Stick to the Script
Monday, June 9th, 2008I love movies and plays. The best ones feel spontaneous because the actors have practiced their lines and moves so many times that they feel unscripted.
Follow their example. Once you’ve defined your message, practice it until you can say it verbatim without sounding scripted.
Actors follow a script and rehearse. Musicians follow a script and rehearse. Dancers follow a script and rehearse. Professional speakers follow a script and rehearse.
You can follow a script and rehearse, too. During media training, we sometimes develop messages as a group for the practice interviews that follow. Sometimes we’ll spend more than an hour developing messages and honing them until each one is a simple statement that can be repeated in a few seconds. Then, we write them on big sheets of paper and paste them on the wall where the people being interviewed can read them.
More often than not, the participants don’t say the message they helped to write the way it’s written on the wall the first time through. Instead, they paraphrase what’s on the wall to sound natural. Inevitably, the paraphrased version isn’t as good. If it’s better than the one on the wall, we change what’s on the wall.
Following a script is hard until you’ve done it a few times because it feels scripted and rehearsed. But if you do it right, the scripted version is your best version of what you want to say. So, say it that way. How do you make it sound spontaneous and unrehearsed? By rehearsing it until it sounds spontaneous and unrehearsed.
That’s my two cents’ worth. What’s yours?
———
The Monday Morning Media Minute is now available as an eBook. My new eStore features five eBooks based on the Media Minute. To check them out, visit my eStore and buy early and often. The eBooks come as PDF files. You don’t need special eBook software to read them.