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Ted Talks: The Official TED Guide to Public Speaking Paperback – April 4, 2017
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A must-read insider’s guide to creating unforgettable speeches and changing people's minds.
Done right, a talk can electrify a room and transform an audience’s worldview; it can be more powerful than anything in written form. This “invaluable guide” (Publishers Weekly) explains how the miracle of powerful public speaking is achieved, and equips you to give it your best shot. There is no set formula, but there are tools that can empower any speaker.
Since taking over TED in 2001, Chris Anderson has worked with all the TED speakers who have inspired us the most, and here he shares insights from such favorites as Sir Ken Robinson, Salman Khan, Monica Lewinsky, and more— everything from how to craft your talk’s content to how you can be most effective on stage.
- Print length288 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarper Business
- Publication dateApril 4, 2017
- Dimensions5.31 x 0.72 x 8 inches
- ISBN-101328710289
- ISBN-13978-1328710284
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“The TED Talk has reinvented the art of rhetoric for the 21st century. Goodbye to windy academese, scientific gobbledygook, pompous moralizing, powerpoint chloroform – we now know that “ideas worth spreading” can indeed be spread far and wide, and with clarity and panache. Behind this revolution lies Chris Anderson, who had a vision that powerful ideas can improve the world and has developed a coherent philosophy and a set of guidelines for compelling communication. This book may restore rhetoric to its time-honored place as one of the essential skills of an educated citizen.” —Steven Pinker, Johnstone Professor of Psychology, Harvard University, and author of HOW THE MIND WORKS and THE SENSE OF STYLE “Nobody in the world better understands the art and science of public speaking than Chris Anderson. He has nurtured, coaxed, and encouraged so many speakers over the years (myself included) — helping us to bring forth our very best performances onstage, even when we were at our most nervous and overwhelmed. He is the absolutely perfect person to have written this book, and it will be a gift to many.” —Elizabeth Gilbert, bestselling author of BIG MAGIC and THE SIGNATURE OF ALL THINGS “This is not just the most insightful book ever written on public speaking—it’s also a brilliant, profound look at how to communicate. If you ever plan to utter a sound, this is a must-read. It gives me hope that words can actually change the world.” —Adam Grant, Wharton professor and New York Times bestselling author of GIVE AND TAKE and ORIGINALS “Over the past 25 years, TED has revitalized the whole world of conferences and speaking events. Here for the first time, Chris Anderson and the TED leadership team set out all they've learnt about the dos and don'ts of public speaking. An essential read for all event organizers and speakers. Is there a single recipe for a great speech? Of course not. But there are some essential ingredients, which the TED team sets out here with concision, verve and wit (which are also some of the ingredients). An inspiring, contemporary guide to the venerable arts of oratory.” —Sir Ken Robinson, best-selling author of THE ELEMENT, OUT OF OUR MINDS, and CREATIVE SCHOOLS. “The TED Talk may well be the defining essay genre of our time: what the pamphlet was to the 18th-century, and the newspaper Op-Ed was to the twentieth. TED Talks is the guidebook to this new language, written by the man who made into it a global force.” —Steven Johnson, bestselling author of HOW WE GOT TO NOW “Anderson shares the secrets behind the best TED presentations, believing that anyone can be taught the skills to deliver a compelling speech—TED-style or otherwise. It’s all presented very naturally and with an upbeat, positive tone …. readers will be able to use the techniques for any manner of public speaking.” —Booklist “[Anderson] covers important topics such as making a personal connection with audiences, explaining complicated subjects to laypeople, priming people to accept counterintuitive ideas, and cultivating a sense of showmanship. He also addresses aspects of preparation, such as knowing what vocal styles to avoid, planning attire, and managing nervousness.This is an invaluable guide to effective presentations, and catnip for all the TED fans out there.” —Publishers Weekly —
About the Author
CHRIS ANDERSON is the curator of TED. Trained as a journalist after graduating from Oxford University, Anderson launched a number of successful magazines before turning his attention to TED, which he and his nonprofit acquired in 2001. His TED mantra—“ideas worth spreading”—continues to blossom on an international scale. He lives with his family in New York City.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
1
Presentation Literacy: The Skill You Can Build
You’re nervous, right?
Stepping out onto a public stage and having hundreds of pairs of eyes turned your way is terrifying. You dread having to stand up in a company meeting and present your project. What if you get nervous and stumble over your words? What if you completely forget what you were going to say? Maybe you’ll be humiliated! Maybe your career will crater! Maybe the idea you believe in will stay buried forever!
These are thoughts that can keep you up at night.
But with the right mindset, you can use your fear as an incredible asset. It can be the driver that will persuade you to prepare for a talk properly.
That’s what happened when Monica Lewinsky came to TED. For her, the stakes couldn’t have been higher. Seventeen years earlier, she had been through the most humiliating public exposure imaginable, an experience so intense it almost broke her. Now she was attempting a return to a more visible public life, to reclaim her narrative.
But she was not an experienced public speaker, and she knew that it would be disastrous if she messed up. She told me:
"Nervous is too mild a word to describe how I felt. More like . . . Gutted with trepidation. Bolts of fear. Electric anxiety. If we could have harnessed the power of my nerves that morning, I think the energy crisis would have been solved. Not only was I stepping out onto a stage in front of an esteemed and brilliant crowd, but it was also videotaped, with the high likelihood of being made public on a widely viewed platform. I was visited by the echoes of lingering trauma from years of having been publicly ridiculed. Plagued by a deep insecurity I didn’t belong on the TED stage. That was the inner experience against which I battled."
And yet Monica found a way to turn that fear around. She used some surprising techniques, which I’ll share in chapter 15. Suffice it to say, they worked. Her talk won a standing ovation at the event, rocketed to a million views within a few days, and earned rave reviews online. It even prompted a public apology to her from a longtime critic, feminist author Erica Jong.
Indeed, everywhere you look, there are stories of people who were terrified of public speaking but found a way to become really good at it, from Eleanor Roosevelt to Warren Buffett to Princess Diana, who was known to all as “shy Di” and hated giving speeches, but found a way to speak informally in her own voice, and the world fell in love with her.
THE DAY TED MIGHT HAVE DIED
Here’s a story from my own life: When I first took over leadership of TED in late 2001, I was reeling from the near collapse of the company I had spent fifteen years building, and I was terrified of another huge public failure. I had been struggling to persuade the TED community to back my vision for TED, and I feared that it might just fizzle out. Back then, TED was an annual conference in California, owned and hosted by a charismatic architect named Richard Saul Wurman, whose larger-than-life presence infused every aspect of the conference. About eight hundred people attended every year, and most of them seemed resigned to the fact that TED probably couldn’t survive once Wurman departed. The TED conference of February 2002 was the last one to be held under his leadership, and I had one chance and one chance only to persuade TED attendees that the conference would continue just fine. I had never run a conference before, however, and despite my best efforts over several months at marketing the following year’s event, only seventy people had signed up for it.
Early on the last morning of that conference, I had 15 minutes to make my case. And here’s what you need to know about me: I am not naturally a great speaker. I say um and you know far too often. I will stop halfway through a sentence, trying to find the right word to continue. I can sound overly earnest, soft-spoken, conceptual. My quirky British sense of humor is not always shared by others.
I was so nervous about this moment, and so worried that I would look awkward on the stage, that I couldn’t even bring myself to stand. Instead I rolled forward a chair from the back of the stage, sat on it, and began.
I look back at that talk now and cringe—a lot. If I were critiquing it today, there are a hundred things I would change, starting with the wrinkly white T-shirt I was wearing. And yet . . . I had prepared carefully what I wanted to say, and I knew there were at least some in the audience desperate for TED to survive. If I could just give those supporters a reason to get excited, perhaps they would turn things around. Because of the recent dot-com bust, many in the audience had suffered business losses as bad as my own. Maybe I could connect with them that way?
I spoke from the heart, with as much openness and conviction as I could summon. I told people I had just gone through a massive business failure. That I’d come to think of myself as a complete loser. That the only way I’d survived mentally was by immersing myself in the world of ideas. That TED had come to mean the world to me—that it was a unique place where ideas from every discipline could be shared. That I would do all in my power to preserve its best values. That, in any case, the conference had brought such intense inspiration and learning to us that we couldn’t possibly let it die . . . could we?
Oh, and I broke the tension with an apocryphal anecdote about France’s Madame de Gaulle and how she shocked guests at a diplomatic dinner by expressing her desire for “a penis.” In England, I said, we also had that desire, although there we pronounced it happiness, and TED had brought genuine happiness my way.
To my utter amazement, at the end of the talk, Jeff Bezos, the head of Amazon, who was seated in the center of the audience, rose to his feet and began clapping. And the whole room stood with him. It was as if the TED community had collectively decided, in just a few seconds, that it would support this new chapter of TED after all. And in the 60-minute break that followed, some 200 people committed to buying passes for the following year’s conference, guaranteeing its success.
Product details
- Publisher : Harper Business; Reprint edition (April 4, 2017)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 288 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1328710289
- ISBN-13 : 978-1328710284
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.31 x 0.72 x 8 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #18,552 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #9 in Public Speaking Reference
- #14 in Running Meetings & Presentations (Books)
- #73 in Communication Skills
- Customer Reviews:
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Customers find the book informative and well-written, with a conversational style that helps develop public speaking skills. They appreciate its step-by-step approach to preparation and consider it worth the money. The content quality receives mixed feedback, with one customer noting it provides a solid foundation while another finds it repetitive.
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Customers find the book informative and insightful, providing good guidance on public speaking.
"...It is detailed and thorough, yet not difficult or dry. It has five sections (Foundation, Talk Tools, Preparation Process, On Stage, & Reflection)...." Read more
"...of vulnerability brings the audience to your side -- to the technical and specific -- e.g. busy patterns on shirts come out looking funny on video...." Read more
"...Simple and straight to the point Anderson encourages readers of all walks in life to how to effectively convey a message to our listeners...." Read more
"...As I worked my way through Anderson’s thoughtful and thought-provoking material, I was reminded of the research on peak performance that Anders..." Read more
Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as a marvelous and satisfying read, particularly noting its value for educators.
"...It has been one of the most satisfying reads on the subject yet. I recommend that if you get only one book on public speaking, let it be this one...." Read more
"...we have to do this now, siiiigh." It turned out to be a compelling enough read to have me blaze through it in one sitting, way past my..." Read more
"This is a fantastic book. A great read for anyone looking for specifics in how to improve their speaking (professional or otherwise) abilities. 👍..." Read more
"...This book had some good information, and I enjoyed reading through as it helps me understand aspects of TED events...." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, noting its conversational style and effectiveness in developing public speaking skills.
"...The Official TED Guide to Public Speaking is beautifully and thoughtfully put together. It is detailed and thorough, yet not difficult or dry...." Read more
"..."TED Talks: The Official Guide to Public Speaking" is wonderfully written...." Read more
"I'm fascinated with the ability to tell stories...." Read more
"A unique guide for those who want to develop the art of public speaking, master any weaknesses and develop ideas that can greatly contribute to..." Read more
Customers find the book easy to prepare for public speaking, with helpful examples and step-by-step guidance, and one customer mentions becoming more prepared after reading the entire book.
"...It has five sections (Foundation, Talk Tools, Preparation Process, On Stage, & Reflection)...." Read more
"...Simple and straight to the point Anderson encourages readers of all walks in life to how to effectively convey a message to our listeners...." Read more
"...Here are his concluding thoughts: “In the end, it’s quite simple. We are physically connected to each other like never before...." Read more
"...The examples, tips, and advice are written out in an easy way for anyone to understand and relate to, whether that person wants to give a TED talk..." Read more
Customers find the book worth every penny.
"...Robinson, Elizabeth Gilbert, Jill Bolte-Taylor -- are alone worth the price of admission...." Read more
"...renewing my library copy to go over points, and decided it was worth the investment to buy and keep my own copy...." Read more
"...talk - it can be hard, uncomfortable, and unfamiliar, but it's well worth it...." Read more
"...if you never expect to speak on the TED Stage or any other, the book still has value...." Read more
Customers find the book powerful, with one mentioning its formulae for success and another noting its remarkable success.
"...to public speaking, but Anderson makes the argument that it is the most efficient and effective way to communicate an idea publicly in our generation..." Read more
"...This is by far the most powerful book I have ever read on the subject of speaking and presenting...." Read more
"...from their front row seats on why and how TED talks work and work so well...." Read more
"...and its advice gave me the confidence to deliver my talk with remarkable success...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the content quality of the book, with some finding it solid with examples from TED talks, while others note it becomes repetitive.
"...anything else, what matters is that speakers are comfortable and confident, giving the talk in a way that best allows them to focus on what they’re..." Read more
"It's ok. Not great as I expected, but still decent. A bit too many TED stories for me. Could be more focused on actual techniques." Read more
"...for those who want to develop the art of public speaking, master any weaknesses and develop ideas that can greatly contribute to their personal..." Read more
"...It gives you a solid foundation to build on. Highly recommended!!" Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on May 6, 2016TED Talks are a unique and marvelous gift to the world. They have transformed the public speaking landscape; they have certainly upgraded my world-view.
It is therefore easy to predict that a book authored by the most visible face of, and the driving force behind TED Talks is destined to become a ubiquitous guide book—perhaps eventually become a classic.
I have studied many books on public speaking. I pre-ordered this one the moment I heard of it. It has been one of the most satisfying reads on the subject yet. I recommend that if you get only one book on public speaking, let it be this one. I further recommend that no matter how many other books you have on public speaking, if you are a serious student of this engaging art, then get this book.
The Official TED Guide to Public Speaking is beautifully and thoughtfully put together. It is detailed and thorough, yet not difficult or dry. It has five sections (Foundation, Talk Tools, Preparation Process, On Stage, & Reflection). It is simultaneously pragmatic and inspiring—can’t put it down. I badly want to highlight, make notes, visit links etc., & yet I don’t because I can’t get myself to stop reading—even though very little is new to me! For sure, I will have to read this book repeatedly!
The first four sections are excellent, but it is the last section, “Reflections” that takes the book to another level. Here the author exquisitely shares his stories; how he first got exposed to TED, and his subsequent voyage to the present. It is a magical TED Talk like experience. It is the best part of the book. Only after completing this section did I get a fuller understanding of why TED has become the phenomenon it has.
If you are already knowledgeable about public speaking, I recommend you start out by reading this section first. Here are some of my highlights
• I wish to persuade you of something: That however much public speaking skills matter today, they’re going to matter even more in the future.
• There was an exhilaration in learning how many different types of expertise there were in the world.
• On day three, something really strange happened. My overstimulated brain began sparking like a lightning storm. Every time a new speaker got up and spoke, it felt like a new thunderbolt of wisdom. Ideas from one talk would connect in a thrilling way with something shared by others two days earlier.
• For my entire entrepreneurial life, my mantra has been to follow the passion. Not my passion—other people’s.
• Passion was a proxy for potential.
• We must distinguish knowledge from understanding. The key to understanding anything was to understand the context in which it sat … It is only by looking at that larger pattern that you gain actual understanding.
• So actually what made TED work was not really just the synergy between technology, entertainment, and design. It was actually the connectedness of all knowledge.
• In the years since then, I’ve become evermore convinced of the significance of the connectedness of knowledge.
• A deeper understanding of our own humanity comes not from listening to your parents or your friends, nor to psychologists, neuroscientists, historians, evolutionary biologists, anthropologists, or spiritual teachers. It comes from listening to all of them.
• We’re entering an era where we all need to spend a lot more time learning from each other.
• The revolution in public speaking is something everyone can be part of. If we can find a way to truly listen to each other, to learn from each other, the future glitters with promise.
In the first 4 sections, (Foundation, Talk Tools, Preparation Process, & On Stage) the author treats the material with even-handed erudition. He discusses common traps. His explanation and evangelization of “the throughline” is excellent, and solidified with examples from TED talks. He conveys the idea of a talk being a journey compellingly. He provides a checklist. He discusses five core tools—connection, narration, explanation, persuasion, and revelation—very well.
The author shines through as wise, thorough, and helpful; committed to sharing everything without holding back, without taking sides, or being preachy or superior.
I will cover one chapter in detail to show that this is so. Chapter 11 discusses scripting vs. not scripting, and memorizing vs. reading. Here the author shares lessons learned from the past and how they found it best not to be too rigid in rules on talk delivery, even though the rules generally make sense. He talks about a phase in preparation called the “Uncanny Valley” where everything is super-close to seeming real but is not quite there. Here are some of my highlights:
• There are many ways to prepare for and deliver a TED talk, and it’s important to find the one that’s right for you.
• More than anything else, what matters is that speakers are comfortable and confident, giving the talk in a way that best allows them to focus on what they’re passionate about.
• Today we don’t have set rules. We just have suggestions for helping speakers find the mode of delivery that will be most powerful for them.
• So what I’d say to speakers planning to memorize their talks is this: “That’s great. You’re giving yourself the best chance for a huge hit. But it is absolutely essential to take yourself through the Uncanny Valley and don’t get stuck there. If you’re not willing to commit to do that, do not memorize!”
• There’s a lot to be said for going unscripted. It can sound fresh, alive, real, like your thinking out loud … But it is important to distinguish between unscripted and unprepared. In an important talk there’s no excuse for the latter.
• Frankly the old-fashioned method of a set of punchy notes handwritten on cards is still a decent way to keep yourself on track.
• TED speakers have widely different opinions, by the way, on whether a memorized script or a prepared talk-in-the-moment is the better way to go.
• Dan Gilbert—A great talk is both scripted and improvisational. It is precisely like a great jazz performance.
• Rehearse your impromptu remarks … If everything in a talk leads in perfect lockstep fashion towards its conclusion, it wins points for logic but can leave the audience feeling as though they have been on a forced march rather than a pleasant, companionable walk.
• The majority of TED speakers do in fact script their whole talk and memorize it, and do their best to avoid letting it sound memorized.
Every chapter is equally strong. I repeat, this is a book absolutely worth owning. It is an excellent Go-To Guide book and a source of inspiration.
The author is also refreshingly blunt on occasion:
• If you’ve picked up this book because you love the idea of strutting the stage and being a TED Talk star, inspiring audiences with your charisma, please, put it down right now … Style without substance is awful.
• If you have dreams of being a rock-star public speaker, pumping your audience as you stride the stage and proclaim your brilliance, I beg you to reconsider … Inspiration can’t be performed. It’s an audience response to authenticity, courage, selfless work and genuine wisdom.
On occasion the author passes the baton to an expert colleague—to cover a subject—and then takes it back and continues. It’s a nice touch.
• Tom Rielly tells us, in his own words, about visuals and graphics—in all its technical glory.
• Kelly Stoetzel tells us, in her own words, on how to handle wardrobe stress—the last thing we need.
These lines jumped out and stuck with me:
• Done right, a talk is more powerful then anything in written form.
• Today in the connected era, we should resurrect the noble art and make it education’s fourth R: reading, ’riting, ’rithmetic … and rhetoric.
• Once people have been primed, it’s much easier to make your main argument. And how do you do that? By using the most noble tool of them all, a tool that can wield the most impact over the very long term. And its named using an old-fashioned philosophical word that I love: Reason.
• Most people are capable of being convinced by logic, but they aren’t always energized by it. And without being energized, they may quickly forget the argument and move on.
• Not every talk that is reason based will see immediate success. These talks are generally harder to process than some others, and they may not be the most popular. But I believe they are amongst the most important talks on our site, because reason is the best way of building wisdom for the long term.
• The Pinker/Goldstein dialogue may be the single most important argument contained in a TED talk, yet as of 2015 it has fewer than 1 million views. Reason is not a fast-growing weed but a slow-growing oak tree.
• At TED, most of our talks are told in more conversational language. But the ability to paint a compelling picture of the future is truly one of the greatest gifts a speaker can bring.
• Having no slides at all is better than bad slides.
• We’re planning to introduce more debate to future TED events.
On one occasion I found myself disagreeing a bit with the author. Given that Mr. Chris Anderson is the world’s foremost subject matter expert, I’m probably wrong, but I thought I’d mention it anyway. The author appears to be more accepting of the use of notes than he is of teleprompters or confidence monitors. I find this a little puzzling because the same principle should apply for all three. The golden rule when using notes is “Don’t read and speak at the same time.” I struggle to see why this cannot be applied to confidence monitors and teleprompters too.
What has alternately been called “power reading / see-stop-say technique / Churchill-Roosevelt-Reagan method” goes like this:
1. Look at the line you are about to read (from notes, computer monitor, confidence monitor or teleprompter) and take an imaginary snapshot of them.
2. Bring your head up and/or face the audience
3. Pause.
4. Look at an audience member, establish connection, and conversationally deliver the words, as if speaking to only one person.
5. Look down at the next chunk of words and take the next snapshot
6. Repeat
There is no fake eye contact or inauthenticity if this is done well. It also requires that reading notes be made differently. The main idea is “never let words come out of your mouth when your eyes are on your notes, or the teleprompter, or the computer/confidence monitor.” If interested, more details can be seen in chapter 12 of the James Humes’ book Speak Like Churchill, Stand like Lincoln.
I hope you enjoy this book as much as I did. I am certain that you can get as much value from it as I did. I thank the author for giving yet another gift to the world.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2016A friend told me about this book as I was in the midst of preparing for a TEDx talk. I picked it up with the same enthusiasm a 5th grader has for homework: "Guess we have to do this now, siiiigh." It turned out to be a compelling enough read to have me blaze through it in one sitting, way past my bedtime.
As head of TED, not only has Chris Anderson seen a lot of extraordinary speakers, but also a lot of terrible ones. So he knows the ingredients of both great and mediocre speaking, and how to transform the latter into the former. He presents a highly structured framework useful for beginners all the way to seasoned professionals:
• Foundation: presentation literacy; idea building; common traps to avoid; and the all-important throughline
• Talk Tools: connection; narration; explanation; persuasion; revelation
• Preparation: visuals; scripting; run-throughs; the open and the close
• On Stage: wardrobe; mental prep; setup; voice and presence.
Anderson does a particularly deft job of explaining the throughline concept and emphasizing its importance. So many talks and pitches miss this point, consequently making only a fraction of their potential impact. What holds together the disparate elements of the talk? Without a clear throughline, listeners may never take any of your lovely ideas home with them.
The advice in this book ranges from the lofty and overarching -- e.g. a show of vulnerability brings the audience to your side -- to the technical and specific -- e.g. busy patterns on shirts come out looking funny on video. You may want to speak your talk and transcribe *that* instead of writing it out first. As a professional speaker and speaking coach, I really appreciate how Anderson has compiled many trade secrets that are understood unconsciously but haven't necessarily been articulated all in one spot. And the illustrative examples drawn from all-time greatest TED talks -- Sir Ken Robinson, Elizabeth Gilbert, Jill Bolte-Taylor -- are alone worth the price of admission.
If you are a professional speaker or an aspiring one, this is a supremely useful reference. I applaud that one of the main themes of the book is to *serve your audience*. If you only do that, all your talks can only improve. And special thanks to Chris, for being kind enough to release this book just in time for my 3rd TEDx talk :)
-- Ali Binazir, M.D., M.Phil., Speaking Coach & Pitch Doctor, KNP Communications; author, The Tao of Dating: The Smart Woman's Guide to Being Absolutely Irresistible, the highest-rated dating book on Amazon for 4+ years
- Reviewed in the United States on June 6, 2017Ever dreamed of polishing your verbal communication skills? Or somehow choose the correct set of words almost as in a formula, to impact those who are listening to you? Well look no further, Chris Anderson's "TED Talks: The Official Guide to Public Speaking" is wonderfully written. Simple and straight to the point Anderson encourages readers of all walks in life to how to effectively convey a message to our listeners. Almost as a how to, Anderson includes do's and don't's in a logical fashion to understand why certain methods don't work.
I ordered this book because I am a Communication graduate, I felt compelled to brush up on presenting ideas better to my audience. No matter where we are in life, we will always be interacting with others. In my short work experience, those opportunities where dealing with public and how do I communicate an idea to them was always present in my life. I am glad I purchased this book, and will be one of those books you always keep around. I do suggest however as another reviewer mentioned to start reading from chapter 19 first, then proceed to the first chapters. I highly recommend this book, for personal gain or as a gift to someone. You might never know and end up as a TED speaker!
Top reviews from other countries
- Elizabeth RanaganReviewed in France on January 2, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars Not just for TEDTalks
Excellent book for whoever wants to excel in public speaking whether it be a TEDTalk or a school project. A must-have!
- CustomerReviewed in India on October 25, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Good book
Nice book for learning about speaking skills
-
J RAMON LACALLE REMIGIOReviewed in Spain on January 16, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Un no-recetario sobre cómo hablar en público
Cómo hablar en público se ha convertido en una temática que cuenta con un apreciable número de título. Muchos de esos libros ofrecen vagos consejos al lector sobre cómo debe preparar su presentación al público. Otros, por el contrario, incurren en la pedantería de referirse a los principios aristotélicos de la retórica; lo cual no está más, pero el lector medio necesita algo más concreto, y sobre todo práctico.
En este libro, Anderson comenta, describe, interpreta y presenta las principales recomendaciones que ofrecen a los conferenciantes que participan en las conferencias TED. Para ello, recurre a numerosos ejemplos, tomados de las propias conferencias. Posiblemente, si queremos preparar nuestra propia conferencia, no se adaptará al formato TED. Sin embargo, nos serán de enorme utilidad la mayoría de las ideas que el autor recoge en sus páginas.
A su utilidad le añadiría que está redactado con un estilo sencillo y ameno. Por esa razón, es fácil leerlo en pocas horas. Aunque más bien creo que no es un libro de lectura, sino más bien de consulta para todo el que quiera mejorar su competencia para convencer, animar o implicar a un auditorio, hablando en público.
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in Australia on January 6, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars A great book for preachers
I wasn’t shocked in the last chapter to discover the authors father was a Christian missionary.
As I was reading the book I was encouraging other preachers to read this book to help them better understand the format of an effective sermon, and the delivery.
Motivational speakers, in my opinion are simply imitating preachers of old. TED Talks is a book for preachers with the most important subject left out- Jesus
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ValeriaReviewed in Germany on November 6, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars schnelle Lieferung und gute Verpakung
Das Buch habe ich als Geschenk bestellt und war mit dem Verpakung sehr zufrieden, weil das Buch ohne Kratzen oder Schmutzungen angekommen ist. ah ja, das Buch kann ich auch gerne empfehlen ;)