Speaking Your Brand: Public Speaking Tips and Strategies

Have you ever wondered if you really need to add humor to your business presentations, keynotes, or conference talks? Maybe you think, I’m just here to share valuable information - why should I try to be funny?  Well, in this episode, I’m...

Show Notes

Have you ever wondered if you really need to add humor to your business presentations, keynotes, or conference talks?

Maybe you think, I’m just here to share valuable information - why should I try to be funny? 

Well, in this episode, I’m joined by our lead speaking coach, Diane Diaz, to show you exactly why humor isn’t just a nice-to-have - it’s a must-have.

We’re diving into how to use humor effectively in your talks, without forcing corny jokes (unless that’s your thing!).

From situational storytelling to physical comedy, sarcasm, self-deprecating humor, and even well-placed memes and GIFs, we cover it all.

In this episode, you’ll learn:

  • Why humor makes your audience feel more connected and engaged

  • How to plan humor in your talk (even if you don’t think you’re funny)

  • The power of physical comedy as a speaker

  • Diane’s hilarious story about her mom teaching her to be a petty thief

  • The one type of self-deprecating humor to avoid

 

Even if you don’t consider yourself a comedian, there are so many ways to add humor that feel natural and authentic to you. Your audience will thank you - and they’ll definitely remember you!

Action Step: The next time you’re working on a presentation, pick one of the humor techniques we talk about and try incorporating it. Let us know how it goes!

You’ll also want to watch the video version at https://youtu.be/nVDRqerIlxQ

We’ve included funny clips from stand-up comedians and sitcoms to illustrate our points - you won’t want to miss them!

This episode was filmed in one of the beautiful studios on the campus of Full Sail University, where Diane and I have been teaching business and marketing classes since 2009.

Links:

Show notes at https://www.speakingyourbrand.com/426/ 

Watch the video of this episode at https://youtu.be/nVDRqerIlxQ

Discover your Speaker Archetype by taking our free quiz at https://www.speakingyourbrand.com/quiz/

Enroll in our Thought Leader Academy: https://www.speakingyourbrand.com/academy/ 

Connect on LinkedIn:

Related Podcast Episodes:

 


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What is Speaking Your Brand: Public Speaking Tips and Strategies?

It's time to escape the expert trap and become an in-demand speaker and thought leader through compelling and memorable business presentations, keynotes, workshops, and TEDx talks. If you want to level up your public speaking to get more and better, including paid, speaking engagements, you've come to the right place! Thousands of entrepreneurs and leaders have learned from Speaking Your Brand and now you can too through our episodes that will help you with storytelling, audience engagement, building confidence, handling nerves, pitching to speak, getting paid, and more. Hosted by Carol Cox, entrepreneur, speaker, and TV political analyst. This is your place to learn how to persuasively communicate your message to your audience.

Carol Cox:
That's a good thing to think about when we

want to add humor to talks.

Now, I know that people watching this are

thinking, well, but I'm just talking about my

business topic or whatever.

Like, why do I need humor?

I just want to convey this information.

And so why is humor important for us to

include, whether it's a keynote, a Ted talk,

a business presentation,

a conference session that we're doing. Hi,

and welcome to Speaking Your Brand. I'm your

host, Carol Cox, joined by our lead speaking

coach, Diane Diaz.

Hi, Diane.

Diane Diaz:
Hi, Carol.

Carol Cox:
We always recommend that you add humor to any

presentation, keynote or talk that you give.

Now, you may think when you hear a humor that

you have to do a corny joke.

Maybe like this one.

Diane Diaz:
Did you know that koalas actually aren't

bears? They don't have the qualifications.

Carol Cox:
Okay, so that's where that's where the laugh

track would come in on a.

Sitcom, because clearly that's a super corny

joke. Now, you could tell that in your talk

if you wanted to, it could find a place in

there. But you don't have to find a knock

knock joke or a corny joke or a comedy stand

up set to include in your talks to add humor

to it now. Diane, I know that you've actually

done a stand up comedy set,

a five minute set.

Can you give an example of one of the

vignettes that you shared?

Diane Diaz:
Yes. So my mother was very frugal,

as am I, but she grew up during the

depression, so she was extremely frugal. And

one of the things that she liked to do was to

clip coupons, right?

So that was one way of saving money.

But that isn't the only way that she saved

money at the grocery store. She also,

back in the day when I was a kid,

there was in the grocery store. We shopped

and there was a big table that was divided

into sections that had like wrapped candy in

it, like caramels and things. And this is pre

technology. So you would take a little bag

and put five pieces of candy, and you would

put your little quarter in the slot of the

box. So my mom would tell my sister and I,

who were five and seven at the time,

go and get the candy.

But first she would give us some instructions

and she would say, now listen,

I don't want you to take five pieces of

candy. I want you to take six.

And we were like, mom,

but isn't that stealing? Just go get the

candy. This was my mom's way of saving money.

Now you can understand it from her point of

view. Like this really,

legitimately happened.

She's saving money because we didn't have

much money. Technically it's stealing,

but I find that hilarious that she's

basically turning her children into petty

thieves.

Carol Cox:
Well, and also, the way that you tell it

makes it funny because you could see telling

it to like, well, we would go to the grocery

store. My mom would say,

take six pieces of candy instead of five,

right? And you're like, okay, well, really,

where's the humor in it? Right? Like, you do

the dialogue, you do your mom's voice and how

she's saying it and how you're reacting as a

little kid. Yes. So thinking about adding

humor to talks is like,

find the the humor in the situation,

but then kind of play it out,

like how to bring it to life.

Diane Diaz:
Yes. And even act it out.

So when I, when I was doing the comedy set,

telling that story, I would be my mom and

then I would bend down like I'm talking to

two small children, right.

So giving us the instructions and then I

would lean back up because now I'm,

I'm me saying, but mom,

isn't that stealing? Then I'd bend back down.

So you're acting it out to create the whole

scene for the audience?

Okay, girls, this is what I want you to do. I

want you to go get that candy.

But I don't want you to take five pieces.

I want you to take six.

But, mom, isn't that stealing?

Shh. Just go get the candy.

Carol Cox:
Well, that's a great transition to another

form of humor that you can include in a talk,

which is more physical comedy.

So I actually like physical comedy,

which I'm surprised to discover about myself.

But from doing the in-person workshops and

retreats that we've done where we really we

get the women who attend,

we do improv exercises,

we do dance parties.

We really get them comfortable in their

bodies and doing things and kind of expanding

where they're at by the time they get on the

stage to practice their talks or their

stories, they feel much more expansive.

And so I like physical comedy,

and I think it's because of watching sitcoms

growing up, because you would have to.

The actors did kind of have to act things

out. And I was recently watching an old

episode from friends, which of course was

like, is on all the time,

so you can always catch an episode.

And I was it was an early one,

and I had forgotten how physically comedic

those actors are. Like Jennifer Aniston,

there was like a scene and she's like,

grabbing her mouth because, like, she hit her

tooth and she's like, really getting into it.

And there's other TV shows which are much

more like cerebral.

Or maybe they're just not that much into

physical comedy.

Speaker5:
Oh, Emily. Emily.

Okay, so that's me as a cheerleader.

I'm. Fine. I'm fine.

I just listen to tooth. It's no big deal. I

have a dentist. You know,

I'm gonna go put some ice on it. Excuse me.

Diane Diaz:
Yeah. That's a great example.

Another example is stand up comedians.

If you go most not all comedians,

but most comedians, or at least the ones I

like, like Iliza Shlesinger and comedians

like that. They are very physical.

So they don't just tell jokes,

they actually act out what they're doing.

Speaker6:
And I can say this as a woman who chose to be

single for a very long time,

as a feminist, as a champion of women,

I genuinely feel that when women ask me,

how did.

Speaker7:
You guys meet?

Speaker6:
It's less about a genuine personal inquiry

for me, and it's more like they're digging

for clues, like.

Speaker7:
Where did you find a suitor?

Tell us. We wish to know.

Diane Diaz:
And so if they make up a character, or even

if Mike Birbiglia is another one,

if they're telling a story about their child

and something that a conversation they had

with them, they're acting it out to the point

of actually laying on the ground,

which just adds to the humor level.

Speaker8:
I write some jokes for you.

I write some for my daughter.

Where you need to know for the story is that

it killed, you know, like it was like,

ah.

Speaker9:
What'll we have for dinner?

Carol Cox:
So we have finding the humor in situations,

stories, little vignettes. We have physical

comedy. There's also maybe what,

like sardonic or maybe a little bit more

sarcastic or intellectual humor.

Diane Diaz:
Yeah, I love sarcasm.

Yeah, that's like my second language.

Carol Cox:
And I know that you're a big fan of Seinfeld.

Oh, you love watching that. So how what kind

of humor do they have? And how do you see

that show up?

Diane Diaz:
Yeah, it's the type of humor that I like to

call. Well, it's situational humor,

but I think it's also what I would consider,

like stupid humor, where it's it's really

nothing. But they make such a big deal out of

the nothing that it makes it hilarious. I

mean, completely absurd every day,

you know, the characters going through their

everyday absurd situations that they turn

into this big, huge deal,

but they really carry the joke really far.

So they don't just it's not a joke,

joke, joke, joke, joke. It's a joke that goes

throughout the entire show.

So they take that situation and they really,

like go deep with it and that makes it

absurdly hysterical.

Speaker10:
I didn't get any bread.

Speaker11:
Just forget it. Let it go.

Speaker10:
Excuse me. I think you forgot my bread.

Speaker12:
Bread. $2 extra.

Speaker10:
$2. But everyone in front of me got free

bread.

Speaker12:
You want bread?

Speaker10:
Yes, please.

Speaker12:
$3. What? No soup for you?

Carol Cox:
It's almost like they like, blow it out of

proportion.

Diane Diaz:
Absolutely.

Carol Cox:
They make it much bigger than whatever the

actual situation would be.

Yes, yes, yes. Okay, so that's a good thing

to think about when we want to add humor to

talks. Now, I know that people watching this

are thinking, well, but I'm just talking

about like my business topic or whatever,

like, why do I need humor?

I just want to convey this information.

And so why is humor important for us to

include, whether it's a keynote, a Ted talk,

a business presentation,

a conference session that we're doing?

Diane Diaz:
Yeah, I think humor does a couple of things.

Number one, I think it sort of lightens the

mood. So we've had clients who are talking

about, yeah, they might be talking about

something in their business, but maybe

they're sharing a story that's particularly

poignant or or moving.

And I think adding a humorous element,

not necessarily to that story, but somewhere

in the talk kind of lightens the mood and

breaks the tension. Right?

I think it also lets the audience know it's a

safe space because we all relate to humor.

If you can get people to laugh,

they're releasing all this energy.

Everybody feels connected.

They feel tied together that we all laughed

at the same thing. Ha ha. Right. So it's it's

unifying. It is a release.

It is energetic, right?

It creates an energy in the audience. So it

has so many purposes.

Carol Cox:
Yeah, I love that. And I love this idea of

like breaking the tension. It's almost like

what we describe when we're working with our

clients at the in person workshops.

Like you almost need to have energetic highs

and lows, even in a kind of more heartfelt or

kind of more difficult story.

You still have to have an energetic high

point, because your audience doesn't want to

stay flat and monotone like you as the person

delivering it, but they emotionally don't

want to stay flat and neutral throughout the

entire thing. So humor allows you some of

those energetic high points.

Diane Diaz:
Absolutely. Yeah. And it gives it sort of

takes the audience on a ride.

Right. So where it's it's and they kind of

don't know what to expect. And then when

you're able to pepper some humor in there,

it's those little unexpected nuggets.

Carol Cox:
So I know that sometimes we're like,

oh, okay, I'm just going to just wing it and

something funny comes out or something funny

comes out and and that will be fine.

So yes, that could happen.

Like you could just end up saying something

funny in your talk without having it planned

out. I like actually planning the humor,

which is kind of funny because in that other

episode, we talked about you being the

procrastinator, and I very much not being the

procrastinator, but I will plan out the

humor, and one of the ways that I'll do that

is I'll look through my whole slide deck once

I have it done, or a client's slide deck,

and I look and it's like, okay,

like we have no humor in here whatsoever

unless it happens to just impromptu happen.

We need to go make sure we find some spots.

So I'll find their stories,

like, okay, where is either a humorous

element to the story or right after the

story. How can we lighten the mood?

So to add an aspect to the story,

or I'll find a funny GIF or a funny video

clip to kind of highlight.

Maybe it's like, you know,

to the audience like, hey, I know you really

want to achieve X, y, Z,

and kind of some type of funny gif that

represents that. So that's also a really

great way to think about intentional humor.

Diane Diaz:
Yeah. And I think GIFs and memes are great

for clients who like, we hear a lot of times,

well, I'm just not funny. Well that's okay.

You can still incorporate humor.

You don't have to be a comedian,

right? You don't have to tell jokes to make

it funny, but you can incorporate funny memes

or funny cartoon that sort of gets your point

across, makes the audience laugh,

and they identify with it. And you still

achieve the same goal.

But it doesn't have to come from you

personally.

Carol Cox:
Let's talk about self-deprecating humor,

because that's another form of humor. A lot

of stand up comedians use that as well.

I know as women, we have to be a little bit

careful with self-deprecating humor because

it can. It can hurt us more than it helps us,

depending on what it is. And I remember years

ago I got the advice from someone who does

comedy, and she said to me,

she's like, self-deprecating humor is good

because it builds trust between you and the

audience, and it kind of you let down your

guard. You show that you're not perfect.

The audience will then relate to you.

But, she said, you have to be careful not to

use self-deprecating humor that harms your

credibility for what it is that you're there

talking about. So, for example,

if I'm there talking about what we do here at

Speaking Your brand, I could do a funny bit

about maybe that I'm not a great gardener,

which I'm not like. I have a black thumb. I

cannot keep anything alive.

Like, I could talk about that and that would

be funny, but I wouldn't necessarily want to

talk about something related to the core

message that I'm talking about.

Diane Diaz:
Yes. Yeah. I think, like you said,

self-deprecating humor done carefully can be

effective. I do like, again,

when someone takes that self-deprecating

element and then will thread it through the

talk, right?

So that it comes, it sort of comes back.

And they keep not constantly,

but like a few times they'll reflect back

like to it. And then it sort of creates that

sort of content continuity throughout the

talk and still self-deprecating,

but in a safe sort of way. Like, I could joke

about being short because, I mean, I am

short. It's obvious you can see that, right?

So I often use that as a tool because it is

funny to say, like, I don't know if you've

noticed, but I'm short,

right? Like, because duh,

but but things like that that are safe,

safe.

Carol Cox:
And it doesn't harm your credibility by

saying that. Right.

Because clearly it's not related to the work

that you do. Okay.

So we talked about so different types of

humor that we can use in our talks.

So we have situational humor.

So find the humor in a story that you're

sharing. We have physical humor.

So physical comedy, when you're acting out

stories or things on the stage,

we have maybe like more sardonic,

sarcastic, intellectual humor.

We have just like funny maybe.

Maybe you do like knock knock jokes and corny

jokes and you want to throw a few of those

in. Or like funny gifs and memes and then

self-deprecating humor. Yes. So for those of

you who have been listening to this and

watching this, think about these different

types of humor that we just talked about,

and how can you incorporate some of these

into every single talk,

every single presentation that you give,

because your audience is really going to

appreciate having that connection not only

with you, but also with everyone else who's

in the audience.

I wish I had another corny joke that we could

end this with I can't have any other no.

Diane Diaz:
I cannot think of. I'm fresh out.

Now that you've put me on the spot, I can't

think of one.

Carol Cox:
Why did the chicken cross the road?

To get to the other side. That's the only one

I know. Until next time.

Thanks for watching.