Leo+DadMade for Leo
Delivering the Performance
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Where the Performance Comes From

You wrote the words. But half the speech doesn't live on the page at all — it lives in your body. Let's see why the very same line can soar or die.

NESA ENLS-COM-01 Builds on: writing your spoken-word piece

Play Keep the words the same. Flick the delivery from flat to alive — watch the impact meter jump.
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Audio WalkthroughDad & Leo, Two Minutes — Coming Soon
Video ExplainerComing Soon

Here's the whole idea in one breath: a speech is two halves — the words you wrote, and the way you say them. You've spent ages on the first half. This concept is about the second — the half nobody can read off your page, the half that decides whether the room leans in or quietly checks the clock.

The Page Is Only Half the Speech

Imagine handing your best line to two different people. One mumbles it to the floor, flat and fast, eyes glued to the paper. The other lands it — slows down on the word that matters, holds a beat of silence, looks you dead in the eye. Same fourteen words. One of them gives you goosebumps; the other you forget before they've sat down.

That gap is delivery. It's everything that happens between the ink and the ear — your voice and your presence. The script is what you say; the delivery is how you say it, and the how is doing far more of the work than most people ever realise.

Say it plainly: a speech is script + delivery. The script is the words on the page; the delivery is the voice and the body that carry them. Same script, different delivery — and you've got a different speech.

Why It's the Half That Wins the Room

Think about the speeches that actually moved you — a coach before the final, a character in a film, someone at a funeral. Strip away the voice and the face and write the words out plain, and most of them look ordinary. The power wasn't only in the words. It was in the pause before the big line, the catch in the voice, the eyes that wouldn't let go of yours.

And it's not a trick reserved for great orators. It's the same toolkit you already use when you tell a good story to your mates — you slow down, you do the voices, you leave a gap before the punchline. Delivery is just that, done on purpose. Flick the toy from flat to alive and you'll feel exactly how much of the speech was hiding in the body all along.

Us, Thinking Out Loud

When someone reads a speech off the page in a flat voice, what does it do to you as a listener?

When you tell a story that lands, what does your voice and body already do without you thinking about it?