So how can we make sure our audiences always get what they came for? Prepare your message by answering four simple questions.
Question #1: Why is the audience listening?
Sure the speaker speaks for a reason, a goal, a purpose, but the more important question is, “Why did the audience show up? Why did they come to listen?” What is the audience expecting from the speaker? What do they expect to gain or learn from attending? What do they want? The audience came for a reason. Give them what they came for and you will satisfy them every time. Know their expectation, then meet it or beat it.
Question #2: What do you want the audience to know when you are done?
What is the audience expecting to learn from attending your presentation? While it is true that some speakers speak to an audience to purely entertain them, in most cases, the audience expects to learn something from attending. Know what the audience wants to learn and then make certain you deliver the information with interpretations, explanations, and applications to develop their full understanding.
Question #3: How do you want the audience to feel about your topic?
In business we don’t often focus on feelings because this is business! We stay focused on the bottom line and making well-informed, logical decisions based on research. While you will get no disagreement from me on making informed decisions in business, we cannot discount the fact that we are speaking to humans. All humans have feelings, yes, even you. That is part of what makes us human. Do you want the audience to feel excited, proud, confident, humbled, appreciative, inspired? When you know the feelings you hope to generate, you can develop your message to align with those emotions.
Question #4: What do you expect the audience to do after attending?
If you give them what they came for, you have informed them thoroughly, and you have generated the desired feeling, the audience will want to know the next step. What do they need to do once they leave your meeting or presentation? What do you want them to do? When an audience can logically agree with your information and they have a strong feeling associated with it, they are much more likely to take the next step as long as they know what that step is. Make sure you define the next step for them. The easier you make the next step, the more likely the audience is to take it.