Advanced Toastmasters Club
Meeting Time and LocationThe first Thursday of each month from 6:30-8:30pm at Dorn's Restaurant in Morro Bay: 801 Market Avenue. Dinner Available. Please email President Marjorie Hamon with questions: .
Introduction to the Club
Welcome! Whether you are trying to overcome a fear of public speech, or trying to become a better speaker than you already are, you have taken the first steps toward success!
Toastmasters has been helping people become comfortable and confident speakers since 1924. You will never be forced to speak during a meeting if you are not
ready; you can become a better speaker at your own pace!
The Estero Bay Toastmasters club is looking to expand our membership. We would be delighted to have you attend one of our meetings. Please email us if you have any questions.
About Toastmasters

In
October 1924, a group of men assembled by Dr. Ralph C. Smedley met in the
basement of the YMCA in Santa Ana, California, U.S.A., forming a club to afford
practice and training in the art of public speaking and in presiding over
meetings, and to promote sociability and good fellowship among its members. The
group took the name Toastmasters. We are a local
chapter of Toastmasters
International.
Today, Toastmasters International is a non-profit organization which
gives its members the opportunity to develop and improve their public
speaking abilities through local club meetings, training seminars and speech
contests. Toastmasters International includes more than 199,000 men and women
in more than 9,300 clubs in more than 70 countries.
Experienced professionals and beginning speakers alike can benefit from
our practical, face-to-face learning program. Whether you're speaking to
the board of directors, your customers, your co-workers or your kids,
Toastmasters can help you do it better. You'll learn and practice in a
friendly, comfortable environment with people who are there for the same reason
you areto become better communicators.
At Toastmasters, members learn by speaking to groups and
working with others in a supportive environment. A typical Toastmasters
club is made up of 20 to 30 people who meet once a week for about an hour. Each
meeting gives everyone an opportunity to practice conducting meetings,
giving impromptu speeches, presenting prepared speeches, and offering
constructive evaluation.
"Only
when we are no longer afraid do we begin to live."
-Dorothy
Thomson