7.1 Select and narrow a topic for a speech that is appropriate to the audience, the occasion, the time limits, and yourself.
Your first task, as illustrated in Figure 7.1, is to choose a topic on which to speak. You will then need to narrow this topic to fit your time limits. Sometimes you can eliminate one or both of these steps because the topic has been chosen and properly defined for you. For example, knowing that you visited England’s Lake District on your tour of Great Britain last summer, your English literature teacher asks you to speak about the mountains and lakes of that region before your class studies the poetry of Wordsworth and Coleridge. Or knowing that you chair the local drug-abuse task force, the Lions Club asks you to speak at its weekly meeting about the work of your group. In both cases, your topic and its scope have been decided for you.
In May 2012, CNN and Time journalist Fareed Zakaria delivered much the same speech to the graduating class of Harvard as he had delivered to Duke graduates less than two weeks earlier. After beginning both speeches with the same anecdote about missing his own college graduation, Zakaria went on to use similar, sometimes identical, language and content in the two speeches. Any listeners who later Googled the speech probably felt cheated when they discovered that Zakaria had also delivered essentially the same speech to an entirely different group.1
In contrast to Fareed Zakaria, autism activist and animal behaviorist Temple Grandin notes that when she is invited to deliver a commencement address, she makes it a point to find out about “each campus, the place, and the people,” and to adapt her speech accordingly.2 You, too, should keep in mind each audience’s interests and expectations. “What interests and needs do the members of this audience have in common?” and “Why did they ask me to speak?” are important questions to ask yourself as you search for potential speech topics. For example, a university president who has been invited to speak to a civic organization should talk about some new university program or recent accomplishment; a police officer speaking to an elementary school’s PTA should address the audience’s concern for the safety of young children.
Not only should a speaker’s choice of topic be relevant to the interests and expectations of his or her listeners; it should also take into account the knowledge listeners already have about the subject. For example, the need for a campuswide office of disability services would not be a good topic to discuss in a speech to a group of students with disabilities, who would already be well aware of such a need. The speech would offer them no new information.
Finally, speakers should choose topics that are important—topics that matter to their listeners as well as to themselves. Student speaker Roger Fringer explains the stakes for students in a public-speaking class:
We work hard for our tuition, so we should spend it wisely. Spending it wisely means . . . we don’t waste our classmates’ time who have to listen to our speeches.3
Several years ago, communication scholar and then-president of the National Communication Association Bruce Gronbeck reminded an audience of communication instructors that students should be giving “the important kinds of . . . speeches that show . . . people how to confront the issues that divide them.”4 Table 7.1 offers examples of topics that are appropriate for the interests, expectations, knowledge, and concerns of particular audiences.
On December 17, 1877, Mark Twain was invited to be one of the after-dinner speakers at American poet John Greenleaf Whittier’s seventieth-birthday celebration.5 The guest list included such dignitaries as Oliver Wendell Holmes, Ralph Waldo Emerson, William Dean Howells, and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. When it was Twain’s turn to speak, he began with a humorous sketch featuring Longfellow, Emerson, and Holmes as drunken card-playing travelers in Nevada. Used to laughter and applause from his audiences, Twain was stunned by the silence.
What had gone wrong? Was Mark Twain’s topic of interest to his listeners? Undoubtedly. Did they expect to hear someone talk about the distinguished guests? Yes. Could Twain add to their knowledge of the subject? Probably. Was his topic appropriate to the occasion? Definitely not!
Although after-dinner speeches are usually humorous, Twain’s irreverence was inappropriate to the dignity of this birthday observance. Even though he had considered his audience, he had not considered carefully enough the demands of the occasion. Twain’s irreverent talk aroused quite a commotion at the time and is said to have embarrassed him for years afterward. To be successful, a topic must be appropriate to both audience and occasion.
What do you talk about with your friends? You probably discuss school, mutual friends, political or social issues, hobbies or leisure activities, or whatever other topics are of interest and importance to you. Like most people, your liveliest, most animated conversations revolve around topics of personal concern that arouse your deepest convictions.
The best public-speaking topics are also those that reflect your personal experience or especially interest you. Where have you lived? Where have you traveled? Describe your family or your ancestors. Have you held any part-time jobs? Describe your first days at college. What are your favorite classes? What are your hobbies or interests? What is your favorite sport? What social issues especially concern you? Here is one list of topics that was generated by such questions:
Blues music
“Yankee, go home”: the American tourist in France
Why most diets fail
Behind the counter at McDonald’s
My first day at college
Maintaining family ties while living a long distance from home
Getting involved in political campaigns
An alternative to selecting a topic with which you are already familiar is to select one that you would like to know more about. Your interest will motivate both your research and your eventual delivery of the speech.
All successful topics reflect audience, occasion, and speaker. But just contemplating those guidelines does not automatically produce a good topic. Sooner or later, we all find ourselves unable to think of a good speech topic, whether it is for the first speech of the semester, that all-important final speech, or a speaking engagement long after our school years are over. Nothing is as frustrating to a public speaker as floundering for something to talk about! In such an instance, you may want to turn to one of the following strategies to help generate a speech topic.
A problem-solving technique that is widely used in such diverse fields as business, advertising, writing, and science, brainstorming or visual brainstorming can easily be used to generate ideas for speech topics as well.6 For example, the following list of twenty-one possible topics came from a brainstorming session that lasted about three minutes:
Music
Reggae
Bob Marley
Sound-recording technology
Retro music
Buddy Holly
Censorship of music
Movie themes
Oscar-winning movies of the 1950s
Great epic movies
Titanic (the movie)
Salvaging the Titanic (the ship)
The Beatles
John Lennon
Alternative music
Popular rock bands
iTunes
Treasure hunting
Key West, Florida
Ernest Hemingway
Polydactyl cats
The How To box list gives you step-by-step instructions for brainstorming. If your brainstorming yields several good topics, so much the better. Set aside a page or two in your class notebook or an electronic file where you list topic ideas that you don’t end up choosing. You can then reconsider them when you get your next assignment.
Very often, something you see, hear, or read triggers an idea for a speech. A current story from your favorite news source may suggest a topic. The following list of topics was brought to mind by recent headline stories in a large daily newspaper:
Cyber-espionage
Recovery in the housing market
Issues for same-sex married couples
The rising cost of flood insurance
Mexican drug wars
Optimal advance warning time for tornadoes
In addition to discovering topics in news stories, you might find them in an interesting segment of 20/20, Dateline, or even a daytime talk show. Chances are that a topic covered in one medium has been covered in another as well, allowing extended research on the topic. For example, Dr. Oz’s report on the germiest places in your home may be paralleled by Time’s article on the dangers of overusing antibacterial cleaning products.
You may also find speech topics in one of your classes. One of the topics that we’ve mentioned so far might cause you to get an idea, or a lecture in an economics or political science class may arouse your interest and provide a good topic for your next speech. The instructor of that class could probably suggest additional references on the subject.
Sometimes even a subject that you discuss casually with friends can be developed into a good speech topic. You have probably talked with classmates about such campus issues as dormitory regulations, inadequate parking, or your frustration with registration and advisors. Campuswide concerns would be relevant to the student audience in your speech class, as would such matters as how to find a good summer job or the pros and cons of living on or off campus.
Just as you jotted down possible topics generated by brainstorming sessions, remember to write down topic ideas that you get from what’s trending in social media you use, class lectures, and informal conversations. If you rely on memory alone, what seems like a great topic today may be only a frustrating blank tomorrow.
By now, you probably have a list of topics from which to choose. But if all your efforts have failed to produce any ideas that satisfy you, try the following strategy:
Access a Web directory such as Yahoo! Directory and select a category at random. Click on it, and look through the subcategories that come up. Click on one of them. Continue to follow the chain of categories until you see a topic that piques your interest—or until you reach a dead end, in which case you can return to the Yahoo! Directory homepage and try again.
A recent random directory search yielded the following category and subcategories, listed from general to specific:
Society and culture
Environment and nature
Ecotourism
This search took only a few minutes (as will yours, as long as you resist the temptation to begin surfing the Web) and yielded at least one possible topic: The pros and cons of ecotourism. An additional advantage of this strategy is that you begin to develop your preliminary bibliography while you are searching for a topic.
After brainstorming, reading the newspaper, surfing the Web, and talking to friends, you have come up with a topic. For some students, the toughest part of the assignment is over at this point. But others soon experience additional frustration because their topic is so broad that they find themselves overwhelmed with information. How can you cover all aspects of a topic as large as “television” in three to five minutes? Even if you trained yourself to speak as rapidly as an auctioneer, it would take days to get it all in! The solution is to narrow your topic so that it fits within the time limits set by your assignment. The challenge lies in how to do this. The How To box describes one helpful method.