Tag Archive for 'Dan Smith'

CAT meeting this week

July 23rd – Meeting theme:  Into the Fire

  • TME – Bill Wang, ACB
  • TTM – Raf Verheyen
  • Speakers – Susan Zhou, DTM and John Ng, CC
  • GE – Jenny Ni, CC & CL
  • Left-Brain Right-Brain Evaluation Team – Linda Ma, CC and Joyce Hu, CC & CL

Get ready to experience the first session of SUPER TABLE TOPICS!

New Directions: 9 July

The start of a new Toastmasters year begins with our first meeting on 9 July!

  • TME Joyce Hu CC CL
  • TTM Linda Ma CC
  • Special visitor from Australia, Andrew Smith, will deliver his C10 speech
  • Organisational Growth by Entering New Markets, Carlo Wolff ACB CL
  • Summiting Session: Super Table Topics with Dan Smith DTM
  • GE Spike Gu ACB CL

Super Table Topics are a special new initiative for China Advanced Toastmasters. Just imagine a speech-length Table Topics session…

Continue reading ‘New Directions: 9 July’

Spike Gu ACB CL with Summiting Session on Presentation with Power Point 25 June

Theme: Power

25 June, 2009 from 7:10pm

  • TME Dan Smith DTM
  • TTM Jenny Ni CC CL
  • Speech: John Ng CC
  • HPLP Launch speech: Carlo Wolff ACB CL
  • General Evaluator: Susan Zhou DTM
  • Individual Evaluator: Emily Minor CC ALS
  • Individual Evaluator: Wendy Wang ACB ALB

Mastering Your Emotions

Summiting Session: Mastering Your Emotions with Daniel Smith DTM

  • TME Delphy Chow ACS CL
  • TTM Spike Gu ACB CL
  • Lunch Date Linda Ma CC
  • DSLR Photography Emily Minor CC ALS
  • Love Languages Wendy Wang ACB ALB
  • IE Jenny Ni CC CL
  • GE Carlo Wolff ACB CL

General Evaluation at Shanghai No. 1


Last Monday night our VPE was the GE at Shanghai No. 1 at their 499th meeting. It was a longer evaluation than is often possible and you can see it here or below but some of the key points are below:

  • Utilization: Use whatever happens to get across your message.
  • Frame the message and prepare the audience.
  • Say less; communicate more.
  • Take your time. When you do, speak with a purpose.
  • Share the emotional component of the message, not just the content. Communicate feeling AND information. They’ll remember the feeling long after they forget your information and will forget your information immediately if they don’t like the feeling they get around you.
  • Everytime we stand up, we’re looking to expand our skills. There are no small roles, only short ones. When you have a short role, it’s a concentrated experience to use in refining your skills.
  • Set the frame – when you speak, identify the criteria for success or at least the guidelines that you are working towards.
  • There are no excuses – don’t make them for yourself or give them to other people. Just give your best. Always.
  • When things go wrong, strive to make the problem invisible. Make it look as though it was part of the plan.
  • Give your audience the gift of your message. They are VIPs (Very Important People) so if you don’t have a point to saying something yet, think of one.
  • Great evaluators highlight examples of great things that we can learn from, highlight ways that we can improve and presents the combination of the two for the benefit of the audience. Speak of “the speaker” to the audience rather than speaking to the speaker. Give your personal evaluation for the speaker later.
  • Have a great introduction. Introductions set the stage for the audience and help them get more from the presentation. The easiest way is to write one yourself.