Friday, July 27, 2018

About anchor host emcee Corporate trainer Girish Sharma

Girsh is the funniest & Most energetic corporate trainer in India. His vision of corporate training is giving the knowledge with the help of humour, wit, comedy & Bollywood Music. 

With over 3000 national and international live shows to his credit, Anchor Girish Sharma, in a span of 8 years, has mastered the art of performing at the spur of the moment! A charmer, who arrests the audience’s attention, with a driving stage presence, also manages to keep them on their toes with his unceasing energy, making every event a success beyond expectations. 

Girish has also worked in entertainment channels like ZOOM TV and E-24. He has shared the stage with the likes of Kanika Kapoor, Prachi Desai, Daisy Shah, Boman Irani, Mahima Chaudhry, to name a few! 

Internationally, Girish has performed in Kuwait, Istanbul, Cyprus, and Antalya, Dubai, Singapore, Thailand, Russia & Uzbekistan

 

Contact Us :-

Call : +91-9769964451

Email :- gichi011@gmail.com

Website : www.teambuildinganchor.com
Website : www.anchorgirish.com

Best indian wedding anchor | Anchor Girish Sharma

https://youtu.be/gsMCT2ZdDmQ

Thursday, July 19, 2018

Event anchoring and public speaking tips

Gratitude is always the best place to begin. 
Any and every gig is an honour. Thank the host, and thank the audience for the possible mountains they moved to show up and listen to you.

2. Being prepared is an act of love. And intelligence.
Even if you can improv with the best of them, do a complete run through in advance, and a written key points list of your talk. I like to do a verbal run through in the tub the day before (the tub is my second office, really,) and I do a key points list the morning of the event.

3. Lead with your best stuff. 
Make an entrance. Put forth your Big Point right away. Start with your best story, your funniest joke, your guiding theory. Don’t make them wait to see you shine. Grab ‘em from the get-go.

4. Know who you’re talking to. 
A co-presenter and I gave a talk to a group of underprivileged single moms. My co-presenter talked about shopping at Tiffany’s and Saks. They turned on us. It was ugly. Along this same line…

5. Research your audience. 
Guy Kawasaki is great at this. At a presentation in Vancouver last year, he sported a Vancouver Canucks jersey, made some good jokes about the event organizers, and told some personal stories that related to the organization’s mission.

6. Actively respect your audience. 
A playwright friend of mine commented on an actor’s performance: “You could tell she didn’t like the character that she was playing. And you’ve always got to find something to love about who you’re playing to make it real.” Same goes for your audience. You won’t always be presenting or pitching to your tribe, to people you “like”—find the common ground and put your love there.

7. Never, ever admit to fatigue. 
I heard a very popular author open his talk, to a packed theatre, with “I’m quite tired, I’ve been on the road for a few days.” Instant downer. It made us feel guilty for keeping him up past his bedtime, or ticked that we spent $50 to hear a jet-lagged psychologist. I’ve done gigs on two hours of sleep, in the middle of a professional tragedy, stoned on Sinutab. You get up there and you SMILE, no matter what. You can collapse when you get off stage.

8. Stay in the lead as long as you’re on stage.
A few weeks ago I was speaking to a ballroom of university business students at The Four Seasons Hotel. As I was leaving the stage, a woman at the back of the room raised her hand. I’d just handed back my mic, but I gestured to take her question. She proceeded to tell me that I was dressed like a slob and not setting a good example to the students about personal branding. Not kidding. (And I looked HOT, BTW.) You could have heard a pin drop. Heckled! First time for everything.

“And how have you come to be here tonight?” I asked her. I figured she sneaked in. She mumbled something about being a mentor, and then she made a dash for the door, carrying her various tattered shopping bags. “Well,” I said to the stunned audience. “Now you have an example of what elegant is and what elegant isn’t. And that’s branding.” I didn’t exhale until I got in my car.

9. Plan your finish. 
Wrapping up can be the hardest part of a talk because you’ve either used up all of your good stuff, you’ve gone over time, or you have space to fill. Hold on to your closing gold nugget so you can leave on a high note either way.

10. Believe that people are rooting for you. 
It’s vastly true that every single person watching and listening to you wants you to be amazing. They want a great experience. No one likes to see someone bomb. They really do want you to win.

11. Go easy on the apologies.
This is a tricky one, because elegance is the numero uno concerno. But things like, “Sorry to keep you waiting,” “My apologies for the technical snafu,” can create more snags in your fabric. Sometimes, most of the time, it’s better to just keep going. An ice skater doesn’t apologize for slipping. She keeps skating, distracting you with the next great move.

12. Dress up.
When you’re on stage being well dressed says, “I cared about you enough to polish it up.” Sunday best.

13. Affirm, pray, focus, ommm. 
Whether it’s a staff meeting you’re leading or a concerto performance, a short pre-show ritual pulls your energy into your center. Before I take the stage I say this quickie prayer, “Help us shine.” That’s it. That covers me, the audience, and the world in one fell swoop.

14. Ask questions.
Frame your stories into questions and you’ve created a conversation.

15. Know how you want to feel when you’re done your presentation.
Ultimately, you can’t really control what the audience does and if try to, you’re likely to fumble. I’ve had what I thought were hilarious stories that didn’t get so much as a giggle. And I’ve had low-engagement audiences that swarmed me after I got off stage. You just don’t know.

What you can aim for is how you want to feel. And when you anchor into that feeling, your energy gathers a momentum and you get into the magical flow.

When I leave the auditorium, I want to feel like I connected, like I was divinely feminine, and innovative–on my personal edge. And if I did my best to be those things, then I can sleep well, even if I forgot to say thank you, or I tripped over a speaker, or got heckled by a bag lady.

PS…
All-important style tips:
Ladies: 
Wear a good bra. You know, 80% of women are wearing the wrong fit of bra, right? Well, when that happens on stage, it’s tragic. While we’re on the topic…
Tits up. You heard me. Lift your girls up and your entire posture changes.
False eyelashes. Don’t be afraid of them. When you’re being photographed, the small touch of glam can give you just the right amount of voom voom.
Always have a back up outfit. 
High heels are a must. Because, it’s not how you feel, it’s how you tower.

Gentlemen:
Shave. A 5 o’clock shadow looks great when you roll over in the morning, but in the spotlight or on camera, you do not look suave, you look like a bum. Or like George Michael in 1991.
The pants. It’s all about excellent fitting pants. Get a tailor

Note : I have collected this date from internet. These tips is a reaserch work by me. Not my own written


About Girish :-


Anchor Girish Sharma is a Mumbai based famous event anchor. You can know more about him from his website


www.anchorgirish.com


YouTube channel of Anchor Girish Sharma

https://www.youtube.com/user/4378mandi


Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Anchor Girish Sharma hosting Pre wedding Night in Kolkata

https://youtu.be/iGCPTrPKok4

Learn anchor | How to anchor an event | Girish Sharma

https://youtu.be/mBWEc-Fjpd4

Funniest Team Building game by Girish Sharma.

https://youtu.be/u4UOt43mIug

Top 10 corporate Team Building Anchor Girish Sharma



Top 10 Corporate Team Building Activities

https://youtu.be/rqOUkuSei7Q


1. Happy Hour

True, your coworkers may not want to see you bust out your best Axl-Rose-snake-dance impression, but a little moderate imbibing does wonders for team morale, cohesiveness and camaraderie. Not only does happy hour offer some light at the end of the tunnel during a grueling work week or deadline, it provides the perfect light-hearted atmosphere to develop lasting relationships out of the workplace.

2. Indoor Go Kart Racing

Who hasn’t wanted to blow off some steam over lunch? Seeing your coworker whiz past you – rather than over the top of their cubicle – means heightened senses and adrenaline will pump out bonding oxytocin and feel-good endorphins.  Just limit the good natured heckling to the track and there should be no hard feelings lingering over the water cooler.

3. Team Olympics

Obviously emphasizing the team aspect of this activity will naturally foster cohesiveness while letting everyone’s competitive side come out for the betterment of the group. Choose fun and challenging teamwork-based games taking advantage of your natural surroundings. Who said sandcastle sculpting can’t be competitive?

4. Scavenger Hunt

Who said scavenger hunts are just for kids? This engaging activity mimics in-office skills like creative thinking, leadership and organization, while encouraging co-workers to work together. The location can vary – think about involving your entire office building and making teams out of each company – or take your group to an up-and-coming neighbourhood to explore.

5. Icebreakers

Icebreakers, by definition, encourage conversation, interaction and communication. Pick a fun personal fact about everyone’s history – a worst job will likely result in some laughs – and have everyone jot it down on a postcard. As each card is read aloud, guess which employee held the particular groan-worthy job in way to learn something new about each of your colleagues.

6. Paintball

Okay, we’d have a hard time arguing that paintball can improve office skills like team leadership or organization – it really is a dog-eat-dog sport – but when it comes down to a rowdy good time, paintball makes the list.

7. Hiking Survivor-Style

Again, this ambitious undertaking should focus on team work, so rather than pitting individuals against each other, split into pairs or groups. And we’re not trying to kill anyone here so pick a simpler task like scaling a chosen point with nothing but a compass and a good old-fashioned paper map. The point here is moot if electronics are involved so ditch the iPhones!

8. Volunteering for Charity

The positive effects of volunteering – lowered stress and greater thankfulness in everyday life, not to mention the positive benefits to those on the receiving end – have become an increasing topic of interest. Volunteering as a group multiplies these benefits while bringing co-workers closer on a personal level.

9. Chilli Cook-Off

Hosting a chilli cook-off or bake off not only lets co-workers get to know each other in a low stress, friendly environment, but everyone gets to the reap the rewards: [hopefully] a bounty of good grub.

10. Charades

Participating in a game like Charades, utterly silly by nature and most likely a game the majority of your employees haven’t participated in in years, possibly decades, forces everyone to drop their guard – quick. And to loosen up those stuffy types, it couldn’t hurt to combine this classic with corporate team building activity #1, as mentioned above 

Anchor Girish Sharma Hosting Corporate Team Building

https://youtu.be/hG_-1YJMerU