Title: A Presentation on Presentations
1A Presentation on Presentations CS 6 Summer
2006 Jill A. Brady Computer Science
Engineering DepartmentUniversity of California -
RiversideRiverside,CA 92521bradyj_at_cs.ucr.edu Mo
dified from the notes of Edward R. Tufte, Craig
S. Kaplan, Eamonn Keogh, Patrick Winston, and
others
2Outline
- Motivation for Presentations
- Planning the Presentation
- Creating the Presentation
- Giving the Presentation
- Conclusion
3Motivation for Presentations
- You will be giving presentations for the rest of
your life. - In college
- To get hired
- To get a promotion
- As a representative of your company
4Motivation for Presentations
- A poor presentation can cost you
- Your grade
- Your job
- Your salary
- An important client . . .
5Motivation for Presentations
- A good presentation requires organization and
preparation more than anything else. - Anyone can learn, and everyone should!
- Today is the day.
6Outline
- Motivation for Presentations
- Planning the Presentation
- Creating the Presentation
- Giving the Presentation
- Conclusion
7Planning the Presentation
- Presentation as a meal
- Hosts welcome
- Menu
- Hors doeuvres
- Entrée
- Dessert
8Planning the Presentation
- Hosts welcome
- Always have a title slide!
- Presentation title
- Your name
- Company or School Affiliation Address
- Date of the presentation
9Planning the Presentation
- Menu
- Outline the presentation
- Audiences want a roadmap.
- provides proof of destination, ability to get
there.
10Planning the Presentation
- Hors doeuvres
- Dangle the Carrot
- Purpose / motivation of the speech
- What you will prove by the end
- Show enthusiasm for your work!
11Planning the Presentation
- Entrée
- The idea, in more detail
- Background knowledge, if needed.
- Your efforts
- What you created, even if it is a concept
instead of a product - Supporting experiments or research
- Proof you are sane and rational
- Results
12Planning the Presentation
- Dessert
- The conclusion
- Restate the main points
- Restate results/conclusion in one sentence.
- This is the sentence you want them to remember!
- Make it clean, short, and strong.
13Planning the Presentation
- The questions / thank you slide
- Any Questions? at the top
- Thank sources, funding parties, etc. at the
bottom. - Gives a clean finish.
14Outline
- Motivation for Presentations
- Planning the Presentation
- Creating the Presentation
- Giving the Presentation
- Conclusion
15Creating the Presentation
- Start with a clean slate
- Simple backgrounds (if any!)
- No patterns
- Strongest contrast color for text
16Creating the Presentation
- Use large fonts Small fonts are hard to read.
- Use highly contrasting colors.
- Avoid red and green, they can be hard to see.
- DONT USE ALL CAPS.
- Use color in any graphs, include a key
17Creating the Presentation
- Be balanced with graphics.
- Does this graphic add meaning, or just distract
the audience? - Never post a table of numbers, always use a graph
or chart.
18Creating the Presentation
- Find new graphics.
- Do not use built-in clipart. Weve seen it.
- images.google.com
- A picture is worth a thousand words, but not if
its blurry. Avoid bitmaps (bmp). Go large. - Projected colors differ from monitor colors.
19Creating the Presentation
- No Media!
- Do not use music or video. It wont work.
- Use transition effects with great care.
- Nothing should blink, spin, bounce, or move.
20Creating the Presentation
- Be Terse
- The sales forecasts show an increase on the very
near horizon. - vs
- Sales heading up.
- Remove words everywhere. Outline only.
- 5 bullets or 1 main point per slide, max.
21Creating the Presentation
- Ordered Lists Use numbers.
- Outline of our method
- Design
- Implementation
- Testing
- Unordered Lists Use bullets.
- Goals
- Ease of use
- Reusability
- Reliability
22Outline
- Motivation for Presentations
- Planning the Presentation
- Creating the Presentation
- Giving the Presentation
- Conclusion
23Giving the Presentation
- Practice
- In front of a mirror
- In front of friends
- In front of a clock! Do NOT go over time.
- At the presentation site.
- Prepared confident.
24Giving the Presentation
- Show up early
- Get off the Internet
- If it is your laptop. No update now messages
or incoming email to break the mood. - Be careful of desktop images be professional.
25Giving the Presentation
- Use title page to gain attention, start lecture.
- Always introduce yourself.
- Be full of energy, its now or never!
26Giving the Presentation
- Do
- Speak loudly, clearly, slowly.
- Make eye contact.
- Move around the room.
- Point to important areas on the slides.
- Take deep breaths.
- Memorize key sentences.
27Giving the Presentation
- Dont
- Read off your slides!
- Apologize. Nobody notices your mistakes until
you point them out. - Rapid-tag-team a partnered presentation.
Minimize disruptive switching.
28Giving the Presentation
- Dont
- Begin every sentence with the same word.
- Use pause words like um, and, so.
- Stand in one place.
- Keep hands in pockets.
- Talk to the floor.
- Talk to the screen.
29Giving the Presentation
- More annoying nervous habits
- Playing with jewelry
- Licking and/or biting your lips
- Constantly adjusting your glasses
- Popping the top of a pen
- Playing with facial hair (men)
- Playing with/twirling your hair (women)
- Jingling change in your pocket
- Leaning against anything for support
30Giving the Presentation
- On pointers
- Some like them, some dont.
- Required for pointing to graphs on large screens.
- If you use one
- Turn it off when not actively pointing at
something. - Point at target, then turn on.
- Dont circle things rapidly.
- Dont point at the obvious.
31Giving the Presentation
- Running behind?
- Be aware of time so this doesnt happen.
- Pick up the pace a little if early on.
- Skim or skip unimportant slides/sections.
- Leave time for a good solid conclusion.
- Leave time for questions.
32Giving the Presentation
- Giving the Conclusion
- End strongly. Get a little louder, change pitch.
- Ask for questions and be open to getting them.
- Difficult questions or difficult people
- Suggest finishing the discussion together after
the presentation. - Admit any mistakes or issues with grace.
- You can disagree, but dont protest.
33Outline
- Motivation for Presentations
- Planning the Presentation
- Creating the Presentation
- Giving the Presentation
- Conclusion
34Conclusion
- We have discussed presentation organization and
creation, with emphasis on simplicity and
clarity. -
- We have also discussed giving the presentation,
including common mistakes and quirks.
35Conclusion
- We have seen that its not charisma or charm, but
careful planning and practice that make the
difference. - In conclusion, I must reemphasize the importance
of presentation skills for both your immediate
and long term success. Embrace any opportunity
to practice.
36Conclusion
- Any questions?
- Thank you to Dr. Eamonn Keogh and Patrick Winston
for resources used in this presentation.