TED's secret to great public speaking | Chris Anderson | TED

2,917,897 views ・ 2016-04-19

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
Some people think that there's a TED Talk formula:
0
12258
2908
00:15
"Give a talk on a round, red rug."
1
15190
1975
00:17
"Share a childhood story."
2
17189
1402
00:18
"Divulge a personal secret."
3
18615
2007
00:20
"End with an inspiring call to action."
4
20646
2771
00:23
No.
5
23441
1150
00:24
That's not how to think of a TED Talk.
6
24615
2097
00:26
In fact, if you overuse those devices,
7
26736
1989
00:28
you're just going to come across as clichéd or emotionally manipulative.
8
28749
4143
00:32
But there is one thing that all great TED Talks have in common,
9
32916
3880
00:36
and I would like to share that thing with you,
10
36820
2679
00:39
because over the past 12 years, I've had a ringside seat,
11
39523
2675
00:42
listening to many hundreds of amazing TED speakers, like these.
12
42222
4739
00:46
I've helped them prepare their talks for prime time,
13
46985
2437
00:49
and learned directly from them
14
49446
1436
00:50
their secrets of what makes for a great talk.
15
50906
2326
00:53
And even though these speakers and their topics all seem
16
53256
2770
00:56
completely different,
17
56050
1151
00:57
they actually do have one key common ingredient.
18
57225
3736
01:01
And it's this:
19
61318
1229
01:03
Your number one task as a speaker
20
63254
2611
01:05
is to transfer into your listeners' minds an extraordinary gift --
21
65889
4587
01:10
a strange and beautiful object that we call an idea.
22
70500
4579
01:16
Let me show you what I mean.
23
76034
1335
01:17
Here's Haley.
24
77393
1151
01:18
She is about to give a TED Talk
25
78568
1966
01:20
and frankly, she's terrified.
26
80558
1843
01:22
(Video) Presenter: Haley Van Dyck!
27
82425
1649
01:24
(Applause)
28
84098
3000
01:30
Over the course of 18 minutes,
29
90537
1836
01:32
1,200 people, many of whom have never seen each other before,
30
92397
3964
01:36
are finding that their brains are starting to sync with Haley's brain
31
96385
4120
01:40
and with each other.
32
100529
1438
01:41
They're literally beginning to exhibit the same brain-wave patterns.
33
101991
3394
01:45
And I don't just mean they're feeling the same emotions.
34
105409
2866
01:48
There's something even more startling happening.
35
108299
2499
01:50
Let's take a look inside Haley's brain for a moment.
36
110822
2897
01:54
There are billions of interconnected neurons in an impossible tangle.
37
114190
4231
01:58
But look here, right here --
38
118445
1807
02:00
a few million of them are linked to each other
39
120276
2761
02:03
in a way which represents a single idea.
40
123061
3439
02:06
And incredibly, this exact pattern is being recreated in real time
41
126524
4040
02:10
inside the minds of everyone listening.
42
130588
3078
02:13
That's right; in just a few minutes,
43
133690
2160
02:15
a pattern involving millions of neurons
44
135874
2363
02:18
is being teleported into 1,200 minds,
45
138261
2785
02:21
just by people listening to a voice and watching a face.
46
141070
3129
02:24
But wait -- what is an idea anyway?
47
144682
2809
02:27
Well, you can think of it as a pattern of information
48
147515
3484
02:31
that helps you understand and navigate the world.
49
151023
3388
02:34
Ideas come in all shapes and sizes,
50
154435
1976
02:36
from the complex and analytical
51
156435
2000
02:38
to the simple and aesthetic.
52
158459
2079
02:40
Here are just a few examples shared from the TED stage.
53
160562
2873
02:43
Sir Ken Robinson -- creativity is key to our kids' future.
54
163816
3705
02:47
(Video) Sir Ken Robinson: My contention is that creativity now
55
167545
2931
02:50
is as important in education as literacy,
56
170500
3101
02:53
and we should treat it with the same status.
57
173625
2490
02:56
Chris Anderson: Elora Hardy -- building from bamboo is beautiful.
58
176139
3120
02:59
(Video) Elora Hardy: It is growing all around us,
59
179283
2324
03:01
it's strong, it's elegant, it's earthquake-resistant.
60
181631
4160
03:05
CA: Chimamanda Adichie -- people are more than a single identity.
61
185815
3841
03:09
(Video) Chimamanda Adichie: The single story creates stereotypes,
62
189680
3102
03:12
and the problem with stereotypes is not that they are untrue,
63
192806
4397
03:17
but that they are incomplete.
64
197227
1984
03:19
CA: Your mind is teeming with ideas,
65
199607
2214
03:21
and not just randomly.
66
201845
1351
03:23
They're carefully linked together.
67
203220
2206
03:25
Collectively they form an amazingly complex structure
68
205450
2905
03:28
that is your personal worldview.
69
208379
2174
03:30
It's your brain's operating system.
70
210577
2286
03:32
It's how you navigate the world.
71
212887
1872
03:34
And it is built up out of millions of individual ideas.
72
214783
3785
03:38
So, for example, if one little component of your worldview
73
218592
3469
03:42
is the idea that kittens are adorable,
74
222085
2826
03:44
then when you see this,
75
224935
2395
03:47
you'll react like this.
76
227354
1580
03:48
But if another component of your worldview
77
228958
2077
03:51
is the idea that leopards are dangerous,
78
231059
2263
03:53
then when you see this,
79
233346
1245
03:54
you'll react a little bit differently.
80
234615
2261
03:57
So, it's pretty obvious
81
237524
1588
03:59
why the ideas that make up your worldview are crucial.
82
239136
3913
04:03
You need them to be as reliable as possible -- a guide,
83
243073
2996
04:06
to the scary but wonderful real world out there.
84
246093
3788
04:09
Now, different people's worldviews can be dramatically different.
85
249905
3747
04:14
For example,
86
254198
1186
04:15
how does your worldview react when you see this image:
87
255408
3838
04:19
(Video) Dalia Mogahed: What do you think when you look at me?
88
259919
2968
04:22
"A woman of faith," "an expert," maybe even "a sister"?
89
262911
4442
04:28
Or "oppressed," "brainwashed,"
90
268292
3819
04:32
"a terrorist"?
91
272135
1165
04:33
CA: Whatever your answer,
92
273955
1394
04:35
there are millions of people out there who would react very differently.
93
275373
3397
04:38
So that's why ideas really matter.
94
278794
2076
04:40
If communicated properly, they're capable of changing, forever,
95
280894
3678
04:44
how someone thinks about the world,
96
284596
2049
04:46
and shaping their actions both now and well into the future.
97
286669
4385
04:51
Ideas are the most powerful force shaping human culture.
98
291603
3881
04:55
So if you accept
99
295508
1151
04:56
that your number one task as a speaker is to build an idea
100
296683
2730
04:59
inside the minds of your audience,
101
299437
2046
05:01
here are four guidelines for how you should go about that task:
102
301507
3294
05:04
One, limit your talk to just one major idea.
103
304825
3821
05:09
Ideas are complex things;
104
309157
1833
05:11
you need to slash back your content so that you can focus
105
311014
3365
05:14
on the single idea you're most passionate about,
106
314403
2753
05:17
and give yourself a chance to explain that one thing properly.
107
317180
3634
05:20
You have to give context, share examples, make it vivid.
108
320838
3753
05:24
So pick one idea,
109
324615
1247
05:25
and make it the through-line running through your entire talk,
110
325886
3201
05:29
so that everything you say links back to it in some way.
111
329111
3478
05:33
Two, give your listeners a reason to care.
112
333182
3375
05:37
Before you can start building things inside the minds of your audience,
113
337523
4031
05:41
you have to get their permission to welcome you in.
114
341578
2405
05:44
And the main tool to achieve that?
115
344007
1833
05:46
Curiosity.
116
346181
1343
05:47
Stir your audience's curiosity.
117
347548
2248
05:49
Use intriguing, provocative questions
118
349820
2221
05:52
to identify why something doesn't make sense and needs explaining.
119
352065
4181
05:56
If you can reveal a disconnection in someone's worldview,
120
356698
3961
06:00
they'll feel the need to bridge that knowledge gap.
121
360683
3317
06:04
And once you've sparked that desire,
122
364024
2039
06:06
it will be so much easier to start building your idea.
123
366087
3284
06:10
Three, build your idea, piece by piece,
124
370032
3373
06:13
out of concepts that your audience already understands.
125
373429
3714
06:17
You use the power of language
126
377167
1647
06:18
to weave together concepts that already exist
127
378838
2929
06:21
in your listeners' minds --
128
381791
1637
06:23
but not your language, their language.
129
383452
2294
06:25
You start where they are.
130
385770
1436
06:27
The speakers often forget that many of the terms and concepts they live with
131
387230
3698
06:30
are completely unfamiliar to their audiences.
132
390952
2611
06:33
Now, metaphors can play a crucial role in showing how the pieces fit together,
133
393587
5174
06:38
because they reveal the desired shape of the pattern,
134
398785
3674
06:42
based on an idea that the listener already understands.
135
402483
3508
06:46
For example, when Jennifer Kahn
136
406015
1985
06:48
wanted to explain the incredible new biotechnology called CRISPR,
137
408024
3649
06:51
she said, "It's as if, for the first time,
138
411697
2286
06:54
you had a word processor to edit DNA.
139
414007
3031
06:57
CRISPR allows you to cut and paste genetic information really easily."
140
417062
4627
07:02
Now, a vivid explanation like that delivers a satisfying aha moment
141
422165
4278
07:06
as it snaps into place in our minds.
142
426467
2333
07:08
It's important, therefore, to test your talk on trusted friends,
143
428824
3920
07:12
and find out which parts they get confused by.
144
432768
2604
07:15
Four, here's the final tip:
145
435396
2308
07:17
Make your idea worth sharing.
146
437728
2777
07:21
By that I mean, ask yourself the question:
147
441242
2653
07:23
"Who does this idea benefit?"
148
443919
1818
07:26
And I need you to be honest with the answer.
149
446489
2961
07:29
If the idea only serves you or your organization,
150
449474
2912
07:32
then, I'm sorry to say, it's probably not worth sharing.
151
452410
3277
07:35
The audience will see right through you.
152
455711
2111
07:37
But if you believe that the idea has the potential
153
457846
2682
07:40
to brighten up someone else's day
154
460552
1898
07:42
or change someone else's perspective for the better
155
462474
2816
07:45
or inspire someone to do something differently,
156
465314
2864
07:48
then you have the core ingredient to a truly great talk,
157
468202
3620
07:51
one that can be a gift to them and to all of us.
158
471846
3130
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7