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He made the mistake that I have often seen speakers do when trying to give a presentation in a foreign language — he tried to copy native speakers — and he failed royally.
He made the mistake that I have often seen speakers do when trying to give a presentation in a foreign language — he tried to copy native speakers — and he failed royally.
When giving a presentation in a language that is not your native language, there are two basic keys to being successful (these apply, by the way, to every presentation you give!), be authentic and establish the context of what you're saying.
Be Authentic
When this colleague, a well-known presentation trainer and author, gave his first major speech in English, he decided to use the American rhetorical device of call and response. Call and response is when the speaker primes the audience to give a certain response on cue. For example, in the African-American church culture when the minister says "Say Amen!" and the congregation responds with "Amen!" Or when then President-Elect Obama would ask the audience a question, an the audience responded with, "Yes, we can!"
In the case of my colleague, neither he nor the audience was American (although the situation would have been much worse if he had tried this method with a bunch of Americans! They would have truly been insulted!) He started his first call and, dutifully, on the power point slide was the expected response. The audience, wanting to be supportive, hesitatingly said their line. He continued, and, not more than a minute later, the audience was expected to respond. After about the fourth or fifth response, the audience began to get agitated. People weren't quite as willing to assist as they initially were, and they genuinely wanted the talk to be over. They began rolling their eyes and talking to each other. He lost them.
What were the mistakes that he made? A simple answer might be to say that he should not have used a rhetorical device that didn't fit the situation, BUT THE DIFFICULTIES HE HAD DIDN'T HAVE TO DO WITH THE RHETORICAL DEVICE! He could have kept the call and response, even though it doesn't belong to his culture, if he had just put it in a context that the audience would have accepted. We'll talk about this in a minute.
So, what were the mistakes that he made? For one, he wasn't being authentic. With authentic I mean true to himself, his way of being, his personality structure, his experiences, his values. Being authentic has to do with starting with you. This is especially critical when you are speaking in a foreign language. Ask yourself if you would be saying that sentence in your own language. Would you choose to use, for example, vulgarities in your native language? If not, then don't do it in a foreign language. Would you choose to try a foreign rhetorical device in your native language? If not, then don't try it in a foreign language. Would you walk differently, talk differently than you do everyday if you were speaking in your native language? If not, then don't try it in a foreign language. Be true to yourself and your own values — always.
And the second grave mistake that he made was that he did not establish the context for what he was trying to accomplish.
Establish the Context
Context is everything.
If in your speech you don't establish the context for a concept, an idea, or, yes, even a rhetorical device, you will lose or offend your audience.
I mentioned above that this speaker could have used the call and response rhetorical device if he had only put it in context. He could have not only used it, he could have thrilled his audience with it! Simply by taking a moment to frame the call and response into either an historical or, even better, a humorous context, he would have fascinated us and had us gladly participating in his game. Don't underestimate the power of context — especially when speaking in a foreign language or in a foreign culture.