In a speech to motivate action, why should you try to get listeners to take action immediately?

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Motivating Listeners

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Download The Persuasive Speech...

The Persuasive Speech

What Is Persuasive Speech? Persuasion The process of influencing attitudes, beliefs, values, and behavior

Persuasive speaking Speech that is intended to influence the beliefs, attitudes, values, and acts of others*

Goals of Persuasive Speaking 1. Speaking to Influence Thinking Desire to gain intellectual agreement. Example: To persuade my audience that immigrants enrich American society and business life. 2. Speaking to Motivate Action Tries to impel listeners to take action. Example: To persuade my audience not to buy groceries from markets that do not support dolphin-safe tuna fishing products.

How To Motivate Action Don’t just imply, tell the audience what they need to do in response to your speech. Send around a petition Pass out a sign-up sheet Get a show of hands Be careful not to overly pressure listeners!

What Is Persuasive Speech?

Persuasive vs. Informative The goal of the persuasive speech is to influence audience choices These choices may range from slight shifts in opinion to wholesale changes in behavior Persuasive speeches seek a response As with informative speeches, persuasive speeches respect audience choices*

What Is Persuasive Speech?

Persuasive Purposes How can you determine whether your topic and goals are persuasive? When you seek to influence an audience’s attitudes about an issue When you seek to influence an audience’s beliefs or understanding about something When you seek to influence an audience’s behavior When you seek to reinforce an audience’s existing attitudes, beliefs or behaviors*

What Is Persuasive Speech?

The Process of Persuasion When you speak persuasively, you try to guide the audience to adopt a particular attitude, belief, or behavior that you favor*

What Is Persuasive Speech?

The Process of Persuasion Several factors that increase the odds that your efforts at persuasion will succeed: A message should meet the psychological needs of the audience Seek only minor changes in the audience’s attitudes Establish a common ground between yourself and the audience Leave your audience feeling satisfied and competent For change to endure, people must be convinced they will be rewarded in some way*

Classical Persuasive Appeals According to Aristotle, persuasion could be brought about by the speakers use of three modes of rhetorical proof Rhetorical proof The speaker’s use of three modes of persuasion: the nature of the message, the audience’s feelings, and the personality of the speaker*

Classical Persuasive Appeals:

Logos Many persuasive speeches focus on serious issues requiring considerable thought Logos Refers to persuasive appeals directed at the audience’s reasoning on a topic*

Classical Persuasive Appeals:

Pathos

"Let's pretend for a moment. Suppose that on the upper righthand corner of your desk there is a button. You have the power , by pushing that button, to quickly and painlessly end the life of one you love; your brother, or sister, or father. This loved one has terminal cancer and will be confined to a hospital for his remaining days. Would you push the button now? His condition worsens. He is in constant pain and he is hooked up to a lifesupport machine. He first requests, but as the pain increases he pleads for you to help. Now would you push that button? Each day you watch him deteriorate until he reaches a point where he cannot talk, he cannot see, he cannot hear - he in only alive by that machine. No would you push that button?"

Classical Persuasive Appeals:

Pathos involves an appeal to audience emotion Pathos – As used by Aristotle in terms of persuasive appeals, the audience’s feelings*

Pathos

Classical Persuasive Appeals:

Pathos

"I ask again, how long could you take walking into that hospital room and looking at your brother or father in a coma, knowing he would rather be allowed to die a natural death than to be kept alive in such a degrading manner? I've crossed that doorstep - I've gone into that hospital room, and let me tell you, it's hell. I think it's time we reconsider our laws concerning euthanasia. Don't you?"

Classical Persuasive Appeals:

Ethos Ethos – As used by Aristotle in terms of persuasive appeals, based on the nature of the speaker’s moral character and personality*

A Plan for Organizing Persuasive Speeches Motivated sequence An organizational pattern for planning and presenting persuasive speeches that involves five steps: attention, need, satisfaction, visualization, and action*

A Plan for Organizing Persuasive Speeches:

Step 1: Attention A persuasive speech should begin by getting the audience’s attention The attention step addresses core concerns of the audience, making the speech highly relevant to them*

A Plan for Organizing Persuasive Speeches:

Step 2: Need The need step isolates and describes the issue to be addressed in the persuasive speech Audience have a reason to listen to your propositions*

A Plan for Organizing Persuasive Speeches:

Step 3: Satisfaction The satisfaction step identifies the solution This step offers the audience a proposal to reinforce or change their attitudes, beliefs, and values regarding the need at hand*

A Plan for Organizing Persuasive Speeches:

Step 4: Visualization The purpose of the visualization step is to carry the audience beyond accepting the feasibility of your proposal to seeing how it will actually benefit them The visualization step invokes needs of self-esteem and self-actualization*

A Plan for Organizing Persuasive Speeches:

Step 5: Action The action step involves making a direct request of the audience to act according to their acceptance of the message*

When to use motivated sequence Sell a product or service Mobilize listeners to take a specific action sample_persuasive_speech_outline.htm

Problem-solution pattern When to use: Unawareness Severity underestimated sample-problemsolutionpattern.htm

Statement-of-reasons pattern When to use: Audience’s leaning toward presenter’s position Justification needed

Comparative-advantages When to use Which solution? Superior solution recommended!

Speech to influence thinking Sample specific-purpose statement To convince my audience that the US. President should be limited to one term lasting 6 years To convince my listeners that the metric system is superior to the traditional American system of weights and measures To persuade my audience that schools should stop using IQ tests

Speech to motivate action Sample specific-purpose statement To urge people to START doing something To persuade my audience to walk 3 miles a day To persuade my audience to adopt the traditional Mediterranean diet To persuade my listeners to sign a petition aimed at outlawing corporal punishment in elementary schools To persuade my audience to take a course in first aid

Speech to motivate action Sample specific-purpose statement To urge people to STOP doing something To persuade my audience to stop smoking To persuade my listeners to stop buying things on credit To persuade my audience to stop using nylon bags To persuade my listeners to stop paying bribes to the policemen.

Examples What arguments can you provide to a group of farmers to persuade them to adopt organic farming? a group of teachers to persuade them to give up corporal punishment to students? a group of college students to support a volunteer cause financially in Africa?

Examples You want to show that your solution is better than the others. Let’s compare Alternative medicine vs. conventional medicine Eurostar train vs. airplane Low cost carriers vs. full-service airlines

How do you motivate your audience to take action?

How to Motivate Your Audience to Take Action.
1 – State what action you want them to take: ... .
2 – Answer the following question: What If you/we do? (this takes care of the pleasure) ... .
3 – Answer the following question: What If you/we don't? (this takes care of the pain).

How do you motivate the audience in a speech?

Engage the audience — get them interested, give them a reason to listen..
Describe a scene or a character..
Tell a story..
Share a personal experience..
Relate to a recent event..
Piggyback on a previous speaker's remark or theme..
Point out something important about the audience or the current setting..

Why is a call to action important in a speech?

The call to action which comes right before the end of a persuasive speech is where you clearly tell the audience a role they can play after they leave your talk. The CTA gives audience members concrete tasks to tackle, and these tasks are ones that must be completed in order to bring your ideas to fruition.

How do you call an audience to action?

Hook, Line, and Sinker: 7 Tips for a Killer Call-to-Action.
Use a strong command verb to start your CTA. ... .
Use words that provoke emotion or enthusiasm. ... .
Give your audience a reason why they should take the desired action. ... .
Take Advantage of FOMO. ... .
Know your devices. ... .
Don't be afraid to get a little creative..