How to Explain
Anything to Anyone Easily: 8 Spontaneous Speaking Structures
Do you get in your own way during a job interview or while
giving a presentation? If so, you might be wondering:
“What can I do to quickly explain something when in the moment?”
Thankfully, there are ways to do this and
they are very simple ways. Author of Speaking
Up without Freaking Out: 50 Techniques for Confident and Compelling Presenting, Matthew Abrahams informs us, “When you are in a
spontaneous speaking situation, you have to do two things simultaneously,”
1. Figure
out what to say.
2. Figure
out how to say it.
Let’s examine 8 spontaneous speaking structures that allow you
to become comfortable and respond immediately to any speaking situation.
What
are Spontaneous Speaking Structures?
A
spontaneous speaking structure is a way to tell a story. It is a way to explain
anything quickly by using simple structures to frame a story.
“Structure
sets you free.” – Matthew Abrahams
Here’s why structures set you free:
Speaking structures help you explain anything ad lib. They
provide an easy way to structure our thinking and prevent us from freezing in
the moment.
Abrahams informs us,
“You
need to set expectations and structures do that.”
8
Spontaneous Speaking Structures
Let’s
now examine 8 spontaneous speaking structures:
1.
What? So What? Now What?
Terry Borton’s Development Framework was constructed in 1970 and
is a simple approach involving only three questions: What? So What? Now
What?
- What? What happened or
what is emerging?
- So
What? Why
is it important or what lessons can we learn from it?
- Now
What? What
are we going to do next or what should we do moving forward?
2. Who?
Why? What?
Abrahams provides an easy way for us to use Borton’s Development
Framework when introducing someone by simply changing the What to Who.
- Who? Who they are.
- Why? Why the person
is important.
- What? What we are
going to do next (i.e. listen to their presentation).
3.
Problem/Opportunity – Solution – Benefit
Another powerful, yet extremely simple technique is the Problem
(or Opportunity) – Solution – Benefit structure. Abrahams explains that this is
a great technique to use when pitching or persuading someone.
- Problem/Opportunity. What do you want
to solve or what do you want to capture?
- Solution. What are the
steps to achieve it?
- Benefit. What is the
benefit to their organization?
4. ADD
Abrahams illustrates a simple approach to use during a question
and answer period of a speech, presentation, or interview.
- A:
Answer questions
concisely (condense your information into a few succinct words).
- D:
Detail the
answer through an example
- D:
Describe the
value of your answer to the asker.
5. TAKE
Yet another example of a simple speaking structure offered by
Abrahams is TAKE. This is a great approach to use when accepting recognition.
- T:
Thank your
audience.
- A:
Acknowledge the
award/accomplishment.
- K:
Keep the
momentum going.
- E:
End with
impact.
6.
1-3-1 Speech Structure
The authors of The Secret
Memory Booster in Public Speaking offer
a powerfully simple approach to learn, remember, and present information using
the 1-3-1 approach.
- 1:
Idea The
first step is to structure your idea through Prep (get
their attention with questions, a story, a quote, or a startling
statistic), Promise (specifically the benefits to your
audience), and Path (indicate how they will get the
promise or preview the main points).
- 3:
Themes or Main Points Next, outline your main points
through the use of the following: SHARP, Power Phrase, Reflection,
Application, Power Phrase, then Transition. SHARP = Story
(anecdote, metaphor, or analogy), Humor, Activity, Reference/Quote,
Photo/Prop
- 1:
Conclusion or Call to Action In your conclusion, use the
following: Summary (call back to the main points), Q&A, Memorable (tie
to the intro).
7. STAR
This next technique is perfect to use when answering the typical
behavioral interviewing questions asked during a job interview. Behavioral
interviewing is an approach used to assess a candidate’s past experience and to
judge the response to similar situation on a future job; thus, it is used a
predictor of future performance. 2 For
example, say you are interviewing for a job and the interviewer asks,
“Describe a time when you had to…”
- Instead
of rambling through the question with an incoherent reply, try the STAR
technique:
- S:
Situation Detail
the background. Provide a context. Where? When?
- T:
Task Describe
the challenge and expectations. What needed to be done? Why?
- A:
Action Elaborate
your specific action. What did you do? How? What tools did you use?
- R:
Results Explain
(quantify) the results: accomplishments, recognition, savings, etc.
8. What
– Why – How Feedback
Lastly, the perfect structure for growing from feedback is the
What – Why – How structure. Pay attention to the feedback you receive (from all
around you – people, environment, etc.). Then ask the following:
- What? What is going
on? Which leads to an understanding of the Why.
- Why? Why is this
happening? Which leads us to invent new things (the How).
- How? How can things
get better? This then leads us to change our actions; thus, leading back
to the What (for which the cycle never ends).
By following these 8 simple spontaneous speaking structures, you
will find you can easily explain anything off the cuff. Each one of these
speaking structures helps you structure your thinking and allows you to respond
confidently in any situation.
They allow you to tell a story, set expectations for your
audience, provide you a way to figure out what to say and figure out how to say
it. Thus, a spontaneous speaking structure sets you free.
Dr. Jamie Schwandt https://www.lifehack.org/685888/how-to-talk-to-people-and-explain-anything?ck_subscriber_id=168781672
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