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Toastmasters International President Radhi Spear in red jacket smiling on magazine cover
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Toastmasters International President Radhi Spear in red jacket smiling on magazine cover

September 2024
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Make Every Listener Comfortable


Make your speech accessible to every listener—including guests who are visual, aural, and kinesthetic learners, or who are visually, physically, or hearing-impaired. Here are accommodation suggestions from motivational speaker and coach Rosemarie Rossetti, Ph.D.

  • Coordinate with organizers to reserve seats and spaces up front for those who need to be close to the stage.
  • Always use a microphone; repeat audience questions.
  • Let your audience see your lips (use clear or see-through masks).
  • Describe slides for those who can’t see or have joined the meeting without video.
  • Use closed captioning for virtual presentations; show audiences how to enlarge the font size. An 18- to 20-point font works best.
  • Consult this guide to Understanding What Makes Typeface Accessible.
  • Advocate for sign language interpreters; use apps like Wordly.ai, which provides simultaneous interpretation in 16 languages.
  • Avoid ALL CAPS as it gets read as acronyms by text readers.

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