The thought of speaking in public makes some of the most confident professionals break into a nervous sweat. But once you understand the keys to successful public speaking, you'll have a toolkit that is applicable in many other instances—especially marketing.

Using some of the same concepts that have the power to make or break your public address, you can dramatically transform the effectiveness of your marketing campaigns.

The best part? You never have to give a speech to do it.

We'll start with the three methods of persuasion that Aristotle outlined: Ethos, Pathos, and Logos

1. Ethos

Public speakers are faced with the task of developing credibility with their audience by proving they are a reputable source.

For instance, if you were to give a speech on the negative impacts of high sugar consumption in children, your audience will be likely to take your argument more seriously if you start off introducing yourself as a dietician—thus, establishing ethos.

Similarly, a marketer must be deemed credible to be effective with the target audience. It's the reason someone might feel more comfortable purchasing a piece of décor from Amazon as opposed to a site with a name like www.buyyourdecorhere.com (domain name still available, surprisingly).

A company that has established ethos is much more likely to gain buy-in from its target audience.

2. Pathos

Great speeches rely heavily on pathos—emotional appeal. Imagine you are having a conversation with a friend about a close family member's death. Telling that friend your family member has passed may create sympathy; however, showing them a photograph of you and that family member in the hospital and telling the story about your last exchange of words with that family member will likely have a much more significant emotional impact.

Public speaking and marketing work in the same way as that conversation.

The language and imagery used to convey your message has the power to strongly appeal to the emotions of your audience. Animal-adoption commercials rely heavily on such techniques. The audience knows—the second they see a puppy on television—that they have two options: Turn the channel or break out the credit card (and maybe some Kleenex).

3. Logos

Logos, not to be confused with the cool graphics that represent brands, is the appeal to logic. Simply put, people need to believe that the facts presented to them are the truth before buying into them.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Stephanie Villella

Stephanie Villella is communications coordinator at Cass County Electric Cooperative in Fargo, ND. She has more than a decade of public speaking experience.

LinkedIn: Stephanie Villella