Reading
a Teleprompter effectively is a lot more difficult than many people
think. First of all, most people don't read aloud as well as they think
they do. Add to that the difficulties of the sentences being cut up to
two or three words per line and those lines moving at a distance while
you have lights in your face. Meanwhile there are thousands, maybe millions, of people
watching you closely. Deal with all this while appearing to not to be
reading at all.
Do not fixate on the words as they roll past you. Novice teleprompter readers squint and stare
at the words without realizing it. Moving words tend to frighten people. They entice them to read faster because the words seem like they are escaping. This encourages mistakes. When you stammer and the words keep rolling by, panic sets in and many people fall apart.
This is why it is
painfully obvious when watching someone with little experience with a
teleprompter. Look at the teleprompter naturally. Notice what is
happening to your face. If you are straining to focus on the
teleprompter then stop.
Dictate the pace. Don't let the pace dictate you. There is a temptation
to read faster when the words are scrolling off the screen. Always
remember that it is not your obligation to play catch up. Read the
teleprompter at your own speed and make the operator adjust to you.
Know your material. It is imperative that you know the story you are
reading before you see it on the teleprompter. If you are already
familiar with the script you are less likely to strain to see the
words. Reading a teleprompter effectively is all about not appearing to
be reading. If your face is contorted and eyes moving around it will be
obvious that you are.
Use the teleprompter as a guide. Do not try to read every word exactly
as it is written on the teleprompter. Every anchor makes mistakes.
Sometimes words are misspelled. Occasionally a long word will be cut in
half because it is too long for a line. Whatever the problem, if you
get lost in your script you will fall apart on camera.
If you already
know your story well then you can adapt to whatever happens. The
teleprompter is a helpful tool but you must be able to communicate
without it. Every teleprompter goes down at some point. If you are
completely reliant on it you will be in big trouble when it eventually
fails you.
Be natural and just talk. You may be looking at words on the
teleprompter but all those people on the other side of the camera are
looking at your face. They aren't thinking about the fact that you are
reading. You should therefore not give them any reason to think you are
reading. Speak fluidly with natural pauses and inflection. Every time
you catch yourself reading, stop and just talk.
Practice. Effectively reading a teleprompter is all about confidence
and comfort in front of the camera. The only way to gain that is
through repetition. When reading a teleprompter comes as naturally as
breathing you will be ready. Eventually you will forget the
teleprompter is even there.