The last 50 years in public speaking have been the JFK/Ronald Reagan era. The next 50 will be the YouTube/talk radio/iPhone era.
To be a great speaker in the future, you must learn to connect with audiences conditioned by the modern media.
Before television, listeners were happy to listen to long speeches, notes consultant Joey Asher. With the advent of TV, the key to great speaking became connection. Now comes Public Speaking 3.0, where modern media have conditioned audiences to value interactivity, brevity and informality.
July 21, 2010 at 12:00 AM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
The last 50 years in public speaking have been the JFK/Ronald Reagan era. The next 50 will be the YouTube/talk radio/iPhone era.
To be a great speaker in the future, you must learn to connect with audiences conditioned by the modern media.
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