediately:
- Ask a question
- Tell a brief story
- Share a surprising statistic
- Make a bold statement
Tell them what to expect:
- “Today I’m going to show you three ways to…”
- “By the end of this, you’ll understand…”
Body (80% of time)
Organize your main points clearly:
- Rule of three - Most people remember 3 main points best
- Problem-solution - Identify a problem, present your solution
- Chronological - Walk through events in time order
- Comparison - Compare and contrast options
Use transitions between sections:
- “Now that we’ve covered X, let’s look at Y…”
- “The second key point is…”
Closing (10% of time)
Summarize key points:
- “To recap, we covered three things…”
End with impact:
- Call to action (“Here’s what I want you to do…”)
- Memorable quote
- Circle back to your opening story
- Leave them with a challenge or question
People remember beginnings and endings most. Spend extra time crafting your opening and closing. The middle can be more flexible.
Practice Like You Mean It
Thinking through your presentation isn’t practice. Practice means saying the words out loud, multiple times.
Effective practice methods:
1. Practice out loud alone
- Stand up
- Use your full voice (not mumbling)
- Practice gestures
- Time yourself
2. Record yourself
- Use your phone camera
- Watch the recording (painful but valuable)
- Notice filler words, pacing, body language
- Identify what to improve
3. Practice in front of someone
- Ask a friend or family member
- Request honest feedback
- Practice handling questions
4. Practice in the actual space (if possible)
- Get comfortable with the room
- Test any technology
- Adjust to the acoustics
Practice your opening and closing more than anything else. If you nail those, you’ll feel confident throughout.
Prepare Your Materials
Slides (PowerPoint, Google Slides, LibreOffice Impress)
Slides are visual aids to help your audience remember and recall information. They are NOT your script.
Cardinal rules:
1. No walls of text
If your slide is packed with sentences and paragraphs, you’ve failed. Slides should have:
- Short headlines
- Key words or phrases
- Bullet points (3-5 max per slide)
- One main idea per slide
2. Never read the slides verbatim
The audience can already read. If you just read what’s on screen, you look like a poor presenter and waste everyone’s time.
Instead, use slides as anchors. The slide shows the key point. You speak to augment and expand on it.
Bad: Slide says “Increase productivity by 30%” and you say “This increased productivity by 30%.”
Good: Slide says “Increase productivity by 30%” and you say “We saw a 30% productivity increase within the first quarter. Teams reported finishing projects faster, fewer overtime hours, and higher satisfaction scores. Let me walk you through how we measured this…”
The slide gives the headline. Your words give the story, context, and depth.
Best practices for slides:
- Large fonts (at least 24pt, preferably 30pt+)
- High-contrast colors (dark text on light background or vice versa)
- Images and charts over text when possible
- Consistent design throughout
- One main idea per slide
- Use slide builds/animations sparingly (they can distract)
Timing your presentation:
If you have a timed presentation (e.g., 60 minutes for 40 slides), break it into checkpoints.
For a 60-minute / 40-slide presentation:
- At 15 minutes → Should be around slide 10
- At 30 minutes → Should be around slide 20
- At 45 minutes → Should be around slide 30
This gives you real-time feedback on whether you need to speed up or slow down.
Notes:
- Bullet points only (not full sentences)
- Large font so you can glance quickly
- Number pages in case you drop them
- Use note cards or one sheet of paper
Technology:
- Test everything beforehand
- Have a backup plan (what if the projector fails?)
- Bring your own adapter if needed
- Have slides on multiple devices
Delivery: How You Say It Matters
Content is important. Delivery is what makes people listen.
Vocal Techniques
Pace
Most nervous speakers talk too fast. Slow down. Pause more than feels natural.
Practice technique:
- Record yourself speaking
- Listen to the pace
- Deliberately slow down by 20%
- It will feel awkward to you but sound perfect to listeners
Volume
Speak louder than conversation. Project to the back row.
Practice technique:
- Practice in a large room
- Imagine throwing your voice to the back wall
- Ask someone to stand in back and signal if they can hear
Pauses
Silence is powerful. Pause after important points. Pause instead of using filler words.
Strategic pauses:
- After asking a question (let them think)
- After making an important point (let it land)
- Before transitioning to a new section
- When you feel the urge to say “um” or “uh”
A 2-3 second pause feels like forever to you but feels totally natural to the audience. Practice pausing.
Vocal Variety
Monotone speakers lose audiences fast. Vary your pitch, volume, and pace to maintain interest.
How to add variety:
- Emphasize key words by saying them louder or slower
- Lower your voice for serious moments
- Raise energy when sharing exciting points
- Speed up to show urgency, slow down for emphasis
Body Language
Your body communicates as much as your words.
Posture
Stand tall. Feet shoulder-width apart. Weight balanced.
Avoid:
- Slouching
- Leaning on one leg (looks casual)
- Swaying or rocking
- Hands in pockets (looks too casual)
- Crossed arms (looks defensive)
Gestures
Use natural hand gestures to emphasize points. Don’t force it, but don’t restrict yourself either.
Good gestures:
- Open palms (shows openness, honesty)
- Counting on fingers when listing points
- Bigger gestures for larger rooms
- Gestures that match your words
Avoid:
- Fidgeting with pen, notes, clothes
- Repetitive gestures (same motion over and over)
- Hands clasped in front (looks nervous)
- Pointing at the audience (can feel aggressive)
Eye Contact
Look at individuals in the audience. Hold eye contact for 2-3 seconds, then move to someone else.
Pattern:
- Scan the room systematically
- Make eye contact with front, middle, and back
- Don’t stare at one person or section
- If you’re too nervous, look at foreheads (they can’t tell the difference)
If you’re very nervous about eye contact, look at the back wall of the room instead of at faces. To the audience, it looks like you’re making eye contact with people behind them. You appear engaged without the stress of actually meeting people’s eyes. Use this as a stepping stone while building confidence.
Avoid:
- Looking at the floor
- Looking at your notes the whole time
- Looking only at your slides
- Staring at one friendly face
Movement
Move with purpose. Don’t pace aimlessly, but don’t stay rooted in one spot either.
Strategic movement:
- Move to a new spot when transitioning to a new point
- Walk toward the audience for emphasis
- Use the stage space (if you have it)
- Move to engage different sections of the audience
Avoid:
- Pacing back and forth
- Hiding behind a podium the whole time
- Moving without purpose
Managing Filler Words
“Um,” “uh,” “like,” “you know,” “so,” “basically” - these undermine your credibility. Filler words make you sound uncertain and unprepared.
This is one of the most common problems for speakers, and it’s also one of the hardest to fix because filler words happen automatically.
How to reduce filler words:
1. Become aware
- Record yourself speaking (both presentations and casual conversations)
- Count how many times you use filler words
- Notice when you use them (usually when thinking or transitioning between thoughts)
2. Replace with silence
This is the key technique.
Every time you feel the urge to say “um” or “like,” say nothing instead.
- Not a hum
- Not a mouth noise
- Not “uh”
- Just silence
A 1-2 second pause feels awkward to you but sounds completely natural to listeners. In fact, it makes you sound more confident and thoughtful.
3. Practice in everyday speech
Don’t just work on this during presentations. Make it a daily habit.
- During conversations with friends
- When answering questions in class or meetings
- When ordering food
- When telling stories
Every time you catch yourself using a filler word, pause and restart. Make it a game. Track your progress.
The more you eliminate filler words in daily life, the less they’ll appear when you’re presenting.
4. Slow down
- Filler words happen when you’re rushing
- Speaking slower gives you time to think
- You’ll naturally have fewer gaps that tempt you to fill with “um”
5. Practice transitions
- Filler words often happen between thoughts
- Practice transition phrases: “Next,” “Let’s look at,” “Another key point,” “Moving on”
- These give structure without filler
Don’t try to eliminate all filler words overnight. Pick ONE (usually “um” or “like”) and focus on reducing just that one for a few weeks. Once you’ve made progress, tackle another. Trying to fix everything at once usually fails.
Managing Nerves
You’ll still feel nervous even with perfect preparation. Here’s how to manage it.
Before You Speak
Physical preparation
1. Breathe deeply
- Slow, deep breaths activate your parasympathetic nervous system
- Inhale for 4 counts, hold for 4, exhale for 6
- Do this for 2-3 minutes before speaking
2. Power pose
- Stand tall, hands on hips or raised in victory pose
- Hold for 2 minutes (in private before you speak)
- Research suggests this can reduce cortisol and increase confidence
3. Warm up your voice
- Hum or sing quietly
- Do tongue twisters
- Practice your opening lines
4. Move your body
- Walk around
- Do jumping jacks
- Release physical tension
5. Watch what you eat and drink
Avoid carbonated drinks beforehand:
- No soda, sparkling water, or beer before speaking
- Carbonation causes burping, which is disruptive and embarrassing
- Stick to still water
Consider speaking on an empty stomach:
- Unless medically dangerous for you, avoid eating a large meal right before
- Light stomach = clearer mind and better focus
- Heavy meals make you sluggish and risk digestive issues during your talk
- If you must eat, keep it light (small snack, not a full meal)
Lemon water or lemon tea:
- Lemon helps tighten and clear your throat
- Warm lemon tea is especially effective
- Helps reduce mucus and improves vocal clarity
- Sip before speaking, not during (unless you have water available)
Mental preparation
1. Reframe the fear
- Don’t tell yourself “I’m nervous”
- Tell yourself “I’m excited”
- Your body can’t tell the difference - it’s the same physiological response
2. Visualize success
- Picture yourself speaking confidently
- Imagine the audience responding positively
- Mental rehearsal activates the same brain regions as physical practice
3. Focus on service, not performance
- You’re not performing for judgment
- You’re sharing information that helps them
- Shift from “What do they think of me?” to “How can I help them?”
During Your Talk
If you lose your place
- Pause, take a breath, glance at notes
- Say “Let me back up for a second…” and restart
- The audience won’t notice as much as you think
If you make a mistake
- Don’t apologize profusely
- Either ignore it and keep going, or briefly acknowledge and move on
- “Let me rephrase that…” then continue
If your mind goes blank
- Pause (seems shorter to them than to you)
- Look at your notes
- Ask “Any questions so far?” to buy time
- Repeat your last point and continue from there
If someone asks a tough question
- “That’s a great question. Let me think about that for a moment…”
- “I don’t know the answer off the top of my head. Let me get back to you.”
- “What do others think?” (if it’s a discussion setting)
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Reading from slides
Your slides are visual aids, not your script. If you’re just reading text from slides, the audience could have read an email instead.
Fix: Use minimal text on slides. Speak to the points, don’t read them.
Apologizing at the start
“I’m really nervous…” or “Sorry, I’m not a good speaker…” loses credibility immediately.
Fix: Start strong. Your nerves are internal. The audience can’t see them unless you point them out.
Speaking to the slides
Turning your back to the audience to read your slides breaks connection.
Fix: Glance at the screen briefly, then turn back to the audience and speak to them.
Too much content
Trying to cover everything in detail overwhelms the audience and rushes your pace.
Fix: Pick 3 main points. Go deep on those. Cut everything else.
No clear takeaway
If the audience leaves thinking “That was interesting but what was the point?” you’ve failed.
Fix: Make your key message crystal clear. Repeat it. State it explicitly in your closing.
Weak endings
Trailing off with “So… yeah… that’s it” wastes your most memorable moment.
Fix: Plan a strong closing. Make it punchy. End with confidence.
Types of Public Speaking
Formal presentations
Planned talks with slides or materials. Most common in work/school.
Keys to success:
- Thorough preparation
- Clear structure
- Practice multiple times
- Professional delivery
Impromptu speaking
Speaking with little or no preparation. Called on in a meeting, asked a question in class.
Keys to success:
- Use simple structures (Point-Reason-Example, or Past-Present-Future)
- Take a breath before you start
- It’s okay to be brief - quality over quantity
- Practice by setting a timer and speaking for 1 minute on random topics
For impromptu speaking, use the P.R.E.P. formula:
- Point - State your main point
- Reason - Give one reason why
- Example - Give a brief example
- Point - Restate your main point
Storytelling
Using narrative to convey a message or lesson.
Keys to success:
- Start with a hook that raises questions
- Use sensory details (what you saw, heard, felt)
- Build tension
- Have a clear payoff or lesson
- Keep it concise (not every detail matters)
See Story-Telling for more depth.
Toasts and social speaking
Weddings, celebrations, informal gatherings.
Keys to success:
- Keep it short (2-3 minutes max)
- Personal but appropriate for the audience
- Warm and genuine, not trying to be funny unless humor comes naturally
- End with a clear conclusion (“Please join me in raising a glass…”)
Resources for Getting Better
Organizations
The gold standard for practicing public speaking. Low-cost clubs worldwide where you practice speaking in a supportive environment.
- Weekly or bi-weekly meetings
- Structured program with progressive difficulty
- Feedback from experienced speakers
- Costs ~$50-100/year
How it works:
- Prepared speeches (you research and present a topic)
- Table Topics (impromptu speaking practice)
- Evaluations (giving and receiving feedback)
Books
On public speaking:
- Talk Like TED by Carmine Gallo - Lessons from TED talks
- Steal the Show by Michael Port - Performance techniques for speakers
- Confessions of a Public Speaker by Scott Berkun - Honest, funny guide from experienced speaker
On storytelling:
- The Storyteller’s Secret by Carmine Gallo
- Storyworthy by Matthew Dicks
On managing fear:
- The Charisma Myth by Olivia Fox Cabane - Building presence and confidence
Videos and Channels
Watch great speakers:
- TED Talks - Study how top speakers structure talks
- Toastmasters Champion Speeches - Watch the best compete
Learning channels:
- Vinh Giang - Communication and speaking techniques
- Stanford Graduate School of Business - Search for “communication” talks
Practice Tools
Record yourself:
- Use your phone camera
- Watch with the sound off first (focus on body language)
- Then watch with sound (focus on vocal delivery)
Mirror practice:
- Practice in front of a mirror
- Watch your gestures and expressions
- Get comfortable seeing yourself speak
AI practice:
- Use ChatGPT or Claude to practice Q&A
- Have the AI ask you tough questions about your topic
- Practice responding clearly and concisely
Practice Exercises
Exercise 1: 1-Minute Random Topic
Set a timer for 1 minute. Pick a random object in the room. Speak about it for the full minute without filler words.
Do this daily. It builds the skill of thinking while speaking.
Exercise 2: Record and Critique
Record yourself giving a 3-5 minute talk on any topic. Watch it. Write down:
- How many filler words?
- Did you make eye contact (with camera)?
- What’s your pace like?
- Do your gestures look natural?
Do this weekly. Compare recordings over time.
Exercise 3: Impromptu Speaking
Use Table Topics questions or pick random questions online. Give yourself 15 seconds to think, then speak for 1-2 minutes.
Exercise 4: Slow Down Challenge
Take a passage you normally read at your natural pace. Read it again at 50% speed. This is probably the pace you should speak at when presenting.
Practice speaking entire presentations at this deliberately slow pace.
Summary
Public speaking is a skill, not a talent. Here’s what matters:
Preparation:
- Know your material cold
- Structure clearly (opening, body, closing)
- Practice out loud, multiple times
Delivery:
- Slow down and pause more
- Make eye contact, use open body language
- Speak to the audience, not to your slides
Managing nerves:
- Everyone gets nervous - use that energy
- Breathe deeply before speaking
- Reframe anxiety as excitement
- Focus on helping the audience, not on your performance
Getting better:
- Join Toastmasters or practice regularly
- Record yourself and watch critically
- Study great speakers
- Speak more often (the only way to improve is repetition)
The fear doesn’t go away completely. But with practice, you learn to speak confidently despite the fear. And eventually, speaking in front of others becomes one of your most valuable skills.
Start small. Practice often. You’ll get there.