AI Can’t Replace This ...Yet | 3 Reasons to Hone Your Public Speaking Skills
Nary a day goes by when we are not presented with an article or discussion about artificial intelligence. Early adopters tout it as a game changing must-have, while resisters fear for their jobs and livelihoods. The former make great arguments for the use of AI in just about every aspect of life. The latter cautions against rapid adoption, also presenting logical arguments. Then there are those in between who basically advise to proceed with caution.
On this all three can agree, AI is here to stay. If we’ve learned anything from the advent of the internet in the ‘90s it is that technology changes, change is inevitable and increasingly swift, and adapting to change is the only way to grow.
Why, then, would I taunt AI’s ability? It’s simple, for all its advances—good, bad, or indifferent—it cannot produce a live human being physically on a stage before a live audience.
As long as humans are wired for communion with one another, which we are (sans neurotechnology), there will be a market for in-person presentations.
Sure, you can avoid physically addressing an audience by producing a video address and sending it electronically or by creating a powerful slide deck full of animation but pound for pound, there’s no exact replication for an in-person presentation. Even if holograms were perfected, we might still end up in the uncanny valley with an ineffective outcome not much different from that of showing a video address on a jumbotron. Ditto for VR headsets; besides, everyone in the audience would need one.
Simply put, you can avoid such situations, or you can leverage them for your personal and professional growth.
The ability to impact an audience through artful presentations can increase your confidence, boost your credibility, and improve your bottom line.
Below are four good rules for any conversation.
Whenever you speak from a stage, be it a boardroom or a large auditorium, you are in a position of power and scrutiny. Opt for humility and integrity every time.
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Here are more tips for making an impact with your presentation:
Above all, HAVE FUN!
Enthusiasm is contagious, and you want your audience feeling good as they leave.
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Elementary Gifted Support at Marple Newtown School District
2moI proved it incorrect on a 5th grade multi step math problem!