What is the purpose of your presentation?
Sometimes a speaker is captured by the need to give the public information too.
When preparing a presentation, he began work on its perimeter, and soon realized that there was no way to share all he knows about his subject. Moreover, there is no way to share everything they know in a day or weekend workshops, either. She is an expert and his many years developing his knowledge and skills.
Panic and wondered how you can get your audienceno such restrictions. They fear that the public did not learn enough, and worse, that she may be prejudiced his "expert" if they do not demonstrate the full extent of his knowledge.
Instead of looking like a kind of prison, where time as his chains would rather see it as an incredible amount of freedom!
If you have your attention and offers fewer opportunities for hearing, it is clearer, more accurate and gives eachThe idea more thought and debate.
Pointer 1: Determine your objective
There is a simple step to ensure that your ad will stay focused and ready. Unfortunately many people overlook this step, which is why their speeches drift, wander, and seem to follow a logical path.
What is the purpose of your presentation? Want to inform, educate, entertain, inform, inspire, motivate, or all of the above? What do you want the audience to do asThe result of his intervention?
I notice the lack of goals is regularly seen in the short, approximately 10-15 minute presentations, perhaps because it goes the way of information overload has instead opted to cut out the strange and focus on the criticism.
Pointer 2: Run the clock back and working
They say you're one of ten minutes to give the presentation. If your opening is 1-2 minutes, and the castle is about 1-2 minutes, giving between six andEight minutes before the body of your ad. Not much, right?
If you have three important points that you want to do at that point, every point will be between two and 2 1 / 2 minutes, give them time to draw.
When a breakdown in this way, you can see how critical it is an objective before you start designing your presentation – be it short or long.
Pointer 3: Determine the main points
Once you have your goal inmind the main points that determine the purpose and meets the needs of the public. It will not be able to cover everything, you know, to decide what is important to share this moment.
Instead of experiencing a hurricane of ideas (or a typhoon, if you're west of the International Date Line), the public can absorb, rather than the subject in a way that allows connection and a deeper understanding of the concepts and messages.
Choose the ideas that are relevant toyour target audience at this time. Cut, edit or delete place, condense, omit, and perfect. Let go and save the rest for later messages, e-books, blogs, newsletters, articles, or your next book.
What's new in the industry? What's new in your company? What are the three most important things people should know to buy shoes, bike, get a good workout, choose a holiday destination or find a financial advisor? Choose at least three and leave the rest toa second time.
It does a disservice to the public not to overload them with information. Get your target in place, and the rest will follow.
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