Attention and Interest

It takes more than a snappy introduction to maintain interest, and you have to do more than just talk. Too much uninterrupted talk can lead to boredom even if your information is first class. Depending how alert your audience is, you will need to intervene to stop them wandering off at least once a minute, if you want undivided attention – which of course you do. Show a visual, tell a story, use a prop, move around, change the tone of your voice, change the pace, ask the audience to do something, write on a flip chart or demonstrate a process.

Following are some useful tactics for maintaining attention.

  1. Activity or movement: lively behaviour and treatment of the content that makes it appear as if something is actually happening.
  2. Reality: reference to actual people, events, places; being specific and concrete rather than abstract.
  3. Proximity – drawing on what is close at hand; people in the room, current events, local references.
  4. Familiarity – the use of recognised examples, well-known phrases, commonplace events.
  5. Novelty – the opposite of the familiar; startling facts, odd turns of phrase, surprising images, unusual combinations.
  6. Suspense – creating curiosity about what will happen next. Posing puzzles or provocative questions.
  7. Conflict – setting up pros and cons, opposing viewpoints, competing schools of thought.
  8. Humour – playful remarks, silly or exaggerated images, amusing plays on words, ironic twists of fate, entertaining stories.
  9. Vital self interest – something that is important to listeners. Matters of survival, or saving them time, earning money, making life more pleasant.

Keep the audience involved

  • Use the names of people in the audience
  • Refer to the immediate setting or shared experience.
  • Use concrete examples rather than hypothetical ones to illustrate a point.
  • Ask questions, ask for a show of hands or a straw poll
  • Ask rhetorical questions
  • Ask listeners to visualise examples
  • Use the word “You”.
    • You’ve probably seen
    • Do you sometimes wonder
    • In your morning paper
    • “Has this ever happened to you…”