Asked by jerry
make this short and casual Two reasons audience engagement matters in public speaking:
1. Engagement increases retention and comprehension—when listeners are actively involved, they are more likely to understand and remember key points.
2. Engagement builds credibility and motivates action—an engaged audience trusts the speaker more and is likelier to accept or act on the message.
Three strategies a speaker can use to keep an audience engaged:
- One effective strategy is sustained eye contact and purposeful body language to create rapport and signal confidence.
- One effective strategy is storytelling and use of concrete examples to make abstract ideas relatable and memorable.
- One effective strategy is asking rhetorical or direct questions to prompt mental involvement and maintain attention.
Real-life example:
- In her TED Talk “The Danger of a Single Story” (2009), Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie engaged her audience through personal anecdotes, clear narrative structure, humor, and direct address. She combined vivid stories with varied vocal pacing and well-timed pauses, used eye contact and expressive gestures, and posed rhetorical observations that prompted listeners to reconsider assumptions—resulting in a highly memorable and persuasive presentation.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Two quick reasons engagement matters:
- People remember and understand more when they’re involved.
- Engaged listeners trust you and are more likely to act.
Three easy ways to keep people hooked:
- Strong eye contact and confident body language.
- Tell stories and use concrete examples.
- Ask rhetorical or direct questions to pull them in.
Real example:
- Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s TED Talk “The Danger of a Single Story” — personal stories, clear structure, humor, varied pacing, eye contact and gestures, plus rhetorical points that made it memorable.
- People remember and understand more when they’re involved.
- Engaged listeners trust you and are more likely to act.
Three easy ways to keep people hooked:
- Strong eye contact and confident body language.
- Tell stories and use concrete examples.
- Ask rhetorical or direct questions to pull them in.
Real example:
- Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s TED Talk “The Danger of a Single Story” — personal stories, clear structure, humor, varied pacing, eye contact and gestures, plus rhetorical points that made it memorable.
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