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Fear of public speaking? This Rochester professor has you covered

Amy Arbogast 鈥16 (PhD) offers six tips for helping people find their voice.

Amy Arbogast 鈥16 (PhD) says she鈥檚 鈥渁lways been a talker,鈥 so forging a career in public speaking was a natural fit.

鈥淚 was terrible at every sport in high school, so I joined the speech team,鈥 says Arbogast, an associate professor in the 人妻少妇专区鈥檚听 (WSAP). 鈥淭he coach couldn鈥檛 coach my senior year, so I stepped in. That鈥檚 when I discovered my passion. I loved helping students find their voice and figure out what they wanted to say and how they wanted to say it.鈥

Arbogast came to Rochester in 2009 to begin a PhD in American history. She joined the WSAP staff and in 2013 created the , where she remains its coordinator and teaches writing and public speaking classes. Arbogast and former fellow Maria Sepulveda 鈥18, 鈥23S (MBA) also run their own private consultancy, , which offers public speaking tips, consulting, and coaching.

Everyone needs to know how to communicate their ideas effectively and build meaningful connections with the people they鈥檙e talking to.鈥

Arbogast is writing a guidebook to class presentations for undergraduates in the humanities that will be published by the , but she says people from all walks of life can benefit from polishing their speaking skills.

鈥淚n nearly every job, people do things that require public speaking skills every day,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou meet with clients, lead meetings, have critical conversations with supervisors and colleagues, and deliver short presentations to your team or manager. Everyone needs to know how to communicate their ideas effectively and build meaningful connections with the people they鈥檙e talking to.鈥

Arbogast offers this advice for anyone who wants to master the art of public speaking.

Amy Arbogast teaches public speaking tips to a classroom full of 人妻少妇专区 students.
ACTIVE VOICE: Amy Arbogast is an associate professor in the Writing, Speaking, and Argument Program and the coordinator of Speaking Fellows Program at Rochester. (人妻少妇专区 photo / J. Adam Fenster)

Know your audience!

鈥淪peakers often focus on what they want to say, but great speakers focus on their audience. What do you want them to know? What do they already know? What kinds of language or jargon will be familiar to them鈥攁nd what will make them feel left out? Choose wisely.鈥

Be yourself.听

鈥淎udiences aren鈥檛 interested in seeing you play a character or pretend to be something you鈥檙e not. The most compelling speakers pull us in because we feel like we鈥檙e seeing their true selves. Authenticity builds trust and a connection with your audience.鈥

Find your perfect pace.听

鈥淲e often talk fast because we know our material and are excited about it. But for audiences hearing that material for the first time, our fast pace makes it impossible to keep up. Practice slowing down just enough that it annoys you, and you鈥檙e probably in the sweet spot.鈥

Public speaking expert Amy Arbogast presenting in front of a chalkboard.
GOOD POINT: 鈥淚n nearly every job, people do things that require public speaking skills every day,鈥 says Arbogast. (人妻少妇专区 photo / J. Adam Fenster)

Work up to eye contact.

鈥淚f eye contact makes you nervous, pick out four friendly faces in the audience鈥攑referably in different quadrants鈥攁nd start by focusing just on them. After your nerves settle, you can expand to the rest of the audience.鈥

Focus on getting started.

鈥淭he first part of your speech might be nerve-wracking, but once your cortisol levels even out, you鈥檒l find your footing. Practice your opening lines and trust yourself to build momentum, energy, and confidence.鈥

Practice, practice, practice!

鈥淎 speech gets better every time you read it, even if you don鈥檛 make changes. Practice is the single most useful thing you can do to make a speech better and help yourself grow as a speaker. It makes you become comfortable with your material and dynamic with your delivery.鈥