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The great lectern debate

Nick R. Thomas adds his two cents to the "great lectern debate," as he has christened the recent discussions on public speaking blogs.

Here's a great quote from his post:

"...whatever your height, you must be bigger than the lectern: in other words, be lively and animated in your delivery and don't bury your face in your written materials..."


More on lecterns here:

Another reason to avoid the lectern

Using a lectern: Do or don't?

2 comments:

  1. Oh my! What a large collection of words about such a trivial topic! I think that we all fall into one of two groups: those who like a lectern and those who don't.

    If you are wearing a mic, then it really doesn't matter - go where you want to go, stay if you must. However, as Nick mentions, if the mic is built into the lectern, then you are pretty much fixed in place.

    I view this as being similar to a professional sports team playing an "away" game - the conditions are not ideal, but you've still got a job to do. I try to make the most of the situation and when I'm tied to a lectern I focus on using BIG hand gestures and lots of eye contact to make up for the loss of full body language. Every presentation is a learning experience.

    - Dr. Jim Anderson
    The Accidental Communicator Blog
    "Learn How To Calm Your Fears, Wow Your Audience, And Get Your Point Across"

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  2. It's not about whether a speaker likes or dislikes the lectern; it's about what benefits the audience most. And most of the time, speaking from behind a lectern doesn't benefit the audience, unless the speaker is larger than life (and larger than the lectern, as Nick suggested).

    Much of the time, the speaker has a say in the room setup. So why not request a setup that doesn't stick you behind a lectern? I do it all the time.

    I don't think any topic is trivial if it can help someone become a more effective speaker.

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