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Community Tips For Public Speaking
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Community Tips For Public Speaking

Check out tips and tricks for public speaking from the testing community in this Testing Planet article

By the Testing Community

Recently on Twitter, Bruce (The Legend) @BruceOnlyBruce shared this question to get advice from the testing community on public speaking at conferences:

What are your best conference speaking tips?

Anything from beating nerves, bringing your coolest self, structuring slides, accessibility, preparedness, what’ve you got?

Tell me your secrets, speakers of twitter…

— Bruce (the legend) ✨ (@BruceOnlyBruce) November 3, 2021

The result was some fantastic advice around a range of topics when it comes to creating, practising and delivering a talk. So let’s take a look at some of the excellent ideas that were suggested:

Preparing a talk

One of the hardest parts of putting a talk together can be putting it all together. We might know the main goals of our talk, but how should we structure it? How should we arrange our slides? Fortunately, @mattwynne had some great advice for getting started:

Prepare your slides weeks ahead with a backbone of outlined points, one word / phrase per slide. Do that in one sitting so you nkow you're "ready" then iterate to make them fancier over the coming weeks.

Try and find a meetup or brown-bag session to run through and get feedback.

— Matt Wynne ✊🏿 (@mattwynne) November 3, 2021

@Simon_tomes shared a great way to frame a talk and kick start it with a bang:

Tip Idea 1: Jump straight in with a story that amplifies your key message. The audience will know you by the end of your talk - if not before via the schedule – so no intro required. Wrap up with your key message again to bookend the talk. It's all about that one message.

— Simon Tomes (@simon_tomes) November 3, 2021

@A11y_Ady also shared this point about ensuring your slides don’t get too cluttered:

I try to follow the 6 items or less for slides, pictures are good prompts for subjects. Also include your main contact info that way if someone takes a picture you are credited.
Remember to pause. I say, does that make sense to give me a pause / let folks think about your point

— Ady Stokes (@A11y_Ady) November 3, 2021

He also raised a point that a @heather_reiduff and @the_qa_guy also recommend about promoting yourself through your slides, making your talk more accessible and how to deal with those nervous sweats 😬

Twitter handle on every slide!

If you're prone to sweating when you're nervous (I am!) Wear looser fitting clothes and possibly have a spare tee or a scent to spray in the bag for after for freshening up.

You'll be awesome, legendary in fact 😉

— Heather Reid (@heather_reiduff) November 3, 2021

For the slides:
- I have a https://t.co/B2xu6tAQlZ link to the slides on the cover slide so people can follow on their own devices
- Also I have everything I say in the slide notes to help people with hearing issues
- Twitter handle and conference hashtag on every slide

— Tobias Geyer (@the_qa_guy) November 3, 2021

Practising a talk

Practising a talk before delivering it not only helps to familiarise ourselves with what we want to talk about. It can also help our confidence when we deliver it, or as @HannesLindblom shares:

Spend some extra time preparing and rehearsing the first few minutes of your presentation so you are sure to nail that. In that way, the initial nervosity have faded once you are into the rest of the talk.

— Hannes Lindblom (@HannesLindblom) November 3, 2021

So how do we go about practising our talks? @CAkehurstRyan and @Simon_tomes share two alternative approaches we can take:

Tip Idea 5: I think this can be a super personal choice). Practice your talk as much as you can. In front of yourself in a mirror. In front of a camera to watch it back. In front of someone else. Capture it on audio tape. Practice can be a huge help to test in pre-production.

— Simon Tomes (@simon_tomes) November 3, 2021

Get a friendly pal/s and give that presentation to them over and over! You get comfortable, can get feedback and start to find cool improvs with your content. It also helps with nerves as you’ve done this before, a few times!

— Callum Akehurst-Ryan (@CAkehurstRyan) November 3, 2021

@Simon_tomes also shared another benefit of practising around working out the best way to deliver our talks:

Tip Idea 3: Use your voice in various ways. Go fast, go slow, be loud, be quiet. Take on a different persona for a bit and see what happens. Find out how your arms and body move with your voice and see what's comfortable.

— Simon Tomes (@simon_tomes) November 3, 2021

Getting ready to speak

So the talk is ready and rehearsed, the time is come to speak and the nerves are starting to kick in. Here are some great tips to handle the nerves, from @EskoLuontola:

Before going on stage, tighten the muscles in your arms and upper body with all your strength, for example by trying to lift the chair you’re sitting on. Hold that for a minute or five, and then relax.

That should get rid of the physiological effects of nervousness.

— Esko Luontola (@EskoLuontola) November 4, 2021

@FionaCCharles shares a very practical, and important, piece of advice before getting ready:

If your slides have embedded video/audio, test it *yourself* in the presentation venue, preferably the day you present. Also, if (like me) you have issues with standing to speak ask for a high stool with a back & foot rest, plus a monitor you can easily see to track your slides.

— Fiona Charles (@FionaCCharles) November 3, 2021

And finally, @Simon_tomes suggests an idea that embraces the energy and nerves…

Tip Idea 4: Guzzle down a chocolate brownie and/or a tin of sugary delight as fast as possible about 15 minutes before your talk. The sugar buzz can be fun and kick in just when you need it! 😅

— Simon Tomes (@simon_tomes) November 3, 2021

Delivering the talk

Talking in front of a group of people, regardless of size, can be overwhelming. So it’s important to remember that it’s ok to make mistakes and that the audience is there to support you and learn. Which is exactly @m3tomlins and @FriendlyTester suggest:

For your own self-empowerment, it is acceptable to:
- not fully answer a question from the audience
- invite a disruptive audience member to stop or leave the room
- take a long pause while people view your slide content
- not share all your slides
- not have slides at all

— Mark Tomlinson (@m3tomlins) November 4, 2021

There are also some practical tips to keep in mind that @Gem_Hill and @Tazee_k share:

put your phone somewhere not on your body, because notifications will pile in from people mentioning you on twitter. You will almost definitely need to wear something with pockets for the mic pack.
Take a breath between slides to help you slow down.
Enjoy it!

— Gem Hill (@Gem_Hill) November 3, 2021

Talk slowly. Gives brain time to process werds

— Ben Williamson (@Tazee_k) November 3, 2021

What to do after speaking

Finally, @villabone has a great piece of advice to keep in mind wants the talk is over to let the dust settle and to take some time for yourself.

Get some 'you' time. Everyone will want a bit of you after the talk, it's perfectly OK to go off and find some 'you' time
Also, just be you, don't try to copy anyone, just be you, they've come to see you

— VillaBone (@villabone) November 3, 2021

Resources

All of the tips and tricks shared are incredibly useful when speaking, but there were also a lot of additional resources shared which can be found below:

https://seasidetesting.com/2021/03/13/tips-for-conference-proposals-and-sessions/ 

https://leanpub.com/presentationheuristics 

http://rethink-testing.co.uk/?p=158

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iwpi1Lm6dFo&ab_channel=TEDxTalks

https://presentationzen.blogs.com/presentationzen/2005/09/living_large_ta.html 

https://mindfultester.com/tweaking-my-workshop-accessibility/   

About the authors

This article is a co-curation effort based on ideas shared by:

@BruceOnlyBruce

@mattwynne

@simon_tomes

@A11y_Ady

@heather_reiduff

@the_qa_guy

@HannesLindblom

@CAkehurstRyan

@TheTestDoctor

@EskoLuontola

@FionaCCharles

@m3tomlins

@FriendlyTester

@Gem_Hill

@Tazee_k

@villabone

This article was curated by Mark Winteringham.

Tester, Toolsmith, Author and Instructor
Mark Winteringham is a tester, toolsmith and author of AI-Assisted Testing and Testing Web APIs, with over ten years of experience providing testing expertise on award-winning projects across a wide range of technology sectors, including BBC, Barclays, UK Government and Thomson Reuters. He is an advocate for modern risk-based testing practices and trains teams in Automation, Behaviour Driven Development and Exploratory testing techniques. He is also the co-founder of Ministry of Testing Essentials a community raising awareness of careers in testing and improving testing education. You can find him on Twitter @2bittester or at mwtestconsultancy.co.uk
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