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  <title>Speaking To Audiences In BIG Venues In Japan</title>
  <description>Q: Why does speaking in a very large venue require a different approach? A: A very large venue changes the scale of communication. In a smaller room, subtle delivery may still work. In a hall holding thousands, the audience at the back will see the speaker as very small. That means the presentation has to become larger in gesture, energy and stage use. Mini-summary: Large venues punish small delivery, so the speaker has to scale up. Q: What should a speaker do before the audience arrives? A: Get there early and sit in the seats that are furthest away. Go to the back row or up to the highest section. This gives you a direct sense of the distance and helps you understand how little of you the audience can actually see. That awareness helps shape the way you present. Mini-summary: The farthest seats teach you how the room really feels to the audience. Q: How should gestures change in a big venue? A: Use a pin microphone so your hands are free. In a very large room, small gestures disappear. The speaker needs larger, clearer movement and should use both hands often to fill more of the stage with visible presence. Mini-summary: Bigger spaces require bigger, clearer gestures. Q: What role do voice and energy play? A: The speaker has to project more than sound. The idea of ki captures the need to push personal energy outward. On a large stage, mentally direct your voice and energy all the way to the back wall so the people furthest away still feel included. Mini-summary: In a big hall, voice and presence must travel together. Q: How should eye contact work with such a large audience? A: Break the audience into sections such as left, centre and right, and also near and far. Then work each section with deliberate eye contact, picking out individuals where possible. Even in a huge venue, people respond to direct connection. Mini-summary: Structured eye contact makes a large audience feel more personal. Q: How should the speaker use the stage? A: Use the left, centre and right sides of the stage, but move slowly. Walk to one side, stop, settle, and speak to that section. Return to the centre, then move to the other side and repeat. At the same time, do not forget the front row, because they feel your presence most immediately. Mini-summary: Purposeful movement helps every part of the room feel included. Author Bio: “Dr Greg Story, Ph.D. in Japanese Decision-Making, is a veteran Japan CEO and trainer, author of multiple best-sellers and host of the Japan Business Mastery series. He leads leadership and presentation programmes at Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo.” </description>
  <author_name>The Japan Business Mastery Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan</author_name>
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