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Presentation Skills (but keep in mind: This is NOT a presentation) Dr Theodoros Manavis

Presentation Skills (but keep in mind: This is NOT a presentation) Dr Theodoros Manavis tmanavis@ist.edu.gr. You (how YOU should behave). You (how YOU should behave). Read the audience (eye contact) Body language Voice (you’re an actor!) Time (measure it)

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Presentation Skills (but keep in mind: This is NOT a presentation) Dr Theodoros Manavis

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  1. Presentation Skills (but keep in mind: This is NOT a presentation) Dr Theodoros Manavis tmanavis@ist.edu.gr

  2. You (how YOU should behave)

  3. You (how YOU should behave) • Read the audience (eye contact) • Body language • Voice (you’re an actor!) • Time (measure it) • Goal always in mind (passion!) • Humour! (I know you have it!) • Hostile audience? No problem, you’re cool! • Attire (ντύσιμο)

  4. Do’s and Dont’s

  5. Do’s and Dont’s

  6. Do’s and don’ts • People tend to push all their information onto the slides. If the slides can pass all the information, what use is the presenter? Be SELECTIVE about what is on the slides. You can add a lot of content verbally. • Good presenters use the slides to SUPPLEMENT the presentation. They  show off charts, graphs or amusing pictures or cartoons that help make their point better or more effectively. They do NOT copy out dull pages of texts. (see slide 18 for a brief example) • If you must include text - make sure its big and easy to read. If you have text up there you WANT people to read it. Make it possible. Large fonts, sans serifs, contrasting colors. Test it out if possible before hand.

  7. Do’s and don’ts • Backgrounds are not how you show off your sophistication. Complicated backgrounds cluttered with images DETRACT from the clarity of your presentation and makes people focus on the background as opposed to the FOREGROUND where their attention should be. • Animations and sounds candestroy good presentations. Be sure that each one you include is absolutely essential. If in doubt, leave it out. • Have speaking notes - slides are NOT notes. Try and think about what you’re going to say, what order you’ll present information in and what you can ignore on a slide, or which way you want the audience to interpret information on a slide that may be ambiguous. • Do not repeat what’s on the slide. If you want them to read, you have to presume your audience is literate. Presuming they’re illiterate is the easy way to have a bored audience.

  8. Do’s and don’ts • Your voice is part of the presentation - use it!!! Change your tone, for emphasis, for clarity. People who speak with a monotone are the worse presenters. They sound like they don’t care about the material - and if you care don’t why should the audience? • Talk at the WHOLE audience. Don’t stand to the side, don’t talk to one member, don’t focus on the lady in the middle. Look around, make everyone in the room interact with the presentation.  • Ask for questions at the end. It shows confidence in your material and preparation and a willingness to engage with the audience. Answer the questions if you can. There’s nothing wrong with saying some one has asked a very good question and you can’t answer it.

  9. Do’s and don’ts • Prepare yourself in advance (time and content) • Be very clear about how much time you have- and stick to that time in preparing your presentation. It's very difficult to 'cut' a PowerPoint presentation at the event itself, so it's a great mistake to run out of time. Most presenters prepare too much material; but nobody ever complains that a presentation was too short (it always allows more time for questions).   • The first slide should announce the title of your presentation, the event and date, and your name and position. This may seem terribly obvious, but many speakers miss off some of this basic information and then weeks later listeners (or their colleagues back at the organisation) are not clear who made the presentation or when.

  10. Do’s and don’ts • The second slide should catch the attention of your audience for your presentation. It could be the central proposition of your presentation or a conventional wisdom that you wish to challenge or a relevant or witty quote from a leader in your field. If it is amusing or controversial or both, so much the better. • The third slideshould set out the structure of your presentation. The default structure should consist of three themes that you intend to examine. For a very short presentation, there might only be time for two; if you want to look at more than five areas, write a book instead.   • Each slide should have clear heading. A question is often a good way of winning attention - but, in that case, make sure you answer the question in the body of the slide.

  11. Do’s and don’ts • Each bullet point should consist of an intelligible phrase, rather than merely a word or two that is meaningless on its own or conversely a complete sentence that is better delivered orally. So, for instance, do use "Focus on profitable and growing markets" rather than simply "Focus" or "Markets". • Make appropriate use of pictures. It's a good idea to break up text with illustrations and it is true that a picture is worth a thousand words.   • The last slide should set out all appropriate contact details: certainly e-mail address and possibly snail mail address.

  12. Do’s and don’ts • Make copies of your slides available. It is a matter of preference whether you do this at the beginning of your presentation or at the end. If your listeners have copies at the beginning, they can take notes simply by annotating the slides, instead of having to note down all the information on the slides. On the other hand, you might feel that, if they can see in advance the slides you are going to use, you lose the element of control or surprise. • Use navigation signs.  Audience should always know where they stand. • FONTS: Big and clear, preferably sans-serif. Not many different fonts!!

  13. Do’s and don’ts • Use contrasting coloursto make it easier to read. Avoid fuzzy backgrounds. Avoid too many colours Trying tobe creativecan alsobe bad • Too much artwork may distract your audience. It cannot substitute content.   • CONSISTENCYthrough your presentation. Don’t change fonts, colours, styles • 1-2 minutes per slide • (The 6x7 rule): (but be careful with this, it’s not really a rule!) No more than 6 lines per slide No more than 7 words per line Background – Bad

  14. Do’s and don’ts K.I.S.S. PRINCIPLE

  15. Do’s and don’ts Keep It Short and Simple

  16. Do’s and don’ts • Presenting data and figures: • Use simple charts/graphs, with (ideally) one main point per chart/graph • Don’t try to squeeze too much data in your graph • Labels x and y axis, and units • Use a title that clearly explains the idea you are trying to get across • Make sure text is big enough • Make sure colours and background are visible

  17. Do’s and don’ts • Presenting graphs and figures : a good example

  18. Do’s and don’ts • Presenting graphs and figures : another good example

  19. Do’s and don’ts • Presenting graphs and figures: a bad example

  20. Do’s and don’ts • Presenting graphs and figures: a possible solution to the previous example

  21. WHAT ANNOYS MOST 62% 47% • SPEAKER READS SLIDES • SMALL TEXT • COLOUR CHOICE • FULL SENTENCES, NO BULLETS • FLYING/MOVING TEXT AND GRAPHICS • COMPLEX DIAGRAMS, CHARTS 43% 39% 25% 22%

  22. CHECK THESE OUT, may be helpful and funny! Death by powerpoint: http://www.presentationexamples.com/ "How to" : Visual Effects in PowerPoint 2003 http://www.slideshare.net/mjamesno/how-to-visual-effects-in-powerpoint-2003?src=related_normal&rel=32924

  23. A small visual example BEFORE, do you see any problems?

  24. Example (alternatives)

  25. Example (alternatives)

  26. Example (alternatives)

  27. Example (alternatives)

  28. Example (alternatives)

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