- Presentation Skills
- Sales Presentations
- Technical Presentations
- Exceptional Presentations
- Handling Obstacles
- Executive Presentations
- Scientists and Engineers
- Presentation Skills Consulting
- Public Speaking Training Skills
- Presentation Training
- Sales Presentations
- Technical Presentations
- IT Training
- Executive Presentations
Additional Presentations Training Related Tips:
Go Too Fast, and You're More Likely to Have an Accident!
Preparing Your Speech or Presentation
How to Talk to a Sales Prospect
How to Organize Your Ideas for Presentation
How to Improve Presentation Skills
Seven Simple Steps to Designing a Corporate Proposal Power Point Presentation
Dialing Up the Drama in Presentations
Presentations Training Classes Tips For Success
5 Presentation Class Secrets to Eliminate Nervousness
Is It Just Boring? 5 Steps to a Better Sales Presentation
What Not to Include in Your Next Presentation
First Impressions in Presentations - Hey Baby, Come Here Often?
Selecting Presenters for Your Presentation Workshop Seminar
Presentations Shouldn't Run Long - But Don't Run Short!
Presentations For Today's Audiences
How To Make Your Presentations Sexy
How to Present Your Business Effectively
Who Says You’re a Poor Presenter? Presentation Skills Training for Success
The Secret of Great Presentations – Simplicity
How to Design an Effective PowerPoint Presentation
Visual Presentations Training Tips
Presentation Skills Training Courses for Getting Around Nervousness
Presentation and Promotional Materials Build Your Brand Awareness
Corporate Presentation Skills Training Course for Trainers
Presentation Closing Problems and Strategies
Presentation Skills Training Classes Can Benefit Everyone
Content Covered By Presentation Skills Training Classes
10 Presentation Training Class Tips
How A Presentation Class Can Help Overcome the Fear of Presenting
Effective Presentation Skills Training Workshops
Executive Presentation Skills Training Workshops for Salespeople
How To Improve Your Presentation Skills
Why Planning is Key for a Successful Presentation
Discover How to Get Rid of the Butterflies
Better Your Life With Presentation Skills Training Seminars
The Importance of Effective Presentation Skills at Work
More Presentations Skills Tips
Presentations
Training:
Six Steps to Better Presentation Skills
I have a pet peeve that I didn't know I had until recently. Having been in education for a long time, I've sat through my share of presentations. Most of the presentations have been on the positive side of tolerable, but there have been a few that left me with nothing more than a sense of relief when it was over. As I've considered the situations, I've discovered some characteristics that are common to good presentations. So, regardless of the setting--business, school, church, social organization, and so forth--here are some things to keep in mind next time you have to speak to a group of any size.
1. Know your material. Speakers should have confidence in their
knowledge of the material they are presenting. You might have to rely on notes or
note cards, but practice your presentation so that you don't have to read to those in
attendance. When you start reading to me--whether from your notes or the
PowerPoint presentation--I have flashbacks to my childhood and think its nap time!
2. Engage the audience. Let's face it... some of the most knowledgeable
people in the world make poor presenters because they don't know how to engage
the audience. If you are bored presenting it, just imagine how bored those listening
to you are! Engaging the audience can be accomplished through a variety of
interactive techniques--asking good discussion questions, providing fill-in-the-
blank handouts, hands-on activities, etc. Good presenters can read the audience
and can tell if they have them engaged. Be prepared to draw them back in when you
see their minds taking a field trip.
3. Connect to real life. Adults engage in educational experiences for a
variety of reasons, but one of the most prevalent reasons is their desire to learn
something that will help them in their day-to-day lives. Though you might be the
foremost expert in your field, if you can't present material that matters to ordinary
people, you haven't accomplished anything in your presentation. Check your ego at
the door... or you might find that you are the only person in the room who is
impressed with you!
4. Watch the time! This is a big issue for me. Adults are busy and invest
themselves in activities that often are squeezed into an already overloaded
schedule. When you start late or talk beyond the end of class, you have said, "I'm
more important than you!" Respect the time commitment of those in the room and
learn to budget your time so that you can finish before they start checking their
watches. Then, if the situation allows, make yourself available to speak one-on-one
with those who want to remain after class.
5. Don't waste time teaching the obvious or the unnecessary. Most of us
have been around long enough to catch on to the obvious things in life. I bet that
before you can say, "That's a picture of a clock," most adults figured it out. On the
other hand, you might be a clock-aholic... I'm not! So, I probably don't want the
intricate details about the clock's construction.
6. Have a plan. View the presentation as a journey from point A to point B.
Understand why the journey is important, the path you will select to make the
journey, and the interesting details that are part of the journey. When you spend
two hours clicking through slides sharing technical information in a monotone
voice, you need to be put in time-out! That's not education; that's abuse!
We have this idea that all we need to be called an "expert" is a PowerPoint
presentation and a captive audience. Try videotaping your next presentation. If you
get bored or fall asleep while watching it, you need to review this article. People's
time is too valuable for you to waste it! Think about it!
Source: Dr. Terry Hadaway link
Related: Presentation Skills
More Presentations Skills Tips