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A set of ten to wake up and persuade your audience to change their habits and
attitude.
And a set of brand new ideas to prompt and propel your listeners to discover new
views, contemporary worlds and unfamiliar opinions.
If you succeed to get them to act like you propose, then you happen to be expert as
a motivational speaker!
1. How to motivate the audience members to change their nutrition and diet food
behavior and consume enough of fruit and vegetables daily.
2. Does the iPod speech technology foreced PC users to migrate to Apple? Or
work out other issues related to computers and stuff like that for alternative
good public speaking speech topics.
3. Five strategies to promote savings for a comfortable life when you are retired.
(You know, for example, the earlier students start with a solid personal pension
plan, the better their retirement situation later … )
4. Five humanitarian things you can do to help other people after a hurricane,
tropical cyclone or other natural disaster.
E.g. tell about a non-governmental organization (NGO) like the International Red
Cross or Red Crescent Movement.
is a real big challenge for motivational public speaking – a good idea for
some interaction with your listeners.
4. Methods for coaching and training a cheerleader team, and show how you
motivate them to win competitions.
5. Scientific discoveries that make living with color blindness easier.
6. What the heck, just go after your dreams and your own pursuit of happiness!
Motivational Speech Topics
Good public speaking speech topics for the cause of changing opinions on hot
topics, or amazing undiscovered ideas that could give insight in not very well-known
themes and subjects:
1. Local veterinarians should make health care control visits for the animals in pet
shops. Because sometimes you have no idea what you notice in such animal
Step #1 – Attention
Get the attention of your public. State the importance of your specific angle of
approach. List the main benefits to arouse interest.
Step #2 – Need
State the need for change. Show why it should concern them. Relate the issue or
problem to the values, attitudes, interests and needs of the listeners.
Step #3 – Satisfaction
Satisfy their needs. Provide the details and interesting facts. Show how your solution
works.
Step #4 – Visualization
Visualize the benefits. That is the heart of the message. Illustrate them with
examples, anecdotes, comparisons, statistics, definitions and visual aids. Show
successful implementation in other organizations. Tell your public what’s in it for
them.
Step #5 – Call to Action
Call to action. Show them what to do to implement your plan.
Comparative Advantages Pattern
This looks like the one above and is often used for business presentations. The big
difference occurs in the satisfy and visualization steps. In those steps you have to
compare and contrast two or more plans, solutions or alternatives.
Show your listeners which one is the best. E.g.: Compare and contrast two
cellphones and tell which one is the first-class one for your job or personal life and
why.
The Goal
You have just one goal: to instigate your audience to act or to agree. Write down
what you want them to do, and how you are going to persuade them that you are
right. Phrase your goal in a declarative statement, in a way that will motivate.
1. The first way is the use of the imperative mood in relation to activities, issues or
problems at college, in your work environment, or in your community. Examples:
Sharing emotions,
Initiating a debate on a hot topic,
Promoting your book or other craftsman project,
Forcing a change in daily habits,
Motivating them to achieve something in life,
Persuading your listeners to vote for you in some kind of an election campaign.
For example:
1. Protest Against Nuclear Testing.
2. Sign up For My Newsletter.
3. Make Every Workday Feel Like a Lazy Sunday.
4. Remember The Oath You Took For Your Country.
5. Sponsor Our Center for Community Innovation.
6. Improve Your Concentration Skills With Mind and Mental Exercises.
7. Provide Good Conditions For Teambuilding and Cooperating.
8. Just Think Positive!
9. Always Affirm Your Business Deals in Writing.
10. Set at Least One Career Goal a Year.
11. Relax, and Your Presentation Will Be Better.
12. Enjoy Walking the Great Wall of China.
13. Release Your Life With Energy Psychology and Meridian Energy Therapies.
14. Do Not Hesitate, Make a Decision About Your Future.
15. Prioritize Your Daily Goals.
16. Volunteer in Thailand For Tsunami Reconstruction Jobs.
These are random Toastmasters International examples. Watch the so-called action
words and verbs, I have written them in italic style. As you perhaps have noticed, the
list of phrases and terms is open to your sole discretion …
Other action terms could be:
change,
profit,
produce,
nominate,
sale,
master,
save,
vote,
help,
reward,
reveal,
map out,
manage,
organize,
invent,
modernize,
et cetera.
You see, almost every active verb can be the base of an appealing motivational call
to action speech topics. Be creative and find yourself a way in discovering other
words