Acronyms and Abbreviations
A form of humor you will learn during your public
speaking course is the use of acronyms and abbrevations.
An acronym is a form of abbreviation where the letters of the
abbreviation form a new word, for example HUD means the Department of (H)ousing
and (U)rban (D)evelopment. There are many acronyms and abbreviations
that are universally known such as the IRS and the CIA. There are many
more that you can research that may be relevant to your audience.
To make these work best, make the acronym humorous by changing one or
more of the words that go with your well-known abbreviation or acronym.
Here are some examples I have used when teaching a public speaking
course.
IQ Idiot Quotient
CPI Consumers Poorhouse Indicator
IRA Individual Rest-in-Peace Account
TQM Totaled Quality Management
With a little thought, it is very easy to customize acronyms and
abbreviations to your audience and make your public speaking skills even
better. Here are some examples and explanations from a speaking
engagement I did for a hotel franchise:
OCC in the hotel industry means Occupancy Rate. I changed it to Oh!
C'mon Clinton because certain taxes were being proposed by President
Clinton that would affect their industry. I always try to connect with
the audience by mentioning the topics that are foremost on their minds.
This gives you the greatest chance of succeeding with an item of humor,
and success with your audience is what you will learn out of your public
speaking course.
ADR to hoteliers, means Average Daily Rate. This was changed to All
Dated Rooms which is something no hotelier wants to hear. This would
mean a fortune would have to be spent to upgrade and modernize the
rooms.
IOC was the name of the group I was addressing (International
Operator's Council). This was changed to I'm Ordering Chinese and I'm
Out of Coffee. These phrases aren't particularly funny by themselves.
They were coupled, however, with the fact that these people had just
completed rigorous and exhausting inspections by the Franchisor. That is
what made it funny. Knowing when, where, and what will be funny is a
great asset to learn during your public speaking course.
ANA This is one of my generic favorites. ANA represents Al Nippon
Airlines. I mention that it is a good thing that this company had an
American advisor before they used this acronym because the original
version was . . . ANAL (this is revealed on an overhead projector just
after a pause following the word "was").
This ANA versus ANAL story gets good laughter. I extend the humor with
the line, 'How would you like to see that on a 747 coming at you?' This
question gets even bigger laughs, and "leave 'em laughing when you go"
is something you will learn during your public speaking course.
For the hotel presentation, the acronyms were on an overhead
transparency and were displayed using the "reveal technique" learned in
your public speaking course(where individual overhead lines were covered
until it was time to reveal the funny version). You don't have to
project acronyms to use them in your presentation. You could also print
them in handouts, or just tell them out loud, any method can be used
when utilizing the tools learned during your public speaking course.
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