Title: Ch. 12-1
1Chapter 12
- Giving Oral Presentations
2Preparing an Oral Presentation
- Identify your purpose.
- Decide what you want your audience to believe,
remember, or do when you finish. - Aim all parts of your talk toward your purpose.
3Preparing an Oral Presentation
- Understand your audience.
- Anticipate their reactions and make adaptations.
- Consider age, education, experience, and size of
audience.
4Preparing an Oral Presentation
- Organize for Impact.
- Collect information and organize logically.
- Remember these steps
- 1. Tell them what youre going to say.
- Say it.
- Tell them what youve just said.
5Preparing an Oral Presentation
- Capture attention in the introduction.
- Get the audience involved.
- Capture attention by opening with a promise,
story, startling fact, question, or quotation. - Establish your credibility by identifying your
position, expertise, knowledge, or
qualifications. - Introduce your topic.
- Preview the main points.
6Preparing an Oral Presentation
- Organize the body of your presentation.
- Develop two to four main points. Streamline your
topic and summarize its principal parts. - Arrange the points logically chronologically,
from most important to least by comparison and
contrast or by some other strategy. - Prepare transitions. Use "bridge" statements
between major points. (I've just discussed three
reasons for X now I want to move to Y.) Use
verbal signposts however, for example, etc.
7Preparing an Oral Presentation
- Organize the body of your presentation.
- Have extra material ready. Be prepared with more
information and visuals if needed. - Summarizing in the conclusion.
- Review your main points.
- Provide a final focus. Tell how listeners can use
this information, why you have spoken, or what
you want them to do. - Use an anecdote, inspiring quotation, or a
statement.
8Types of Verbal Support
9Types of Verbal Support
10Types of Verbal Support
11Effective Imagery
- Analogies
- Metaphors
- Similes
- Personal anecdotes
12Effective Imagery
- Personalized statistics
- Worst- and best-case scenarios
- Examples
13Nine Techniques for Gaining and Keeping Audience
Attention
- A promise
- "By the end of my talk, you will . . . . "
- Drama
- Tell a moving story describe a problem.
- Eye contact
- Command attention at the beginning by making eye
contact with as many people as possible.
14Nine Techniques for Gaining and Keeping Audience
Attention
- Movement
- Leave podium area. Move toward audience.
- Questions
- Ask for show of hands. Use rhetorical questions.
- Demonstrations
- Include member of audience.
15Nine Techniques for Gaining and Keeping Audience
Attention
- Samples, gimmicks
- Award prizes to volunteer participants pass out
samples. - Visuals
- Use a variety of graphics and visual aids.
- Self-interest
- Audience members want to know "What's in it for
me?"
16Designing and Using Graphics
- Select the medium carefully.
- Consider the size of audience and degree of
formality desired. - Consider cost, ease of preparation, and
potential effectiveness.
17Designing and Using Graphics
- Highlight main ideas.
- Focus on major concepts only.
- Avoid overkill. Showing too many graphics reduces
their effectiveness. - Keep all visuals simple.
- Consider cost, ease of preparation, and
potential effectiveness.
18Designing and Using Graphics
- Ensure visibility.
- Use large type for transparencies and slides.
- Position the screen high enough to be seen.
- Be sure all audience members can see.
19Designing and Using Graphics
- Enhance comprehension.
- Give the audience a moment to study a visual
before discussing it. - Paraphrase its verbal message dont read.
20Designing and Using Graphics
- Practice using your visual aids.
- Rehearse your talk, perfecting your handling of
the visual aids. - Talk to your audience and not to the visual aid.
21Tips for Choosing Colours in Visuals.
- Develop a colour palette of five or fewer
colours. - Use the same colour for similar elements.
- Use dark text on a light background for
presentations in bright rooms.
22Tips for Choosing Colours in Visuals.
- Use light text on a dark background for
presentations in darkened rooms. - Use dark text on a light background for
transparencies. - Beware of light text on light backgrounds and
dark text on dark backgrounds.
23Tips for Preparing and Using Slides
- Keep visuals simple.
- Use same font size and style for similar
headings. - No more than seven words on a line.
- Four total lines, plus a title.
24Tips for Preparing and Using Slides
- Be sure that everyone can see the slides.
- Show a slide
- Allow the audience to read it
- Then paraphrase it.
- Do NOT read from slide.
25Conquering Stage Fright
- Breathe deeply.
- Convert your fear into anticipation and
enthusiasm. - Know your topic.
- Use positive self-talk.
- Shift the spotlight to your visual aids.
26Conquering Stage Fright
- Ignore any stumbles keep going.
- Dont apologize.
- Feel proud when you finish.
27Eight Serious Speech Blunders
- Being dull. Relying on only one or two
illustrations to make your points. - Not repeating your main point often enough.
- Not answering the audience's most pressing
question "What's in it for me?" - Failing to use signal phrases to focus on main
points.
28Eight Serious Speech Blunders
- Neglecting to time your presentation and practice
it out loud. - Forgetting to check your visual aids for
readability. - Answering hypothetical questions after the
presentation. - Getting distracted just before you speak.
29Before Your Presentation
- Prepare thoroughly.
- Rehearse repeatedly.
- Time yourself.
- Request a lectern.
30Before Your Presentation
- Check the room.
- Greet members of the audience.
- Practice stress reduction.
31During Your Presentation
- Begin with a pause.
- Present your first sentence from memory.
- Maintain eye contact.
- Control your voice and vocabulary.
32During Your Presentation
- Put the brakes on.
- Move naturally.
- Use visual aids effectively.
- Avoid digressions.
- Summarize your main points.
33After Your Presentation
- Distribute handouts.
- Encourage questions.
- Repeat questions.
- Reinforce your main points.
34After Your Presentation
- Keep control.
- Avoid Yes, but . . . answers.
- End with a summary and appreciation.
35Presentation Enhancers
36Presentation Enhancers
37Designing and Using Graphics
- Select the medium carefully.
- Consider the size of the audience and the degree
of formality desired. - Consider cost, ease of preparation, and potential
effectiveness.
38Designing and Using Graphics
- Highlight main ideas.
- Focus on major concepts only.
- Avoid overkill. Showing too many graphics reduces
their effectiveness. - Keep all visuals simple.
39Designing and Using Graphics
- Ensure visibility.
- Use large type for transparencies and slides.
- Position the screen high enough to be seen.
- Be sure all audience members can see.
- Enhance comprehension.
- Give the audience a moment to study a visual
before discussing it. - Paraphrase its verbal message don't read it.
40Designing and Using Graphics
- Practice using your visual aids.
- Rehearse your talk, perfecting your handling of
the visual aids. - Talk to your audience and not to the visual aid.
41