Voice & Speech Newsletter


20 Hours to Good Speech

The Basic Skills

Josh Kaufman, author of the international bestseller, The Personal MBA, gave a TEDx presentation showing how you can achieve basic proficiency in any area with just twenty hours of practice, whether you’re learning a language, an instrument or a new sport. It’s a four-step method: deconstruct the crucial skills, learn enough to self-correct, remove barriers to practice, then practice twenty hours. That’s forty minutes per day, for one month.

What if you were to apply that method to speaking? What are the crucial skills? To answer that question, you need to identify the essential characteristics of good speech. I think every speaker needs to be clear, confident and credible. Any specific challenge you encounter relates to one or more of those three..

Clarity gets you understood. Talking too fast, lacking projection and not opening your mouth enough are the main barriers to clarity. Confidence lends impact to your communication. Tension, rushing and holding your breath are the most common physical threats to confidence. Credibility gets people to accept your message. Speaking too fast, too quietly and having a voice that seems high are typical habits that undercut credibility.

Now you can identify the crucial physical skills necessary for good speech: relaxation, breathing and resonance. Relaxation increases your comfort level, slows your speech, and strengthens your voice. Breathing does all those things, plus increases depth and dissipates nervousness. Resonance amplifies and deepens your voice, making it authoritative and engaging.

Your next step is to find exercises that address those three main areas. Relaxation exercises should target grounding and posture, belly and lower back, shoulders and neck, and jaw and tongue. Breathing exercises should cultivate ease of breath, depth of breath and using breath generously to produce sound. (It should not focus on practicing how long you can make one breath last.) Resonance exercises should address openness, efficiency and feeling sound vibrations throughout your entire body.

Everyone admires mastery and expertise, and it’d be nice to excel at everything, but no one has time for that. Besides, you quickly reach a point of diminishing returns. Basic competence is better than having no skill at all. It’s surprising how far you can go with just the basics, and the payoff can be substantial. When it comes to good speech, the underlying skills aren’t complicated or mysterious. Learning the fundamentals of relaxation, breathing and resonance, and integrating those techniques in your everyday speech, will soon have you communicating with clarity, confidence and credibility.





Recommended Video





The First 20 Hours



Becoming a parent spurred Josh Kaufman to approach learning in a whole new way. In this TEDx presentation, he outlines a 4-step approach to acquiring basic competency, in any activity, with just 20 hours of practice.




Featured Products




 

Overcoming
Stage Fright


If you’re looking for basic techniques to enhance your confidence for business presentations or public speaking, this innovative audio program identifies the core skills and delivers a multi-pronged approach for managing nervousness and performance anxiety.



Refresh Your Voice

Discounted Review Session

If you live in the GTA and have already done basic training with Voice & Speech or completed the self-training program, Your Confident Voice, you’re invited to join Vocal Gym for a review session on the 4th Tuesday of any month. It’s a 90-minute refresher course for just $49. You’ll reinforce the progress you’ve made and identify new areas for growth. Just contact Jay and say, “I’d like to show up for the group review session.”








Tip

Everything is built on grounding. Put both feet on the ground, use your whole foot and cultivate an awareness of that secure foundation. You’ll stand to your full height. Your body will settle down. Your voice will strengthen. You’ll feel more confident and look more authoritative. It’s so simple and yet so powerful.

 



Voice & Speech

434 Queen St. E., Toronto
416-922-6384 | voiceandspeech.com




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