Project 6 – Voice and Delivery

Speak. Compete. Connect.

PROJECT 6 — VOICE AND DELIVERY

How You Speak Matters

Because Words Carry Meaning, But Delivery Creates Impact

Introduction

People Hear Your Voice Before They Understand Your Message

Many speakers focus entirely on what they say.

Very few speakers focus on how they say it.

Yet communication is influenced not only by words.

It is influenced by:

  • Voice
  • Tone
  • Pace
  • Energy
  • Expression
  • Delivery

Two people may speak the exact same sentence.

One creates excitement.

One creates boredom.

One creates curiosity.

One creates disconnection.

Why?

Because delivery changes everything.

At The Global Speakers’ Circle, Project 6 introduces one of the most important realities of communication:

People listen with their ears before they process with their minds.

Voice and delivery determine whether audiences remain engaged or mentally disappear.

Why Project 6 Exists

Because Monotony Destroys Attention

Many beginning speakers unknowingly speak in one consistent pattern:

Same speed.

Same tone.

Same energy.

Same volume.

Same rhythm.

As a result:

Audiences lose attention.

Listeners disconnect.

Messages become forgettable.

Even excellent ideas lose impact when delivery becomes flat.

Project 6 exists because:

Speaking is not simply saying words.

Speaking is performance.

Not theatrical performance.

Communication performance.

And delivery determines impact.

Project Title

Voice and Delivery

How You Speak Matters

Your voice is one of your most powerful communication tools.

Before people analyze content:

They unconsciously notice:

  • Energy
  • Tone
  • Confidence
  • Warmth
  • Excitement
  • Authority

Your voice communicates long before your words are fully understood.

This project teaches members:

A strong message delivered weakly becomes weak.

A meaningful message delivered powerfully becomes memorable.

Objective

To Improve Delivery Style

The purpose of Project 6 is straightforward:

To help members become more engaging through better vocal delivery.

Members learn to:

  • Improve vocal expression
  • Control pace
  • Vary tone
  • Use modulation intentionally
  • Deliver ideas with energy

The goal is not becoming dramatic.

The goal is becoming dynamic.

The Deeper Purpose of This Project

This project is not simply about speaking.

It is about influence.

Because people often respond emotionally before responding intellectually.

Listeners may not consciously remember every word.

But they remember:

  • How speakers sounded
  • How speakers made them feel
  • How speakers created energy

Delivery creates emotional experience.

And emotional experiences create memory.

Focus Area 1

Voice Modulation

Voice modulation means changing vocal expression intentionally.

Many speakers unknowingly sound flat because vocal patterns remain unchanged.

Project 6 introduces:

  • High energy moments
  • Low intensity moments
  • Emphasis
  • Vocal movement

Members learn:

  • How voice can rise
  • How voice can soften
  • How voice can pause
  • How voice can create attention

Because variation creates interest.

Focus Area 2

Tone Variation

Tone communicates emotion.

Without tone:

Words become mechanical.

Consider the phrase:

“I'm happy to be here.”

That sentence can sound:

  • Excited
  • Nervous
  • Forced
  • Genuine
  • Confident

Same words.

Different delivery.

Project 6 teaches members:

  • Emotional expression
  • Vocal warmth
  • Conversational authenticity
  • Matching tone with message

Because audiences feel tone.

Focus Area 3

Pace Control

Many beginning speakers unintentionally rush.

Why?

Because nervousness accelerates speech.

Project 6 teaches members:

Slow speaking creates clarity.

Pauses create power.

Silence creates anticipation.

Members learn:

  • Slow down intentionally
  • Speed up strategically
  • Pause before key ideas
  • Maintain audience comfort

Because speed without control creates confusion.

What Members Will Learn

Upon completing Project 6 members begin understanding:

  • How to improve delivery
  • How to vary tone naturally
  • How to create vocal energy
  • How to control pace
  • How to avoid monotony
  • How to become more engaging

Common Challenges Members Experience

Members commonly struggle with:

  • Speaking too fast
  • Monotone delivery
  • Flat vocal expression
  • Speaking without pauses
  • Low energy
  • Predictable rhythm

Project 6 helps members become aware of these patterns.

Because awareness creates improvement.

Practical Delivery Exercise

Pause → Emphasize → Vary → Deliver

Step 1

Pause.

Step 2

Emphasize important words.

Step 3

Change tone intentionally.

Step 4

Deliver with energy.

Simple adjustments create dramatic changes.

What Success Looks Like

Success in Project 6 does not mean sounding theatrical.

Success means:

  • People remain interested
  • People remain attentive
  • People stay connected
  • People feel your message

Because great speakers do not merely transfer information.

They create experience.

Expected Outcome

You Begin to Sound Engaging and Dynamic

Upon completion of Project 6:

Members can:

  • Use stronger voice modulation
  • Vary tone naturally
  • Improve pacing
  • Deliver with energy
  • Create more audience engagement

Most importantly:

Members begin hearing:

“You sounded much more engaging today.”

And engagement is one of the strongest signs of speaking growth.

Project 6 Evaluation Matrix

Structured Feedback for Stronger Vocal Delivery

Project 6 is evaluated not on volume.

It is evaluated on engagement, delivery effectiveness, and vocal variety.

Because audiences remember speakers who sound alive.

Project 6 Scoring Areas

Evaluation Area What Evaluators Observe Weightage
Completion & Participation Did the member complete the speaking exercise? 15%
Voice Modulation Did voice vary naturally and intentionally? 20%
Tone Variation Did tone match emotional intent? 15%
Pace Control Was speaking speed comfortable and controlled? 15%
Audience Engagement Did delivery maintain listener interest? 10%
Energy & Presence Did delivery create positive speaking energy? 10%
Pause Usage Were pauses used strategically? 10%
Growth Potential Evidence of effort and development 5%

Total: 100%

Evaluator Feedback Framework

Observe. Appreciate. Recommend.

What Worked Well

Examples:

  • Strong vocal variation
  • Better speaking energy
  • Good pace control
  • Effective pauses

Areas for Improvement

Examples:

  • Slow down speaking speed
  • Add stronger emphasis
  • Vary tone more naturally
  • Increase vocal expression

Recommended Next Action

Examples:

  • Record and review delivery
  • Practice reading aloud dramatically
  • Observe skilled speakers
  • Focus on pause placement

Project 6 Performance Recognition

Dynamic Voice Recognition

Demonstrated strong vocal variation.

Engaging Speaker Recognition

Maintained audience interest effectively.

Delivery Growth Recognition

Showed visible progress in voice and expression.

Final Message

At The Global Speakers’ Circle:

Words matter.

But delivery multiplies impact.

Because audiences rarely remember only what speakers said.

They remember how speakers sounded.

And they remember how speakers made them feel.

Speak. Compete. Connect.

Deliver with Energy. Speak with Impact.

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