Preparation
For anyone speaking in public, even for a short talk, it is important to be prepared. A key aspect of preparation is warming up your voice and body.
Of course, you should experiment to find what works best for you - there’s no one right way to do this, but it IS essential you do some kind of warm up.
If you are doing a few talks in one day, perhaps at a rally, a vocal cool down and warm up in between talks will also help.
Voice Warm Up Exercises [5-10 mins] Follow the steps below or watch and follow this video.
- Breathe deeply, relaxing your belly, so belly, ribs, and back expand with your breath.
- Stretch out your neck, jaw, face and sides.
- Activate your breath support muscles with a hiss exercise.
- Begin vocalizing on something easy to start stretching out the vocal cords e.g.: lip roll, “HM” (hum), or “NN”.
- Sing on an easy, relaxed OO vowel to work on good, consistent resonance throughout your range.
- Open up to an “AH”, “YAH”, “UH”, or “YUH” to relax the jaw down and lift the soft palate up.
- Get into mix voice with an “NG, “NYAH”, “NAY”, “MUM”, or “BUH”.
- Warm down: If you spent quite a bit of time working out, warm down with a gentle hum or lip trill.
Body Warm Up Exercises [5 mins]
- Stretch your arms up above your head; drop them down. Repeat x 3.
- Bring your shoulders up to your ears; drop them back down; drop them further. Repeat x 4
- Roll your shoulders forward several times. Roll them backwards a few times.
- Wriggle out the tension. Take a deep breath and give a long exhale.
And always remember to keep hydrated - this will also help protect your voice.
Have some water within reach. If your mouth gets dry, or you just need a minute to compose yourself, it’s a great help to say ‘excuse me for one second’ and take a drink.
A tip from the theatre world is to put some lip salve on your teeth to stop your lips sticking on them!
Presenter’s Environment On Zoom, before you begin your session
- close unnecessary internet tabs, make sure nothing is downloading, etc, and generally ensure you have nothing competing with your video bandwidth so you don’t appear distorted to your participants.
- try to ensure your camera is level with your eyeline, and not pointing up or severely down at your face - this helps you to appear natural.
- put your phone on silent and make sure it’s not resting on the same surface as your computer because vibrations/buzzing will still be picked up.
- make sure the room you are in is well-lit! It’s important that your face is clearly visible for lip readers. On that note, ensure you’re looking straight into the camera for the appearance of making eye contact.