Question:

How to Write a Policy Speech?

by Guest9323  |  12 years, 9 month(s) ago

0 LIKES UnLike

I am writing a policy speech for my manager and want to know the best tips to write a good speech. Someone tell me the techniques to write a policy speech.

 Tags: policy, speech, write

   Report

1 ANSWERS

  1. Guest2777
    Speaking in public has been around since the ancient Greeks met in the "agora," or marketplace, to discuss the policies of the day. Today, policy speeches are a part of public speaking and focus on analyzing programs and problems of governmental groups, companies or individuals. In them, the speaker discusses the background of the policy and suggests changes. She presents a solution to the current situation and proves why her plan is practical and should be adopted. Select a topic for your policy speech. Choose something you are interested in, know about or can find out about. Consider your audience in terms of age, interests or background, and be sure your topic is appropriate. Brainstorm by listing your thoughts on items of contemporary relevance, recent experiences, discussions in the newspapers or conversations you may have had. Narrow them to one specific topic. Determine the general purpose of your policy speech. Consider examples: "The United States should restore the draft" urges the audience to consider the proposal but not go out and physically change something, while "Sign the petition to restore the draft" would be a call to action. The speech should convince the audience to think a certain way or persuade the listeners to respond to a call to action. Gather material to prove your points. Use books, magazines, the Internet and interviews, but be sure your material is relevant and timely. Look for facts, statistics, quotes and testimony that clearly support your ideas. Write an outline for your speech beginning with an attention-getting introduction. Use techniques for your introduction such as anecdotes, statistics, startling statements or rhetorical questions that relate to your topic and will grab your audience. For example, with the topic "Children under 16 should not be allowed to babysit," you could use an anecdote for the introduction. Tell the audience a story in which a 12-year-old babysitter had a serious problem, such as not knowing how to handle a fire. This will get the audience interested in your speech.

Sign In or Sign Up now to answser this question!

Question Stats

Latest activity: 13 years, 3 month(s) ago.
This question has 1 answers.

BECOME A GUIDE

Share your knowledge and help people by answering questions.