1. Be honest. Have you ever sat through an unbelievably boring
presentation? Have you ever been a PowerPoint assassin?
2. Objectives for today Learn the ingredients of an effective
presentation.
3. Objectives for today Know how to make interesting
presentations that people actively listen to and remember.
4. Objectives for today Help you to make your presentations
more sales oriented, and increase your audiences buy-in to your
ideas.
5. Why people find presentations boring The 2013 Annoying
PowerPoint Survey % agreement of respondents The speaker read the
slides to us 72.0% The text was so small I couldnt read it 50.6%
Full sentences instead of bullet points 48.4% Overly complex
diagrams 30.8% Poor colour choices 25.8% No clear purpose 22.1% No
flow of ideas 21.0% Little change from previous surveys It seems
that people are not getting better at presenting.
6. Why people find presentations boring The 2013 Annoying
PowerPoint Survey Presenters make 4 key mistakes in preparing They
dont plan their presentation well; it lacks a clear message, flow,
and structure They dont customise they recycle slides produced for
a different purpose without thinking about this audience Poor
visual design makes their messages difficult to read and
understand. Too much detail confuses their audience They confuse
the purpose of the slide deck. Is it a presentation or a document
for circulation afterwards? Too many slides are included.
7. The 2013 Annoying PowerPoint Survey: According to
responders, presenters need to: Improve slide design, avoid poor
(unreadable) colour selections and fonts; and formatting and
layouts that vary between slides. Nothing should distract the
audience from your messages Eliminate walls of text, unreadable
spreadsheets (tiny fonts), over-complex graphics, badly chosen
images, cheesy ClipArt Stop using pictures and videos that dont fit
your message (it may be cool but is it relevant?), distracting
animations and stupid errors Improve delivery. Stop reading slides,
avoid fillers. Lack of rehearsal (delivering a different message,
skipping slides they havent read and dont understand). Eliminate
irritating habits and movements Notice that 3.5 out of 4 are about
preparation. Only one is (partially) about delivery.
8. How to write a bad presentation ( a purely fictional
example) Leave your preparation to the last minute Scratch your
head at empty slide view In desperation, copy and paste slides from
another presentation (not necessarily on same subject). There, now
you have 50 slides. Dont worry about their relevance. Change the
date on title slide to show date you are giving presentation (and
presenters name to yours if necessary) Add one or two slides, plus
the funny video that Tom sent you yesterday. Its not about the same
topic but it is really funny Avoid rehearsal.. it will only make
you look.. well, prepared Wing it on the day.
9. A clear goal Goal Visuals PerformanceParticipation Recap and
memorable end Early Connection Key messages, structure and
content
10. A big problem with many presentations. important messages
are lost in the maze of detail.
11. Less is more. Michelangelos David When Michelangelo was
asked how he carved his statue of David he allegedly said, "It was
easy. I took a block of marble and chipped away the parts that
didn't look like David. Good presentations follow this. Become
ABSOLUTELY clear on your goal and your key messages, and chip away
anything that doesnt communicate these Only say what you need to
say AND NOTHING ELSE Anything extra confuses your messages.
12. The most important question to keep asking. What am I
really trying to say?
13. Exercise - Goal and key messages Write down the single goal
and the key messages (maximum of 3) to summarise your presentation.
If you cant do this automatically, what does that tell you? If your
goal is To give a presentation you are probably a PowerPoint
assassin Look critically at your presentation so far. Does your
presentation clearly communicate your goal and key messages? Is
there any extra stuff there? Work with a colleague and get an
independent view.
14. Messages, structure and content Goal Visuals
PerformanceParticipation Recap and memorable end Early Connection
Key messages, structure and content
15. Storyboarding- laying out the structure Modern
storyboarding is usually credited to Webb Smith, a Walt Disney
designer who posted pictures of key points in the story to show the
outline of an animated movie A storyboard lays out the key steps in
your presentation, building to achieve the goal Storyboard before
you open PowerPoint- get clear on your goal and key messages before
you type anything This will help to stop you adding unnecessary
cr@p and confusing your message.
16. Template Storyboard for your Presentation Goal for the
Presentation (only 1) Key messages to support goal (max 3)
Interesting Title Attention Grabbing first slide Key message 1Key
message 2Key message 3 Recap and memorable end Questions? Optional
Close
17. Presentation Skills Course Storyboard Goal: Make people
understand that every presentation is a sales presentation Key
messages: 1. Less is more; cut the crap 2. Clarify your goal and
messages and refine the presentation like hell 3. Deliver it
compellingly Title: Make your presentations great Attention
Grabber. Bad PowerPoints $252m a day. Annoying PowerPoint Survey
KM1. Cut the crap. Why too much information confuses your audience
KM2. 3 clear messages. Introduction, structure, signposting,
visuals KM3. Delivery: Connecting, Performance, Interaction Recap
and memorable end Questions? Optional Close
18. Messages, structure, and content Having determined your
goal and key messages (maximum 3), you need to deliver these Your
presentation needs to have: An introduction that grabs the
audiences attention Content that achieves the goal by communicating
the key messages A memorable close that recaps the whole, and
leaves the audience with a high impact finish.
19. A. Boring Presenter
20. How about starting with a really boring title? Look at
these titles (all posted on Slideshare.net)? Psychological
Measurement: Construct, variables and definitions How to create
presentations that dont suck Rectification of errors in financial
accounts Steal this presentation! Singapore Corporate Tax System
Which ones would you rather sit through?
21. A presenter Wow! This sounds exciting. Id better sit up and
pay attention.
22. A presenter Shall I order a takeaway tonight?
23. A presenter Sounds important Maybe I should listen. If it
says this however..
24. A presenter Doesnt matter if your topic is boring- you just
need imagination
25. A presenter What did you notice about the last two
titles?
26. How interesting is your title? Take a look at the title of
the presentation you brought with you Imagine you are an attendee
for the presentation from a different department and specialism
Based on the title alone, how motivated would you be to pay full
attention to the presentation? Does it sound more interesting than
Singapore Corporate Tax System? Does it contain any message/
commentary? Discuss with a colleague how you might change it.
27. Ok now that you have their attention You need to keep their
interest and engagement by explaining what you will cover and why
it matters to them Remember INTRO INTEREST- get their interest
NEED- why do they need to listen to you? TITLE- explain your
(interesting) title RANGE- What will you cover and not cover?
OBJECTIVE(S)- what will you have achieved by the end of the
session?
28. Interest and Need These often link together Your first job
-to persuade your audience why they should care about what you are
saying Ideas could be: An interesting statistic (or more than one)
An unpleasant situation for them to avoid A potential gain or
advantage for them Whatever you use has to matter to your audience
-if it isnt real to them they wont care. At this stage you only
have to get them interested, they dont have to be committed
(yet).
29. Creating interest and need- possible ideas How much of
their time is wasted listening to bad presentations? Are they doing
the same to others? Explain how they might have more influence
through better presentations Show them a great presenter (on video
maybe) Get them to think of the worst presentations they have ever
attended and how they felt As a rule, the more real it feels to
your audience the more persuasive it will be; if they feel it they
will connect - if they only understand it they may not
connect.
30. Title, range and objectives Give your audience an idea of
what you will be covering in your presentation (and what you wont)
Explain your goal and purpose in the presentation. People are more
interested in listening if they understand the purpose of having
them sit there Remember to discuss benefits and not just features
of your ideas.
31. Benefits, WIIFM? Whats the difference between a feature and
a benefit? A feature is a fact about something Not all features are
good A benefit tells you why a feature is good (see next slide)
.
32. Features and benefits, WIIFM? A feature is worthless unless
the customer sees it as valuable (have you ever wanted to carry
scissors in your tie?) Too many presentations talk about features
and dont explain the benefits for the listeners Its not enough to
give information, you have to tell the audience why the information
matters to them.
33. Presentation content - Getting key messages across For each
key message: Explain your point and the benefits clearly Look for
ways to make it real for your audience Explain your messages not
just with information, but emotionally (based on stories, pictures,
emotions) Well-chosen war stories can create interest, prove your
credentials and make your message more real to the audience
Personalise your message at an individual level.
34. Which appeal raises more money? A) Money that you donate
will go to Rokia, a seven-year- old orphan in Sudan. Rokia faces
starvation and early death from disease. With your life-saving
support, we will feed her, educate her, and provide her with
essential medical care. B) Food shortages in Malawi are affecting
more than three million people. In Zambia, severe drought has
resulted in a 42% drop in maize production from 2000. About three
million Zambians are short of food. Four million Angolans one-third
of the population face hunger. More than 11 million people in
Ethiopia need food assistance. Please give now.
35. Making it personal beats giving the facts Psychological
studies repeatedly show that people commit more when their emotions
are aroused, and respond more positively to emotions than
statistics One example: Deborah Small (a professor at Wharton
Business School) demonstrated in a set of famous experiments, that
people gave more money to charities when presented with an
individual childs story than with facts about child starvation.
People connect with individuals, and rationalise when faced with
statistics. "Sympathy and Callousness: The Impact of Deliberative
Thought on Donations to Identifiable and Statistical Victims."
Small, Loewenstein and Slovic, March 2007
36. Making it personal beats giving the facts The more
statistical information people were given about the plight of a
group of people, the less generous they became. Yet emotion-based
thoughts failed to increase their generosity to statistical
victims. Its easy to override people's feelings by giving them
statistical information, but it's not so easy to create feelings
where those feelings aren't naturally there to begin with. It's
hard for humans to generate feelings toward statistics." Ask
yourself- what feelings will be generated by my messages? Prof.
Deborah Small
37. Exercise Looking at the presentation you brought with you,
look through the slides and the messages it contains Does it grab
the attention at the beginning and cover the elements of INTRO? How
much of it describes features and how much explains benefits? How
much of it is factual and rational and how much of it personalises
and emotionalises issues? Work with a colleague to get an
independent view, and to identify where and how you might improve
it.
38. Structure-Agendas and signposting People need to understand
where they are in your presentation Tell them in advance what the
structure will be Remind them along the way where they are in the
presentation People listen more when they understand what is
happening.
40. Ways of signposting- The "building" slide Presentation
skills Goal Visuals PerformanceParticipation Early Connection Key
messages, structure and content Recap and memorable end
41. Signposting- Exercise Looking at the presentation you
brought with you, look through the slides and the order and flow Is
it laid out clearly, and does the signposting (if it exists) help
the audience to follow you as you lay out your messages? Work with
a colleague to get an independent view, and to identify where and
how you might improve it.
42. Structure and content summary Attention grabber to begin
Presentation objective Why your audience needs to listen and why
they should care Key messages explained in a personalised way
Explain benefits - not features Keep them signposted along the way
Always keep it personal and emotional.
43. Visuals Goal Visuals PerformanceParticipation Recap and
memorable end Early Connection Key messages, structure and
content
44. Visuals 01 July 2015 45
45. Visuals If you want people to understand better, then get
that stuff off the screen... it is simply making it more difficult
for people to understand what you are saying. Tom Grimes, Kansas
State Journalism Professor 46
46. Bad Visuals- Text No-one wants to take in information that
looks like this Too many slides have too much text. This makes it
easy for the speaker to lose their place on the slide, and harder
for the audience to see the main point Slides with this many words
are actually documents not slides- the point of a slide should be
to summarise key points briefly, not to reproduce the whole book
People can either listen or read. If they have to read they wont be
listening to you Dont give the audience too much work to do. Its
very difficult to figure out what this slide is really trying to
say, as there are so many words and nowhere to focus on. Random use
of colour does not help especially if you cant see the yellow If
you are still reading this you must enjoy pain, or are desperately
searching for a reward for your effort. I salute your
determination; you will be disappointed. Most people give up by
now, on the slide, the speaker and their presentation Adding
irrelevant pictures (even funny ones) doesnt really help, unless
they reinforce your message-its all just too busy and most peoples
brains will be confused by all the information they have to absorb.
Cheesy picture Irrelevant joke
47. Bad Visuals- Poor Layout Last updated 01 July 2015 48 Badly
designed and laid out slides do this.. This is my first point Heres
my second point Time for a messy picture This is actually my most
important point (do you still care?) Theres room for another
pointless (fake) picture here By this stage you really dont care
any more Look! A fluffy rabbit!! Now you will be suicidal
48. Slide Design Countless presentations fail because their
champions use PowerPoint the way Microsoft wants them to, instead
of the right way. Seth Godin, marketing author Seths 3 rules for
slides: 1) Use slides that reinforce your words, not repeat them-
people read faster than you can talk 2) Dont use cheesy images 3)
No dissolves, spins or other transitions. Last updated 01 July 2015
49
49. Slides should summarise- they should not contain your whole
message Use powerful images which reinforce what you are saying Use
only a few words on each slide to summarise your message If the
words on the slide say everything, your voice is redundant.
50. Good slides Consistent fonts and colours Images which
support your message (use Google or Bing images instead of clip
art) Avoid irritating animations- they detract from your message
and irritate people Like flying in really slowly Or swivelling Or
teetering Or Mexican waves Or bouncing Sounds can be irritating too
Last updated 01 July 2015 51
51. Good Visuals- CARS 4 elements of good slide design-
remember CARS Contrast- Keeping the same font and image sizes is
boring- vary these to make it interesting Alignment- align images
for consistency, and play with them sometimes to add variety
Repetition of colours, fonts and images make messages memorable and
give consistency Similarity- place related information together on
your slides- makes information easier to understand Last updated 01
July 2015 52
52. Good Visuals- Contrast Use fonts consistently and use
colour for EMPHASIS Changing font size can also emphasise a point -
SUPERSIZE YOUR KEY MESSAGE Last updated 01 July 2015 53 Light on
dark also gives a break from standard colours and makes your slides
different
53. Early Connection with the Audience Goal Visuals
PerformanceParticipation Memorable end Early Connection Key
messages, structure and content
54. A word on overcoming nerves Visualization Visualise
yourself being successful and running an enjoyable and lively
session Rehearsal Practise, practise, practise until you barely
have to think about the content Be prepared Make a checklist of
everything you need for the presentation and make sure that you
have assembled all materials beforehand so you know you wont be
missing anything Allow good time to set up the room and test the
equipment. Turning up with only seconds to spare and hoping
everything will work means you start flustered and nervous. Make
time to chill before you start 01 July 2015 55
55. A word on overcoming nerves(2) Look confident and think
positively Everyone feels some nerves - in fact a small level of
stress (eustress) is healthy. Force yourself to act confidently and
you will fake it until you make it Deep breaths Relax your
breathing before you start to speak First sentence Your first
sentence is very important. If you deliver it confidently then good
self-talk will kick in. If not then a bad self-talk cycle begins
Break the ice If you can make people laugh early on it relaxes the
audience too. Do this only if you are good at humour though. 01
July 2015 56
56. A word on overcoming nerves(3) Someone on your Side If you
have someone you know is a supporter in the room it helps you relax
Memorize first few minutes If you dont have to think about the
first few minutes it helps to reduce your stress Notes/Visuals.
Dont be afraid to use notes. Also build reminders into your slides
to reduce your need to remember things Stuff Happens Sometimes
things will go wrong. Dont let it get to you. People are
sympathetic to this. 01 July 2015 57
57. A word on overcoming nerves(4) Check out the audience If
you are presenting in a meeting where you are only attending to
present, where possible go along a few minutes early and sit in on
the meeting. This will enable you to gauge their mood and sometimes
give you clues as to how to present. It also helps you to
acclimatise ,and for people to get used to having you there which
may smooth your presentation later.. 01 July 2015 58
58. Connecting with your listeners at the beginning In the
first 60 seconds, you need to convince your audience that you are
worth listening to Connect as a person Tell them what you are going
to tell them Convince them they should listen.
59. Connecting with your listeners. Who is your audience? Who
are the key people to influence? Why will they be there? Why are
they there? Are they willing participants? What do they care about?
What are their needs (pains)?
60. Connecting with your listeners. What are you offering them?
How will listening to you help them? Tell them why it will. Refer
to a pain point for them Offer them a compelling benefit Tell them
an interesting story (but be sure that it is) Make them laugh (if
you can).
61. Performance Goal Visuals PerformanceParticipation Recap and
memorable end Early Connection Key messages, structure and
content
62. Presenting Tips NEVER just read your slides. People read
faster than you talk Remember the Annoying PowerPoint Survey (72%
of respondents mentioned this - the highest reason for complaint)
Tell your audience things that are not on the slide- your words
must add to what people can read for themselves. Last updated 01
July 2015 63
63. Presenting Tips - Nervousness Be aware of where your hands
are and dont hold anything (other than maybe a clicker). Avoid
anything you can fiddle with without realising Try to avoid Ers and
Ums- fillers Pay real attention to your first sentence. A confident
first sentence boosts your confidence. A wimpy first sentence
increases nervousness. Last updated 01 July 2015 64
64. Presenting Tips- Face the audience when speaking Dont talk
if you have turned to read the screen. Remember: Read Turn Talk Try
to minimise how often you turn to the screen (by rehearsing you can
do it from memory). Turning too often looks unprepared.
65. Performance tone, pace and volume Remember your first
sentence is key- make sure it is loud and confident positive self-
talk Monitor your pace- not too fast or slow Volume at 7/10 Check
your pace with the audience after a few minutes Vary your tone and
pitch or you will put them to sleep.
66. Presenting tips Body language Body language Open stance- if
you are open your audience is more likely to be Hands out of
pockets Know where your hands are! Purposeful moving can create
energy.
67. Performance audience reaction Monitor the audience
expression What are good signs? What are bad signs?
68. Performance- standing and movement Whats important about
how you stand and how you move when presenting?
69. Presenting Tips- Movement Move with purpose- nervousness
can produce random movement- very distracting for your audience if
you jiggle about aimlessly Get in close to your audience- dont
baseline Be aware of peoples line of sight to the screen- avoid
blocking the view or casting shadows on the screen.
70. Participation Goal Visuals PerformanceParticipation Recap
and memorable end Early Connection Key messages, structure and
content
71. Participation Whats important to remember about interacting
with your audience in a presentation?
72. Participation - Empathy and involvement Empathy Break the
ice in the first two minutes Smiling and humour Courtesy- if you
are polite they may be also- if you are rude they will be rude for
sure
73. Participation - Empathy and involvement Involvement incl.
eye contact, inviting comment & participation Scan the room
with your eyes Show people that you like them- they might like you
in return Thank people for participating and asking questions (and
give them a ground rule e.g. now or at the end?) Ask What do others
think?
74. Dealing with difficult individuals You cannot force people
to take part if they are determined not to You are presenting to
everyone. You only have so much responsibility towards individuals
if they do not want to take part. Sometimes you cannot bring
everyone with you Your primary responsibility is towards the whole
group- you can only give so much attention to one individual. Never
reward disruptive behaviour with too much attention Use the power
of the group to help to manage difficult individuals. Last updated
01 July 2015 75
75. First principles as a presenter- acknowledging existing
experience Expectation setting is important. Find out about the
audiences knowledge and dont patronise them (even accidentally)
Tell them when some of your material will not be new, or they will
tell you (sometimes angrily). If so ask them to view it as a
refresher. Last updated 01 July 2015 76
76. Disengaged, conscripted and angry participants Have usually
brought outside issues into the room (work or personal) Are best
ignored initially unless they are disrupting the outcome for the
whole group 5 stage process for tackling them: Ask them privately
during a break if they are ok (if possible). Show concern rather
than accusation. Often they will explain whats going on and modify
their behaviour Use the group to control them (see later) If it
continues ask the individual publicly to moderate their behaviour.
Ask the group if they agree As a last resort ask them to leave the
presentation. Last updated 01 July 2015 77
77. Disengaged, conscripted and angry participants They have a
right to feel as they feel and to choose not to participate- but
not the right to prevent others learning as a result Appeal to
their sense of fairness to others- most people respond to this Keep
your tone matter of fact and emphasise that you are concerned for
the good of the majority Dont be blackmailed into giving undeserved
attention. Last updated 01 July 2015 78
78. Disruptive attention seekers/ fidgets They can monopolise
conversations and/ or shout down other participants (know it alls)
Often think they are right on every issue and dismiss alternative
ideas Encourage them to listen to other views e.g. Lets hear what
others think on that point Invite the group to comment- What do
others think? Fidgets cannot leave their technology behind and play
with smartphones/computers/ take calls on cell phones Ignore them
unless they disrupt others. Last updated 01 July 2015 79
79. Irrelevant discussions/ clowns Gently point out when a
discussion is valid but not pertinent to your topic. Thats an
interesting discussion but we dont have time to discuss that today
Ask the group to help keep the discussion focused on the topic
Where possible give feedback during a break asking them to keep to
the subject If they persist, use the same process as for angry
participants People trying to be funny too much can be just as
disruptive- follow the same procedure as before. Last updated 01
July 2015 80
80. Interaction questions and interruptions Thank the
questioner Check everyone has heard the question What do you think
? What do others think? Answer the question- if you can- be willing
to admit when you dont know the answer and commit to checking up
and confirming later. Never make up an answer about a factual
question Check that you have answered the question.
81. Hostile Questioning Sometimes you may feel that the tone of
a questioner suggests that they are hostile to you Firstly,
paraphrase their question to ensure that you have understood them
correctly Before you answer, ask them What do you think? (or
similar). (This is always a good idea even for friendly questions)
The questioner will give a more detailed explanation, giving you
more data to judge if they really are hostile. Last updated 01 July
2015 82
82. Hostile questioning (2) Follow this up with What do others
think? before answering. If e.g. the questioners view is extreme
let other participants disagree with the questioner first When its
your turn, express your view, being careful to express it in terms
of e.g. In my experience, or the experts suggest, or something like
that. Steer clear of I am right and you are wrong. Remember you
dont have to force individuals to agree. If the discussion goes on
too long cut it short and agree to differ / discuss later.
Sometimes people need time to accept a new idea. Dont hold up the
whole group to resolve an argument that may not interest everyone
Remember, What do you think? and What do others think? are two of
the most powerful questions in your toolbox. Use these questions
automatically when you are presenting. Last updated 01 July 2015
83
83. The power of the group with hostile behaviour Dont allow
yourself to get into one to one combat with disruptive individuals
Always invite the groups opinion What do other people think? If you
have to confront someone in a presentation, explain that you want
to get the best result for the group, and keep asking the group if
it accepts their behaviour. Usually group members will jump in and
support you If instead you get into a one on one shouting match
with an individual, the group may sit back and enjoy the
entertainment instead of helping you out. Last updated 01 July 2015
84
84. Interaction rational and emotional participants Think about
your questioner- rational or emotional? Emotional participants
sometimes just need acknowledgement Never put anyone down
(especially emotional participants) You never win an argument in a
presentation so dont get into one.
85. Memorable Finish Goal Visuals PerformanceParticipation
Recap and memorable end Early Connection Key messages, structure
and content
86. Memorable Finish Two key elements to your finish Recap-
Summarise what you have covered and the key points you want people
to remember or agree to End with a punch line- something memorable
for your audience that is linked to your goal.
87. Less is more. Michelangelos David Only say exactly what you
need to say AND NOTHING ELSE All extra content confuses your
message a little more.
88. Great Presentations- the 7 elements 7 steps to a great
presentation A clear goal Clear key messages, structure and content
Excellent, clear visuals Connection with your audience at the
beginning Great delivery Great involvement A memorable end. Before
you enter the room
89. Introduction - Remember INTRO INTEREST- get their interest
NEED- why should they care about what you are going to talk about?
TITLE- explain your title RANGE- overview of the content - what
will you cover? OBJECTIVES- what do you expect to have achieved by
the end of the session?
90. Template Presentation Storyboard Goal for the Presentation
(only 1) Key messages to support goal (max 3) Interesting Title
Attention Grabbing first slide Key message 1Key message 2Key
message 3 Recap and memorable end Questions? Optional Close
91. A presenter Avoid this..
92. Features and benefits, WIIFM? A feature is worthless unless
the customer sees it as valuable Too many presentations talk about
features and dont explain the benefits for the listeners Its not
enough to give the facts, you have to tell the audience why the
facts matter to them.
93. Making it personal beats giving the facts "It's hard for
humans to generate feelings toward statistics." Ask yourself- what
feelings will be generated by my messages?
94. Signposting- helping them navigate through your message
Presentation skills Goal Visuals PerformanceParticipation Early
Connection Key messages, structure and content Recap and memorable
end
95. What makes messages stick? Last updated 01 July 2015 96
UnexpectednessSimplicity Concreteness and realism Emotion Story
telling Humour
96. Good Visual Design 01 July 2015 97 Dont just give the
numbers- say what the numbers mean Which chart is easier to
understand? Commentary beats uninterpreted data
97. The CARS Principle Contrast Repetition Similarity These two
elements make items stand out and add interest These two elements
give a coherent feel
98. Interaction questions and interruptions Thank the
questioner Check everyone has heard the question What do you think
? What do others think? Answer the question- if you can- be willing
to admit when you dont know the answer and commit to checking up
and confirming later. Never make up an answer about a factual
question Check that you have answered the question.
99. Recap and memorable finish- Exercise Looking at the
presentation you brought with you, look at the closing slides How
effectively do they recap the key messages of your presentation?
Look at the actual close. How effective is it? Does your
presentation end with a bang, or gently fizzle out? Work with a
colleague to get an independent view, and to identify where and how
you might improve it.
100. The Memorable Finish Great presentations save lives Dont
be a PowerPoint assassin.
101. Questions?
102. Useful links http://slidesthatrock.com/portfolio/
http://www.thinkoutsidetheslide.com/ http://www.slideshare.net/ (a
useful source of many good presentations- use the search facility
to choose a topic) Posted on www.slideshare.net/ (use the search
line) look up slidesthatrock, Jesse Desjardins and Mike Jeffs. All
have excellent advice on presentations https://thenounproject.com/
A good source for icons to build your own infographics
103. Thats it! Thanks for your participation! See you next
time!