Jan. 18, 2012 – Peter Meyers – As We Speak

As We Speak: How to Make Your Point and Have it Stick

Aired Jan. 18, 2012
12:00 – 1:00pm PT
Presenter: Peter Meyers, Founder and President, Stand & Deliver Group
The world is full of brilliant people whose ideas are never heard. This webinar is designed to make sure that you’re not one of them. Even for the most self-confident among us, public speaking can be a nerve-racking ordeal. Whether you are speaking to a large audience, within a group, or in a one-on-one conversation, the way in which you communicate ideas, as much as the ideas themselves, can determine success or failure. This webinar offers a comprehensive approach for tackling the underlying obstacles that almost all of us experience when faced with speaking in public.

Learn about the three building blocks at the core of this approach:

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Content: Organize the information you want to convey and construct a clear and lucid architecture of ideas that will lead your listener through a memorable emotional experience.

Delivery: Use your body, voice, eyes, and hands in ways that engage your audience and naturally support your message.

State: Bring yourself into peak performance condition. Your state is the way you feel when you perform, and it is both the most powerful and most frequently overlooked component of communication.

About our Presenter

Peter Meyers, Founder and President of the Stand & Deliver Group, is a leadership consultant and professional speaker who has worked for more than a decade helping Fortune 100 companies and institutions worldwide achieve greater influence through the spoken word. An acclaimed actor and theater director, he currently teaches performance and leadership skills at Stanford University, Esalen Institute, and IMD-International Institute for Management Development in Lausanne, Switzerland. He is co-author of As We Speak: How to Make Your Point and Have it Stick, which was published in July, 2011.

Corporate Partners

HP

Access On-Demand  – not available for this webinar. Per Mr. Meyers’s request, the webinar recording was only available for 30 days.