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Public Speaking Outline


I'm sure it would be a real bless for you to have "The Perfect" Public Speaking Outline, to help you organize your speech by placing all the ideas and thoughts in the right order. But do we really want that? Wouldn't be all the speeches the same?


“I have a dream!” – This is the very first sentence of Martin Luther King‘s Jr. public speaking outline to the American nation which is still quoted today.

“I have a dream!” – This is the very first sentence of Martin Luther King‘s Jr. public speaking to the American nation which is still quoted today.

Luther’s rhetoric was so forceful that it undeniably brought about radical changes in the nation’s attitude in terms of racism and discrimination.

Nowadays, public speaking still keeps its main position as a chief tool of communication to large groups of people as well as individuals with the purpose of transmitting information, motivating, and persuading, shifting attitudes as well as generating changes in thought, feeling and action.

Nevertheless, there is no definite recipe of how to pile up an effective public speaking outline or how a speaker should act during a speech. Structurally speaking, public speaking outlines include four main parts such as the title, the opening, the body and the conclusion.

The primary attention-gaining device is the title with the aim of capturing the audience’s attention by means of one word or phrase within which the topic of the speech is concentrated. The outlining of the subsequent parts requires great attention in terms of timing.

A well-proportioned speech gives sufficient time to developing the content of the body and gives less to the opening and the conclusion. Hence, the opening comprises brief, precise, and plain assertions.

Actually, the opening of a public speaking outline reveals the creative and the direct side of the speaker whose aim, in the meantime, is to construct a bond with the audience as well as to prove the speech’s credibility. Essentially, a public speech has the function of developing and debating the proposed topic or idea.

A good orator not only speaks to the audience but listens to them moreover and acts in response to their feedback.

A good orator not only speaks to the audience but listens to them moreover, acts in response to their feedback, avoids being dull and boring, makes the audience hanging on every word.

This can be possible only if the well-prepared speaker is well-informed about the audiences’ characteristics, like their gender, age, ethnicity, race, education, family backgrounds, or other important features.

S/he has the ability of transforming any subject into one of great interest, hence experience, knowledge and integrity is proven on behalf of the presenter.

The end of a public speech should work like fireworks at the end of a celebration, bursting out new attitudes, feelings and ideas. Besides recapping the main point of the delivery, the conclusion aims to be a summary as well as an echo that gives a sense of finality, authenticity and reality.

From an internal point of view public speaking outlines vary from several points of view. The audience response, the speaker and the manner of rhetoric are only some of the factors that lay bare the quality of a public speech.

Public speakers are likely to be less dynamic and spontaneous if they read out their speech from a manuscript, thus extemporaneous speeches are preferred instead of the read ones, as they offer a livelier, fresher and more direct sounding, securing permanent eye-contact communication with the addressee.

However, there is no explicit definition on compiling public speaking outlines. They definitely should be convincing, informative and stimulating.


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