4 Comments Already

commenter
James Said,
June 29th, 2008 @10:00 pm  

Chris,

Interesting breakdown. I think the Social Toastmaster can be broken down into a few categories. In some cases, there is the “Toastmasters is my life social toastmaster.” These people are often harmless but they often don’t know how to function outside toastmasters events.

The more positive extreme are people who are at the point they want to be with speaking and enjoy toastmasters because they feel that they can help other. These are great people to have in a club because mentors are in such supply.

I agree about the survivor. Watching someone grow from a nervous speaker into a more confident speaker is truly an inspiration (and one of the reasons I enjoy Toastmasters).

Great post,
James
blog.jvf.com

commenter
Nancy Said,
June 30th, 2008 @11:12 am  

Chris - I also enjoyed your breakdown. You missed a whole group of people who are dedicated to the leadership track in Toastmasters - those who are willing to serve beyond the club in order to provide a foundation for the rest of the members.

I’m a 20-year veteran, and the leadership track and opportunities to mentor others have contributed greatly to my success in the workplace. In addition to helping “the survivors” - they keep me grounded - these are the reasons I am a life-time member.

commenter
July 3rd, 2008 @5:21 pm  

What about those of us–probably the majority–who are just there to become better public speakers? To get over the nervousness and fright of talking to groups? Those for whom Toastmasters might not have saved our lives, might not be the focus of our lives, but non the less are exactly the sort of people Toastmasters was created for.

That’s my category: people who came in shy and came out confident.

commenter
chris Said,
July 4th, 2008 @7:52 am  

Thank you everyone for the responses. Hopefully I will be able to work them all into a future post on similar topics.

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