Page 28 - October 2017 Voices
P. 28
Make a Compelling Speech from
a Shoebox of Ideas
by Sara Cardella, DTM - Guest Contributor
If you’re a typical 1. Forced cat ownership, because married
Toastmaster, you have husband with cats.
all sorts of ideas floating 2. Owned own cats after divorce, because
around in your head. understood their independence.
You may even write those ideas down and drop 3. Never without cats, they now own me.
them into a shoebox for later development.
What do you do from there? Motivation Sequence—Arrange ideas to
How about this idea—pick a topic from your motivate your audience to action [Get a Cat!]
shoebox and create a speech from it with an 1. Get their attention: “Thousands of years
introduction, body, and conclusion. Then glue ago, cats were worshiped as gods. Cats
the speech together with transitions, making have never forgotten this.” Anonymous
it flow from concept to concept. 2. Why they need: Without a cat, your life
However, your speech is still missing is missing a special warmth.
something. Possibly, it’s the structure pattern 3. Imagine this: With a cat, you have endless
of the three main points that’s not working. hours of humor and wonderment.
How you arrange your content is as important 4. Visualization: You look in the corner, a
as deciding on three main points. sleeping cat. You look in the center of the
Choose from five structural patterns floor, a sleeping cat. You look on your
to arrange your three main points into a bed, a sleeping cat.
compelling speech. In the examples below, I 5. Call to action: Don’t miss this special
use the topic theme “HONORING CATS.” warmth. Get up and go get a cat!
Time—Arrange ideas chronologically showing See? Simple! Take the three main points of
progression [personal experience progression] your speech and run them through each pattern
1. Raised with dogs. Hated and afraid of to decide which works best for your topic. Add
cats. an introduction and conclusion and Voila! a
2. Cats came with husband. Learned to compelling speech is born. Practice the speech
begrudgingly tolerate them. with vocal variety and body language, adding
3. Now love them. Never without a cat quotes and statistics. Enjoy!
Sara Cardella, DTM, District 12 Qualified Speaker,
again! MA Speech Communication. Sara is President of
Topical—Arrange ideas into several categories or Spontaneous Speakers #4264 and Treasurer of Desert
Sunrise Speakers #1969. She’s been a member of
areas of focus [Types of cats who owned me] Toastmasters since 1991. Sara is also a keynote speaker,
1. Siamese—noisy communication coach, and corporate trainer.
2. Burmese—needy
3. Mutts—nurturing
Comparative—Arrange ideas by comparing to
highlight similarities or differences [Dog vs. Cat]
1. Care—scooping poop vs. litter box
2. Love—dogs licking vs. cat purring
3. Play—dogs run around, then attack vs.
cat sneak around, then attack
Cause-Effect OR Effect-Cause—Arrange
ideas by representing one thing as caused by
another or one thing as the cause of another [Cat
ownership}
28 VOLUME 4 ISSUE 4 OCTOBER, 2017