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How to Up Your Speaking Game and Convey Your Message More Effectively w/Tricia Brouk

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Few platforms allow us to share our message like speaking engagements. How do we do them right, so we can make the biggest possible impact? 

What can we do to create a better sense of connection with our audiences? More importantly, how can we get comfortable in front of an audience in the first place? 

In this episode, Executive Producer of TEDXLincolnSquare and author of The Influential Voice, Tricia Brouk shares how to get better at communicating with an audience.

“To go from a good speaker to a great one, you have to understand that everything you do is being observed by the audience.”

-Tricia Brouk

Three Things You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • How to coexist with our fears of being on stage
    We’re not likely to ever completely get over stage fright, so how can we get to a point where fear isn’t stopping us from connecting with an audience? 
  • How to boost our credibility as speakers
    When can we start positioning ourselves as experts whose voices on a subject matter?
  • How to be vulnerable with an audience without making them feel bad
    Is it possible to pull on heartstrings without losing the point of our message?

Guest Bio- 

Tricia Brouk is an international award-winning director. She founded The Big Talk Academy and served as the executive producer of TEDxLincolnSquare until August 2019. She curates the Speaker Salon in NYC, hosts The Big Talk, an award-winning podcast, and her book, The Influential Voice: Saying What You Mean For Lasting Legacy was #1 new release pre-order on Amazon.

To find out more, go to her: WebsiteThe Art of the Big TalkPodcastLinkedIn |Facebook | Instagram

And to get a copy of The Influential Voice: Saying What You Mean For Lasting Legacy, click here. 

 

This Show was Made Possible By: 


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Dana Malstaff

Dana Malstaff

Dana Malstaff is the Founder of Boss Mom and creator Nurture to Convert.
She is a mother, author, speaker, messaging strategist, podcaster, blind spot reducer, and movement maker. She believes that too many brilliant moms are struggling to figure out how to grow their business while balancing all that is required to be a good mom, partner, and woman. So many moms are trying to grow their business using trends that feel inauthentic and aren't realistic for their inconsistent schedules. She has helped thousands of women become known for their brain and not their dance moves