A Speaker's Guidebook: Chapter 6
Name: _________________________
Analyzing the Audience
Define these KEY TERMS
audience analysis
audience-centered approach
pandering
attitudes
beliefs
values
perspective taking
identification
captive audience
demographics
target audience
generational identity
socioeconomic status (SES)
gender
sexist language
gender stereotypes
persons with disabilities (PWD)
co-culture
individualistic culture
collectivist culture
uncertainty avoidance
high-uncertainty avoidance cultures
low-uncertainty avoidance cultures
power distance
linear-active culture
multi-active culture
reactive culture
interview
questionnaire
closed-ended question
fixed alternative question
scale question
open-ended question
1. What can audience demographics reveal about an audience?
2. Which features of the speech setting should be assessed as part of audience analysis?
3. How might audience analysis help alleviate public speaking anxiety?
4. What advantages do published sources have over interviews and surveys?
Class Collage
Instructions: Bring to class three to five cutouts of pictures that represent your values, attitudes, and beliefs.
Discussion: The class will generate a list of demographics and psychographics.
Uncovering Audience Psychology: Identifying Feelings about the Topic, Speaker, and Occasion
Instructions: Group work: hypothetical speech assignments. (This exercise corresponds to text material on pages 89–91.)
1. Topic: Welfare to Work Laws: Should Welfare Mothers Be Required to Work?
Speaker: A professor specializing in the history of welfare
Occasion: A lecture at a university
• Audience 1: senior Republican lawmakers
• Audience 2: caseworkers assigned to welfare mothers
• Audience 3: mothers currently on welfare
2. Topic: Should There Be Legislation Limiting What the Media Can Report on Politicians’ Personal Lives?
Speaker: The publisher of the New York Times
Occasion: An appearance before a congressional committee that is also open to the public
• Audience 1: senators and representatives
• Audience 2: journalists
• Audience 3: lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union
For each of these audiences, how might feelings about the speaker differ? How might feelings about the topic differ? How might feelings about the occasion differ?
• How might the speaker shape his or her message to appeal to each audience?
• Why should the occasion be one of the speaker’s key considerations in planning and delivering the speech?