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Home » Categories » Personal » Public Speaking » Increase Your Volume, Increase Your Success » Reprint Rights » Printer Friendly

Nancy Daniels

Increase Your Volume, Increase Your Success

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Submitted Thursday, October 23, 2008
Nancy Daniels (1,550)
Nancy Daniels

Voice Dynamic
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Are you asked to repeat yourself a lot? Do people often interrupt you? If you want to be successful, if you expect to be taken seriously, you must learn how to increase your volume to a level that is comfortable for your listeners. Those of us with larger voices tire of straining to hear you, tire of asking you to repeat yourself; and, we will take over the conversation.

While we Americans are not renowned for being soft-spoken (especially in the Philadelphia / New York corridor), you would be surprised how many people actually do speak too softly. Aside from the fact that you are not being heard, often one of the drawbacks of being soft-spoken is lower self-esteem.

Some of my soft-spoken clients have told me that they assume people don't listen to them because what they are saying is not important. That is a mistake. Simply put: people are not listening to you or are interrupting you because they cannot hear you!

You need to learn how to increase your volume to a normal level of sound. Notice that I said normal not louder. I don't like loud loud hurts the listeners' ears. In working on volume, I teach people how to speak with a larger voice, not a louder voice. A good example of this is symphonic music versus heavy metal. Increase the listening level of both types of music and I guarantee you will go much further with the former than with the latter before hurting your ears. Symphonic music is primarily resonant; heavy metal is not.

If you are soft-spoken, you have spent your entire life speaking at a particular volume level with which your inner ear is very, very comfortable. Increasing your volume, even just a bit, will be difficult because your inner ear will not like it: your inner ear will think you are shouting. If you learn how to increase your volume properly, you will not be shouting, just speaking with a larger volume of sound.

When I work with clients, I teach them how to find the optimum pitch of the speaking voice, in which their chest becomes their major amplifier. By changing the placement of the voice by allowing the chest to power the voice instead of just the throat, mouth, and/or nose they discover a voice that is naturally larger in volume. If they are soft-spoken, however, that increase in volume may not be enough to bring them up to what I call Volume Level 1, our normal everyday volume level of voice the amount of sound we use on the phone, at the dinner table, in the car, and, in many cases, at the office.

We then work on learning how to distinguish a true Volume Level 1. In recording the soft-spoken individual, I will ask him/her to speak with more volume. All with whom I have worked ( & there have been thousands) have told me that when asked to increase their volume, they thought they were shouting. Upon listening to themselves on the recording, each and everyone has said that indeed their increase in volume sounded normal. Not loud. Just normal.

Learning how to increase your volume takes practice. As much as your inner ear loves your new voice', it is not quite as happy with your new volume. I tell my clients to trust me and not what their inner ear is telling them. In addition, I assure my soft-spoken people that they will never be too loud. Indeed, many of us can be loud, but not those on the softer side. It just doesn't happen.

So stop repeating yourself; stop being interrupted; and, learn to be heard the first time you say it.

With a little time and some practice, you can discover the value of being heard every time you open your mouth to speak .

The Voice Lady Nancy Daniels is a voice specialist and president of Voice Dynamic. Offering corporate and 2-day workshops through the US and Canada , Daniels launched Voicing It! in April of 2006, the only video training course on voice improvement. For more information go to: http://www.voicedynamic.com



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Article added to SearchWarp.com on 10/23/2008 2:46:28 PM.
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