Title: GEB 6115
1 GEB 6115
Making Effective Presentations
2Key OneBuild a Relationship With Your
AudienceSlide 1 of 2
- First Impressions
- Dress, Personal Appearance, Deportment
- The Speech-Before-the-Speech
- Make Relational Contact with the Audience
- Let your audience know that you care about them.
3Key OneBuild a Relationship With Your
AudienceSlide 2 of 2
- Understand That All Listeners Ask Themselves Two
Questions - Do I Like This Speaker?
- Does This Speaker Like Us?
- Know Your Audience
- Demographics, motives, range of receptivity
4Three Questions for Establishing a Communicative
Relationship
How are we alike?
Why do we need each other?
What are we doing here together?
5Key TwoOvercome the Ego BarrierSlide 1 of 2
- Receiving Power From Your Audience
- Speak on Behalf of Your Audience
- Be yourself
- Dont Start by telling people how wonderful you
are, rush into your agenda, and/or talk too much
about yourself - Bury the Lead
- Build rapport without directly confronting the
subject at hand
6Key TwoOvercome the Ego BarrierSlide 2 of 2
- Be Sensitive
- Before every speech, mentally change places with
those that sit before you.
7Four Evidences You Have Broken the Ego Barrier
- Demonstrating Apparent Ease
- Demonstrating Humility
- Demonstrating Transparency
- Demonstrating the Ability to Laugh at Yourself
8Key ThreePromise Your Audience Useable
Information and Keep Your Promise
- Provide Your Listener Useful Content
- Is it important? Is it entertaining? Is it
classic? - Be Organized
- Logic flies
- Disorder p l o d s
9Useful Outline for Any Speech
TELL THEM
1. The Promise (What Youre Going to Tell
Them) 2. The Message or Speech (Content) 3. The
Wrap (What Youve Told Them)
10Key Four Creating Tension and Resolution
Building Attention with StorySlide 1 of 3
- Example
- Example - may or not be narrative in form.
- Illustration
- An example that has grown more detailed to more
thoroughly illustrate a point.
11Key Four Creating Tension and Resolution
Building Attention with StorySlide 2 of 3
- Anecdote
- Is a brief story, often humorous, that binds a
perceptual point to a running tale to make the
precept clearer and more memorable.
12Key Four Creating Tension and Resolution
Building Attention with StorySlide 3 of 3
- Narrative
- Not only make clear some important point, but
because they tell long stories they have the
possibility of enforcing the speeches logic while
holding the audiences attention.
13Key Five Developing an Effective Communication
StyleSlide 1 of 2
- The Use of Technology in Communication
- Lighting and Hearing The Psychological Ears of
the Eyes - Microphones and Lecterns
- The Real Distance and the Psychological Distance
14Key Five Developing an Effective Communication
StyleSlide 2 of 2
- Listener Involvement
- The Eye-Talk
- The Body Silence
- The Listeners Lean
- Be a Good Listener Yourself
- Dont Ignore Non-Verbal Cues