8. Guideline - 1
1. Be prepared
2. Be organized
3. Be clear
4. Be vivid
5. Be natural
6. Be crisp
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Profuse
Preparation
Prevents
Presentation
Predicaments
9. Be Prepared
Know your purpose
Know your audience
Know your subject
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Why? Whom? What? When? Where?
How?
10. Know Your Purpose
to Inform
to Persuade
to Inspire
to Entertain
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11. Know Your Audience
Who?
specific audience
mixed audience
Intellectual capacity
Education
Age, sex, beliefs, expectations
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12. Know Your Subject
What do you wish to say
List your major ideas
Plan an outline
Research & gather data
Choose evidence, examples
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13. Guideline - 2
1. Be prepared
2. Be organized
3. Be clear
4. Be vivid
5. Be natural
6. Be crisp
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14. Be Organized
1. Organize
Opening
(get attention, state the purpose and preview)
Body
(main points, supporting information)
Conclusion
(summarize, restate the purpose, memorable ending)
1. Arrange
(Chronological / Spatial /Topical / Hierarchical)
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15. Opening Ideas
A Story
A Question
An Anecdote
An Interesting Fact
A Biographical Sketch
Some Statistical Detail
A Proverb or Quotation
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16. Closing Ideas
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Summarize main ideas
Refer back to purpose
A question or challenge
A quotation
17. Be Organized
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Tell what you want to tell,
tell,
tell what you have told.
18. Guideline - 3
1. Be prepared
2. Be organized
3. Be clear
4. Be vivid
5. Be natural
6. Be crisp
m n RAJU
19. Be Clear
Clear ideas
Easy language
Simple Words
Simple Structures
Non-verbal cues
Commonplace examples
Simple organization
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20. Guideline - 4
1. Be prepared
2. Be organized
3. Be clear
4. Be vivid
5. Be natural
6. Be crisp
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22. Be Energetic
Pace for effect
Speed up
Slow down
Pause
Encourage the audience
Humor
Positive attitude
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23. Body Language
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• Global eye contact
• Active movement
• Good posture
• Vibrant Tone
• Impressive pace
• Encouraging gestures
• Pleasing smile
24. Use
objects, charts, video, slideshows
Introduce the visual properly
Face the audience,
not the visual
Use
objects, charts, video, slideshows
Introduce the visual properly
Face the audience,
not the visual
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Visual Aids
25. Guideline - 5
1. Be prepared
2. Be organized
3. Be clear
4. Be vivid
5. Be natural
6. Be crisp
m n RAJU
26. Speak from your heart
Speak with enthusiasm
Involve the audience
Humanize
Personalize
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Be Natural
27. m n RAJU
Interactive Presentation
Use
1. Pair & Group work
2. Eliciting
3. Thought provoking
questions
4. Activities and Games
5. Technology
28. m n RAJU
Ask Questions
Yes/No Information
Close-ended Open-ended
Teacher initiated Student initiated
Factual Inferential/
Experiential
LOT HOT
Rhetorical/
Leading
Thought-provoking
29. Guideline - 6
1. Be prepared
2. Be organized
3. Be clear
4. Be vivid
5. Be natural
6. Be crisp
m n RAJU
31. “Tell them what you’re going to tell them,
tell them,
and then tell them what you told them.”
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Be Crisp
32. “Know your stuff,
know whom you are stuffing,
&
know when they are stuffed.”
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Be Crisp
33. Practice
Learn to speak in public
by speaking in public
again and again and again.
“The skill to do comes with doing.”
– Cicero
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34. Don’t
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Don’t read from notes
Don’t read directly from screen
Don’t turn back on audience
Don’t slouch, hands in pockets
Avoid non-words
Don’t talk too fast
35. m n RAJU
Send your comments to
lionnagaraju@gmail.com
This slideshow is available at
www.slideshare.net/lionnagaraju
www.authorstream.com/tag/lionnagaraju
This slideshow is available at
www.slideshare.net/lionnagaraju
www.authorstream.com/tag/lionnagaraju
Hinweis der Redaktion
This slideshow on PRESENTATION SKILLS guides you through some basic principles and guidelines to help you pick up the art and to become better public speakers.
Remember that any of these guidelines and principles will help you master the art only if you practice the skills of public speaking.
Overcoming fear of public speaking is the first step to master this art.
You might be interested to know that the greatest of the speakers also are afraid.
Public speaking frightens some people more than even death frightens them.
Believe that fear CAN BE overcome and confidence CAN BE gained.
Join a Jaycees, Toastmasters or Leo Club to accept opportunities to speak.
As a student, you will have opportunities to make some short presentations either in your class or at college. You are also expected to make a short presentation for a few minutes as a part of your practical examination.
After college, you will be usually asked to participate in a group discussion, or will be asked to appear for an interview, before you are recruited.
As a part of your job requirements, you may have to make in-house presentations or even full length academic lectures.
The four phases of Presentation Skills are Plan, Prepare, Practice and Present.
To plan your presentation, you not only need to know what you are going to talk about, but you should also thoroughly understand why you are making the presentation and whom you are going to speak to.
Preparing includes researching your subject and gathering all available and relevant information.
The importance of practising cannot be overemphasized.
Making a well organized and successful presentation is the final stage.
Here are the six guidelines I would like to give you to help you make an effective presentation.
1. Be prepared.
2. Be organized.
3. Be clear.
4. Be vivid.
5. Be natural.
6. Be crisp.
Let us now discuss each one of these guidelines in details.
Guideline One is to be prepared.
Preparing for a presentation includes knowing the purpose of your presentation, knowing your audience, knowing your subject and knowing the scope of your presentation.
Ask yourself why, where, when, and for whom you are going to make the presentation about what. Knowing the answers to these questions will help you plan and make an effective presentation.
Focus your goals by stating your objective: directly tell your audience what you want them to know, what you want them to do, and what outcomes you are expecting.
In order to convert hearers into listeners, you need to know why they should listen to you. You should know the value or worth or interest of what you are going to say.
to inform (to explain an idea or process, share new information, or show how to do something) - want the audience to leave knowing more than beforehand
to persuade – want to convince the audience to adopt a new position or belief, to change their minds
to inspire – to move the audience to action
to entertain is to please the audience
To make an effective presentation, it is always a good idea to know the variety in values, knowledge, communicative and intellectual capabilities of your audience.
You should also know whether they are young or old, rich or poor, female or male, religious or less believing or non-believing, educated or illiterate etc.
You should also know their expectations whether they are interested or not; want to be entertained or informed; can be persuaded or stubborn in their minds; expect a presentation with sophisticated visual aids or looking for less formal comments.
Who is your audience? Who will be there? What do they have in common with each other? Where is the audience starting from? What is their background
knowledge and understanding? Is there something you need to overcome to convince them? What may be some of the barriers to learning? What do you want them to walk away knowing and understanding? Have you established clear objectives? What do you want them to do at the end of the resentation?
What actions can they take with the information that they received?
The success of your presentation depends on knowing the subject thoroughly. Once you are sure about what you wish to say, prepare an outline of the main ideas you would like to make and gather all relevant information to support your ideas.
You should also know the occasion for your presentation to choose the norms for your presentation and to operate in an appropriate mode – formal or informal, humorous or serious, extemporaneous or highly practised.
“Grasp the subject and the words will follow.”
Our guideline 2 is to be organized.
Systematic organization of your presentation serves three important functions:
It improves clarity of thought, increases effectiveness & credibility and makes the presentation easier to understand.
Every good presentation has three main parts: an introduction, a body, and a conclusion.
The main ideas in the body are usually organized either on time, space or logical sequence.
It is a good idea to open a presentation with a story, a question, an anecdote, an interesting fact, a brief sketch of a biography, some statistical detail, a proverb or a quotation.
The purpose is to draw the attention of the audience to what is going to come.
Remember that whatever idea you use to begin your presentation, it should be brief and relevant to the presentation. For instance, don’t narrate a joke just because it is interesting. In stead search and find a joke that highlights one of your main points.
Before you close the presentation, summarize the main points you have made. You may even remind your audience about the objective statement you made in your introduction and help them evaluate if the objectives have been attained.
Leave the audience with a question or a challenge or a quotation to think about or to reinforce the main idea.
Let not the audience say: “Our speaker doesn’t need an introduction, he needs a conclusion.”
The third guideline is to be clear.
Clarity comes from simplicity in thought and language. If your ideas are clear in your mind, the presentation automatically becomes clear.
Use short, simple and familiar words, instead of the bombastic and high sounding ones. Your sentences should be short and simple in their structure to make your points clear. Give plenty of non-verbal clues, such as gestures and expressions to make your points further clear.
All the main points you make should be simple and well connected. Each idea should naturally emerge from the previous. Use connecting words, milestone words and linkers to help the audience see the organization.
Give necessary and appropriate examples.
The next guideline is to be vivid and vibrant. Make your presentation interesting and impressive by making it colorful and presenting it dramatically.
In a successful presentation, 55% of the audience impact of any perceived truth or communication is through body language. The audience is watching the presenter’s body language.
38% of the audience impact is through the tone and vocal aspects of the presentation. These aspects are: Raising and lowering your voice; Talking in a monotone; Speed talking and slow talking; Mush mouth versus being clear and concise.
And finally, about 7% of the audience impact is through the actual presentation words spoken, i.e. the information you are sharing.
Presentations become vivid when you present them energetically and dramatically.
Your body language should be supportive and positive. Help your audience visualize your ideas by making them concrete.
Use audio-visual aids whenever necessary. However, never overdose your presentation with unnecessary and excessive animations which distract your audience’s attention till they are lost and miss the point you make.
Similarly, excessive body language also distracts and sometimes even upsets the audience.
Modulate your voice and change the pace of your speech for better effect. Slowing down and speeding up have a telling effect on the presentation. Properly used pauses are immensely effective and sometimes convey more meaning than speech. Whenever possible and necessary, physical movement inside the hall also helps leave a greater impact on the audience.
Your presentation should encourage your audience to participate by asking them rhetorical questions and questions to think over and answer.
Who does not like humor, unless you are speaking at a memorial service? Humor makes your presentation energetic and impressive. A clean and relevant joke effectively narrated will relieve the tedium and brighten the presentation.
The most important and powerful tool that you need to equip yourself with is a positive attitude. Your attitude decides whether your presentation is successful or not. There is hardly anything that cannot be accomplished with a positive attitude.
Use real objects, charts, pictures, video clippings, slideshows to support what you wish to say. Your audience retains what they see and listen much more longer than what they just hear. Well used visual aids leave a lasting impact on the audience.
But be warned that each visual aid should be relevant to the presentation and properly introduced. Don’t use an aid because it is good, but only if it helps you make a point more convincingly and more effectively. A presentation without any aids is better than a presentation with irrelevant aids.
Another note – when you are showing the aid to the audience, don’t face the screen or wall and forget the audience. Face them and draw their attention to what you want them to see.
Guideline five is to be natural with your presentation.
Speaking from the heart is speaking about what you personally know, believe in or experienced.
Avoid reeling out cold, dry facts – humanize your speech – relate the facts to human experience, and if possible to your own experience. This will involve the audience and helps them understand better what you say.
Use language appropriate to the occasion, to the audience, to the topic.
The last guideline is to be crisp and brief.
Never exceed the time allocated to you. It is impossible to hold the attention of your audience for long however good your presentation is. So the real art of public speaking is fitting your available time to the subject.
Within the time available to you, go through the presentation as planned, and make any mid-course adjustments if needed.
It is better to be remembered for covering 5 or 6 points well than to leave the audience confused with 500 points.
The three steps of a successful presentation are: take time to tell what you want to tell them, tell them and tell them what you have told them.
This is an old speaking adage: know your subject, know your audience and know when they have had enough.
Practice is the only golden key to your success.
Perfection comes from practice and practice is doing something again and again.
Like any other skill – swimming, dancing, cycling – public speaking also is a skill that can be mastered only by speaking in public again and again.
Use mirror as your first audience.
Stand out when you stand up.
Do not distract the audience with unnecessary movement, irritating prop words and irrelevant body language. Pacing in panic, standing cross-armed or standing hands-in-pockets, playing with coins or keys in your pockets, turning away from the audience and talking into a visual aid, gestures irrelevant to the message--all of these distract the audience from the speech and should be avoided.
Here are the six guidelines I would like to give you to help you make an effective presentation.
1. Be prepared.
2. Be organized.
3. Be clear.
4. Be vivid.
5. Be natural.
6. Be crisp.
Let us now discuss each one of these guidelines in details.