Transcript
How do you make an impact, by choosing just the right words to say? No, by making a connection, by putting your self out there in the room. If you want to affect your listeners, you must give your self. As a speaker, giving your self involves giving your voice. And at a basic physical level, giving your voice requires giving away your breath.
Speaking with only a trickle of breath yields only part of your voice, so your listeners might hear the words but they get the feeling that you’re holding back, that you’re not really committed to what you’re saying. Speaking with a generous outflow of breath tends to engage your whole voice. Your listeners feel they’re getting more of you, that you’re confidently standing behind your message.
How can you make sure you’re engaging your breath sufficiently to make an impact?
Optimize your in-breath. The quality of your voice will never exceed the quality of your breath. If your in-breath is small, tense and shallow, your voice will be small, tense and shallow. If your in-breath is deep, full and relaxed, your voice will be deep, full and relaxed.
Inhale slowly, through your mouth, inviting the breath to sink as far down into your body as possible. Don’t worry about the pause; it’s never as noticeable as you think. Imagine your breath channel being so large you could drive a truck through it, and the walls of the tunnel being smooth as glass. Allow nothing in the channel to obstruct the flow of breath in any way.
Spend breath generously. Speaking is just another way to exhale. You’re a wind instrument. Using more breath will make you feel better and sound better. Making one breath last a long time is stupid and counterproductive. Use it up! The next one is free! Practice “wasting” all your breath on just four to six words. Picture breath pouring out of you as you speak. When you use your breath generously, you will automatically sound stronger, more resonant and expressive. You will be engaging.
Making an impact requires putting some breath behind what you say. Breath is the power behind your voice. When you speak with lots of breath, you actually feel your own strength, and that makes you feel—and sound—strong, at other levels as well. Your listeners will sit up and listen.
For more information and exercises to help you make an impact with your voice, click the link in the description box below, and enroll in the free video mini course, The Sound of Success.
Voice Training: Making an Impact
Making an impact goes far beyond choosing the right words, you have to make a connection. You have to put something out there in the room. As a speaker, your primary tool is your voice, and the power of your voice is your breath. Your ability to literally put some breath into the room is fundamental to making an impact.