When you tell a story with your information, you are using which style of support?

Stories are engaging. They have the ability to keep an audience hooked, listening intently to your every word.

We’ve all sat through speeches that have been devoid of this. The delivery of statistics, figures and facts with little context and not storytelling behind them tend to fall on deaf ears.

Introducing stories to your speeches allows you to bring life to what you say. You can explain your necessary facts and figures with storytelling techniques. This will help keep your audience engaged and help them remember the stats long after you’ve finished talking.

Find out how we can help improve your storytelling skills and improve your speeches with a consultation. 

We’ve put together a handy guide for how you can introduce stories to your speeches.

Know your audience

More often then not you will know who your audience is before you start talking. You’ll know if they are all from the same company or organisation and what that does. If it’s a mixed group you will know the type of work they do.

When you tell a story with your information, you are using which style of support?

Knowing this information will be key when adding stories to your speech. It will let you know the type of stories that will engage your audience and allow you to tailor your stories accordingly.

Research some current topics in your audiences field. Know what are the big issues they’re facing and some recent success stories. Find stories that you can tell and engage with. Not only will they be grateful you have shown interest in their field, they will also be more likely to listen to what you’re saying as it’s relevant to them. You will be speaking their language.

For example, if you’re speaking to a group of aviation experts, research the biggest developments in the field. What new airlines are being introduced? Who is leading the field? When is the next big aviation conference? Find stories of companies who have done well and what they did. Integrate these stories into your speech and watch as your audience listens to every word.

Keep it simple

Long speeches are forgettable. In today’s world peoples attention spans are constantly getting shorter. Keeping an audience’s attention through a speech can be a difficult task. Audiences today can only handle so much information before they start losing focus.

Jon Favreau, director of speechwriting for US President Barack Obama for 8 years, believe simplicity should be a golden rule when writing your speech. He suggests twenty minutes should be the maximum time you should be speaking.

When you tell a story with your information, you are using which style of support?

Keeping your speech simple can be difficult. With audiences losing focus and only a short time to convey your message how can you be successful? We believe the answer is storytelling.

Tell a story that highlights your main point. Overloading you stories with unnecessary facts and figures will only lose your audience faster. Narrow your story down to the essential point. Your story will keep your audience engaged. Keeping it simple will also mean your audience will understand your message and remember it afterward.

Bring personality

Bringing your personality and letting your audience see a different side to you can improve your speeches. Sharing a personal story or one that shows emotion will get your audience on side and help build a repour with them.

When you tell a story with your information, you are using which style of support?

Why not tell a personal story of your own? This can be work-related or not. Poke fun at yourself or tell a story which might envoke emotion. Your audience will be grateful for it. Your audience will engage with your story and begin thinking about it from their own point of view. Stories have the ability to transport people to places they haven’t been for years.

Stories lets the audience identify with you. You stop being the remote expert and become one of them.

Here at All Good Tales we are passionate about stories and love to showcase brands and individual who we think are great at telling their story. We are currently doing great work for brands like Kingspan, Ancestry.com, and daa, to name just a few. We are building brand newsrooms, executing exciting PR strategies, and training key staff how to source, structure and tell great stories. For more information please click here or call Gaye on (01) 254 1845.

What are the 4 types of speeches?

The four basic types of speeches are: to inform, to instruct, to entertain, and to persuade. These are not mutually exclusive of one another. You may have several purposes in mind when giving your presentation.

When someone tells a story as part of a speech what type of supporting material is the speaker using?

When someone tells a story as part of a speech, what type of supporting material is the speaker using? Narrative.

What type of communication is a speech?

Oral communication is communicating with spoken words. It's a verbal form of communication where you communicate your thoughts, present ideas and share information. Examples of oral communication are conversations with friends, family or colleagues, presentations and speeches.

Which type of supporting material should you use if you want to dramatize a topic and get the audience to identify with the content in the speech?

Narratives, stories, and anecdotes are useful in speeches to interest the audience and clarify, dramatize, and emphasize ideas. They have, if done well, strong emotional power. They can be used in the introduction, the body, and the conclusion of the speech. They can be short, as anecdotes usually are.