banter

Welcome to my blog, Banter.

I’ll start, you chime in—I really want to hear from you!

Kate Bennis Kate Bennis

The Proactive Emcee: Shining the light on others

In this last of the “Proactive Speaker” series (for now), we are lucky to have the text for actual TEDx Charlottesville introductions from two of our emcees, Kellie Sauls and Richard Averitt. After writing the post, “The Proactive Speaker: Introductions,” both reached out and offered examples* for us all. Moderators, facilitators, emcees, these are just a few of the beautiful introductions Kellie and Richard wrote. Their generosity, their clear intention to shine the light on the speaker and move the audience to be receptive and excited is palpable in their words. In my work with speakers, I remind them that it is the emcee’s job to brag for them and establish credibility in advance so that the speaker can dig right into the exciting work without that nagging insecurity. Below are the kinds of introductions I emulate. I aspire to this level of grace when celebrating the work of others.…Read on.

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Kate Bennis Kate Bennis

The Proactive Speaker: Introductions

Another place we tend to get passive as speakers is in the bio/introduction—what is going to be said and by whom. And, once more, the organizers will only be grateful when we are proactive. The best thing about tackling the introduction in advance is that we can off-load the bragging we often feel obliged to do in order to gain credibility. For our Charlottesville TEDx, we promised our speakers a thoughtful, rich, thorough, personal, generous, and loving introduction. This meant that our speakers could jump right into their talk rather than reassuring the audience they were worth listening to. Our phenomenal Emcees (pictured here are Kellie Sauls and Richard Averitt) spent lots of time researching the introductions and ran everything by the speaker and their coach to ensure that the intro elevated the speaker without giving away the content of the talk. It is not only hard to talk about our own credentials, it can sound desperate, narcissistic, or sales-y, and runs the risk of putting the audience off. It also takes away from the purpose of the talk—not to talk about ourselves, but to talk about our work in the world. Here’s what I recommend…Read on.

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