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Ethics
in Speaking: A Practical Point of View
Dr. Stephen D. Boyd
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Often managers have to deliver presentations
with unpleasant content. The vice president has to announce
that there is a hiring freeze or a downsizing. The human resource
director speaks to the employees about a benefits package
with fewer benefits. Because executives are often speaking
in difficult situations, the more credibility they can develop,
the more the content will be considered and accepted. Speakers
will have little or no impact on audiences if audience members
don't respect them and what they have to say.
What makes us trust a speaker or believe that he or she is
a reliable source? Whom can we trust to have our best interests
at heart? Let's look at some practical ways a speaker
can maintain and enhance credibility.
Act in ways consistent with the message of the presentation.
This can be as simple as showing concern in tone of voice
and facial expression when talking about an issue that is
facing the company. Acting disinterested or unconcerned when
presenting bad news can offend your listeners. Showing enthusiasm
in delivery by quicker movements, more variety, and a faster
rate of speech when reading an exciting climax of a positive
presentation can produce the same enthusiasm in your audience.
A student began a persuasive speech by spreading garbage out
on a table. She said, "What do all of these pieces of
trash have in common? They can all be recycled." She
gave a good speech on the need for recycling and how to set
up community recycling programs. She finished to a nice round
of applause; then she gathered up all of the recyclables from
the table--and threw them away in the wastebasket in the corner.
She obviously didn't understand the need for speakers to act
in ways consistent with their messages in order to maintain
credibility.
Good preparation is an ethical requirement as well
as a practical one. Your audience has given you time
and an opportunity, and audience members deserve to hear your
best effort. That only comes through careful preparation.
If the audience can tell you didn't prepare for them specifically,
they will feel betrayed and won't respond positively to your
message. Thus the executive should start preparing several
days or weeks before an important presentation is delivered.
It is hard to cram for a speech, and the audience can tell
when preparation has not been adequate.
Show respect for your audience. Don't insult
your audience in any way. Racial slurs and profanity are obviously
unethical, but in addition, don't show disrespect for people's
gender, backgrounds, positions, appearances, or nationalities.
Don't put people down because of their lack of knowledge of
a topic; sometimes their lack of information is the very reason
you have been asked to speak. Don't embarrass any member of
your audience. Don't play a joke on anyone without seeking
permission first. Even if you do receive permission, playing
a joke on an audience member can backfire because the rest
of your group might become fearful they will bear the brunt
of your next joke, causing them to lose trust in you. Poke
fun at yourself instead.
Base your conclusions in your presentation on clear evidence.
Support your assertions with relevant facts, statistics, and
testimony. Keep track of your sources and be ready to produce
them if an audience member has a question. Don't make assertions
you can't support or justify. Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca
write in their book, The New Rhetoric: A Treatise on Argumentation,
that whatever support you use should be able to satisfy the
"universal audience"--that group of all reasonable,
rational people. In your outline each major point should show
a variety of evidence. If that is not the case, then eliminate
the point or, if it fits, place the evidence with another
point you are making.
Choose topics that are consistent with your personal
beliefs. Pick topics important to you that you live
out on a daily basis. You might be able to craft effective
speeches advocating views you do not agree with, but you will
be much more effective and ethical if you advocate opinions
you actually hold. If you advocate a position which is not
something you feel completely comfortable with, this will
be communicated to your audience by your delivery style. In
choosing material for your presentation, one major criterion
is how strongly you feel about the point or support. This
is an excellent way to cut out materials when you have more
content than time allotted.
Respect the time of your audience. Know what time
you are expected to finish--and finish at that time. It is
an insult to your audience members and an abuse of your opportunity
to speak to keep them ten, fifteen, or thirty minutes more
than what is expected of you.
History gives us a good example of the power of an actual
presentation to create credibility. The year was 1952, and
Dwight Eisenhower was running for president with Richard Nixon
as his vice-presidential candidate. Charges surfaced, however,
that Nixon had illegally used some campaign contributions,
and Eisenhower considered dropping Nixon from the ticket.
In what became known as the "Checkers Speech," Nixon
defended himself in a 30-minute, nationally televised speech.
With his wife Pat sitting in the background, he defended his
ethics, at one point holding up a piece of paper he claimed
was the result of an audit of his books finding him blameless.
Nixon did admit, however, that some supporters had given his
children a dog. He said the kids had named the dog "Checkers,"
and no matter what anyone said, he wasn't going to let them
take that dog away. He concluded by asking people to telegraph
or mail to the Republican National Committee their opinion
of whether or not he should continue to run with Eisenhower.
The overwhelmingly positive response assured his place in
the campaign. Who knows how much of American history for the
next twenty years was changed because of a little dog and
a presentation that convinced people of Richard M. Nixon's
credibility.
All of these ethical principles can be condensed to one, a
"golden rule" of speaking ethics: Treat each audience
member as you would like to be treated if you were in your
audience.
Stephen D. Boyd, Ph.D., CSP, is
a professor of speech communication at Northern Kentucky University
in Highland Heights, Kentucky. He is also a trainer who presents
communication seminars and workshops to corporations and associations.
See additional articles and resources at http://www.sboyd.com.
He can be reached at 800-727-6520 or at info@sboyd.com.
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