Five Daily Public Speaking Exercises to Boost Your Speaking Skills

As a public speaking coach, I understand that you might not find yourself in public speaking situations every day. However, you still want to improve as a speaker. In this article, I’ll introduce you to the best exercises you can practice on your own or with friends to enhance your speaking abilities.

Exercise 1: Count Up to 20

This exercise focuses on your delivery, body language, voice, and hand gestures, all combined into one. Here’s what you need to do:

  1. Count up to 20 from 1 to 20, practicing various hand gestures, voice tones, and speeds with each count.
  2. Experiment with pointing at objects in your surroundings while counting.
  3. Play with your delivery, body language, and facial expressions during the exercise.

Remember, this exercise helps you work on your overall delivery, making it more engaging and impactful.

Exercise 2: Hi, My Name Is…

This exercise helps you stay present, comfortable with your space, and grounded during speaking. Follow these steps:

  1. Take a deep breath before and after saying, “Hi, my name is Your Name.”
  2. Maintain eye contact with the audience or an object you’re looking at, even after saying your name.
  3. Embrace the power of silence at the end of the sentence to exude confidence.

Practice this exercise in various scenarios, such as on phone calls, Zoom meetings, or at the beginning of any conversation. The breaths at the beginning and end add impact to your speech.

Exercise 3: I Am the World’s Best…

This exercise focuses on improving your vocal variety. Complete the sentence “I am the world’s best…” with different statements, varying your tone, pitch, and pace each time.

  1. Say the sentence with different volumes – louder and softer.
  2. Experiment with higher and lower pitches.
  3. Play around with the speed of your speech, going faster or slower.
  4. Utilize strategic pauses to add emphasis and variation to your speech.

This exercise enhances your vocal delivery, making your speech more engaging and dynamic.

Exercise 4: Box Breathing

Box breathing is a relaxation technique used by the US Navy to stay composed under pressure. Here’s how to do it:

  1. Breathe in for four seconds.
  2. Hold your breath for four seconds.
  3. Breathe out for four seconds.
  4. Hold your breath again for four seconds.
  5. Repeat the cycle.

This exercise helps you relax and maintain composure, which is vital for effective public speaking.

Exercise 5: Prep Questions

Although not spoken aloud, these prep questions are crucial for preparing for any speaking engagement:

  1. Who is my audience, and what do they want?
  2. What are my audience’s expectations from me?
  3. What are my target points for the presentation, and what do I need to prepare?

Answering these questions will help you understand your audience better and formulate more relevant and engaging content.

In conclusion, these five daily public speaking exercises are designed to help you grow as a speaker. By practicing them regularly, you can gain a competitive advantage and significantly improve your speaking skills. Remember, these exercises are time-efficient and can be easily integrated into your daily routine. So, invest in your speaking abilities and watch your confidence and impact soar!

If you’re interested in further tips to enhance your public speaking, check out my video “Five Tips to Help You Improve Your Public Speaking.” Happy speaking!

3 Daily Public Speaking Exercises

You become what you consistently practice so practice consistently for the person you want to become public speaking is one of those things that is very hard to hold yourself accountable to if you’re running a marathon with a friend, there’s a clear goal run the marathon and if Your friend knocks on your door at 5:00am

Are you going to get out of your house and run that marathon, but with public speaking? It’s a lot trickier because it’s harder for you to do those types of exercises without that clear goal, and that’s exactly why this week’s episode of the master talk will be elaborating on my three daily exercises to help you master your talk on a daily basis.

Hi everyone, I hope, you’re having a fantastic week Brendan from the master talk here and today we are talking about the daily practices. So, let’s get into number one. The random word exercise. I absolutely love this drill, because, if you can master it, you’ll be in the top 1 % of public speakers.

The random exercise is simple: all you do is you have a friend give you a random word in the dictionary that you need to then build an introduction from this is very interesting, because, if you’re able to master this you’ll have a lot less stress in presentations, you’ll also learn to think on your feet.

Faster and you’ll be able to give presentations like spontaneous ones, specifically out of the cusp. I know this is recording and I might be cheating, but let’s use the camera as an example to demonstrate these shots.

The shots that you take don’t just picture their experiences. Their moments don’t just last for yesterday for today or even tomorrow, but for a lifetime of shots, as you can see from the way that I just created a random introduction from the camera.

You can then use that for multiple different words and practice. Five words for five minutes: every single day, number two forced silence, drills. The biggest difference between great speakers and exceptional ones, is their ability to use silences as a way to make their present better and for silence.

Drills help you make those differences by making your silence is better and more strategic in your presentations, so the exercise is very simpler and it’s a lot easier to do with the partner. All you do.

Are you have a partner record. You give a presentation right so you’re, giving the presentation for a minute or two and then in the second recording of the presentation. Your partner is then going to point at you at specific parts of the presentation where he wants you to pause like so and then, as you’re speaking when you watch both recordings, you will be shocked to see that the second recording sounds so much better with silences.

In them, this done on a daily basis will help. You believe that silences will make you better and will also help you strategically weave them into your presentations. So you can become world-class number three.

The endless gaze building upon my last tip about for silence, drills exceptional speakers can pause not just for two, three, or five seconds, but for a long period of time, whether that time happens to be 30 seconds or even a couple of minutes.

So the endless gaze exercise is very simple: the next time you’re practicing silence drills with your partner. Don’t just pause them for a couple of seconds, but pause them for very long periods of time since you’re the only member of the audience.

Your partner is forced to just look at you for that period of time and not make it look awkward and just keep looking at you endlessly, and that way by mastering your endless gaze you’ll be able to gaze into the eyes of your audiences for an indefinite Period of time, as always, if you enjoyed this week’s episode of the master talk, be sure to smash that, like button and subscribe to the YouTube channel as well, to see more videos like this and if there’s anything I’ll leave you off with its this, you become what You consistently practice so as long as you use these tips to get better on a daily basis.

I believe you’ll be 10 steps closer to mastering your public speaking. Everyone has a fantastic week and see you next time.

Source : Youtube