please read attactment careful

[Student Name]

[Student Identification Number]

SP180 Principles of Public Speaking

Assignment 5: Audience Analysis and Outline

[Date of Submission]


AUDIENCE ANALYSIS

[Topic or title of your speech]

[Describe your audience in 20 or fewer words]

Audience Demographics (see pages 58-62 in textbook)

For five or more of these demographic criteria, complete the two columns on the right.

Criteria

Describe your audience based on the criteria in left column

How might you tailor your content to appeal to your audience?

Average age



Age range (youngest – oldest)



Generational group (choose from: Traditionalists, Baby Boomers, Generation X, and/or Millennials?)



Proportion of males and females



Relational arrangements (choose from: married, single, divorced, and/or domestic partnership?)



Cultural groups and in what proportion



Socioeconomic composition



Occupations



Religious groups



Audience Attitudes (see pages 62-63 in textbook)

Complete the two columns on the right.

Criterion

Describe your audience

How might you tailor your content to appeal to your audience?

Choose from the following: Highly favorable, mostly favorable, neutral, mostly unfavorable, mostly unfavorable

[use one of the favorability terms in the cell to the left]


Audience Expectations (see pages 63-64 in your textbook)

For three or more of these audience expectation criteria, complete the two columns on the right.

Criteria

Describe your audience

How might you tailor your content to appeal to your audience?

Is their attendance mandatory or voluntary?



What do they know about your topic?



What do they think about you?



What is the history of your audience as a group?



What is the program surrounding your speech?




NOTE: This Audience Analysis Worksheet was inspired by one shared by Andrew Dlugan on his Six Minutes blog (http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/audience-analysis/ ).

[PERSUASIVE SPEECH OUTLINE USING MONROE’S MOTIVATED SEQUENCE – Replace this with the title of your speech]

  1. Introduction (Attention)
    1. Gain Attention:
    2. Establish Your Credibility:
    3. Central Idea:
    4. Preview Your Main Points:
  2. Body of the Presentation (Need, Satisfaction & Visualization)
    1. Need: [Exactly what is the problem with the current situation?]
      1. Supporting material: [Supporting material should include statistics, or research from credible sources. Each source must be referenced in your speech. For example you would say, "According to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics...." or "In the February 2016 issue of Forbes Magazine, Bill Gates said, '....’ Any source that you reference in your speech must appear in the reference list]
      2. Supporting material:
    2. Satisfaction: [What it will take to resolve the need?]
      1. Supporting material:
      2. Supporting material:
    3. Visualization: [What will life be like once this need is satisfied? Be very descriptive.]
      1. Supporting material:
      2. Supporting material:
  3. Conclusion (Action)
    1. Briefly Summarize Your Main Points
    2. Conclude with a Call to Action: [What do you want your audience to do NOW as a result of listening to your speech? Be extremely specific with your Call to Action]

REFERENCES

[List your references here in APA style and in alphabetical order based on the author’s or authors’ last name. Notice that you will use a hanging indent for the formatting. Visit the Ashworth College Learning Resource Center or the Purdue Online Writing Lab for more specifics on creating your reference list.]