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Toastmaster Magazine December 2024 Cover
Toastmaster Magazine December 2024 Cover

December 2024
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Consider Questions: A Speaker’s Best Tool

Think of questions as the Swiss Army knife of presenting.

By Matt Abrahams


Swiss army knife

What communication tool can you use to make your next presentation more effective and engaging? The answer is … a question. Questions are incredibly versatile tools. Think of questions as the Swiss Army knife of presenting. A well-timed question can accomplish myriad communication tasks, such as building intrigue, inviting audience engagement, helping you remember what to say and even calming your anxiety.

Leverage questions and you can become a more compelling and confident presenter. Here’s how:


Connect With Your Audience

Audience connection is the key characteristic distinguishing a memorable presenter from an average one. Are audience members actively collaborating with the speaker or passively listening to the speaker? Questions provide a great way to foster engagement because they are, by their very nature, dialogic—they’re two-way. You ask, and your audience responds. I recommend using three types of questions throughout your presentation to connect with your audience.


Rhetorical questions build intrigue.

Example: “Would you believe that com­panies are making robotic honeybees to pollinate crops in locales where bees are dying off?” Asking your audience a question for effect—rather than one you expect them to actually answer—prompts them to think about the issue.


Polling questions make the audience part of your point.

Example: “How many of you have ever been stung by a honey­bee?” When asking your audience to respond to your query, be sure to signal how you want them to do so. For example, you might model raising your hand as you ask your question or explain how the online poll works if you are presenting virtually. Then comment briefly on the response you get: “Just as I expected, about 50 percent of you … ”


“What if” questions root your presentation in time.

Example: “What would it be like if all crops were pollinated by robo-honeybees?” Or, “Remember when modern science made it possible for genetically modified vegetables to yield more crops?” Inquire about a possible future or the historical past, and as with rhetorical questions, you may not expect a literal response, but you focus your audience’s attention on the period you’re describing.


Build Your Confidence

Along with engaging your audience, questions build your confidence when preparing and delivering a speech. Many speakers are anxious because they feel they are under the harsh spotlight of an audience who is constantly evaluating them. But, interestingly, incorporating questions from the moment you start planning can help you feel more confident about every aspect of presenting. Here are three ways to use questions to improve your speech:


Ask yourself, “What does my audience need to hear from me?”

Instead of viewing speaking as a performance, think of it as being in service of your audience’s needs. This not only helps you tailor your message to your audience, but it also reminds you that they are the ones in the spotlight—shifting the attention away from you and onto your audience. Make this question your mantra as you prepare and practice your presentations.


Outline your talk using questions.

When writing your next outline, create a list of rhetorical questions to serve as prompts for what you intend to say. Example: “Why is science important to our society? Well, let’s focus on three reasons … ” The benefits of this type of question-based outline are twofold: First, it allows you to feel more confident because you know the answers to your questions; you won’t worry that you might not know what to say. Second, you will be more conversational, since you are simply answering your audience’s unasked questions. And conversational delivery is often better remembered by audiences.


Ask a “back pocket” question to give yourself a break.

If you forget what you want to say or simply need a minute to catch your breath, make use of a pre-planned question to occupy your audience while you re-center yourself. For example, when I teach, I sometimes need to regroup and adjust my lecture midway through. I will simply pause and ask my students the following question: “What is one idea or tool we have discussed so far that you can apply to your life?” While they reflect on this question, I check my notes, take a deep breath, etc.


The next time you are preparing and delivering a presentation, consider using the do-it-all communication tool: the question. This multifunctional device will tighten your connection to your audience, steady your nerves and create a more compelling speech.


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