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EHS Professionals: Grab Your Audience and SPEAK to Succeed!. Margaret Wan, PhD, DTM AIHA Florida Local Section Fall Conference September 29, 2006. Objectives. Introduce oral presentation techniques that achieve maximum impact Focus on five critical success factors to grab any audience
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EHS Professionals: Grab Your Audience and SPEAK to Succeed! Margaret Wan, PhD, DTM AIHA Florida Local Section Fall Conference September 29, 2006
Objectives • Introduce oral presentation techniques that achieve maximum impact • Focus on five critical success factors to grab any audience • Discuss the do’s and don’ts of using PowerPoint and other visual aids
Aside from the speech . . . • Know the room and the equipment • Relax and turn nervousness into positive energy • See yourself giving a powerful presentation • Realize that people want you to succeed!
Five Critical Success Factors • Style • Purpose • Emotions • Audience • Knowledge
Style • Good writing style good speech organization • A rich vocabulary enhances word pictures • Stretch your creativity in using visual aids • Vocal variety and gestures depend on setting
Purpose • Inspire • Inform • Persuade • Entertain
Emotions • Happiness • Sadness • Anger • Surprise • Disgust • Fear
Audience • Analyze your audience • Build rapport before you begin to speak • Connect with audience during your speech • Consider audience size when time limit critical
Knowledge • Speak on a topic about which you are knowledgeable • Do not overwhelm your audience with your knowledge • Anticipate questions in the mind of your listeners
Your Friend and Your Enemy Visual Aids
Example • Use visual aids to add impact • Ensure everyone can see, read, and understand • Keep it simple • The 7 x 7 rule • Fonts • Graphics • Remember Murphy’s Law • Practice, practice, and practice!
Do . . . • Use visual aids to add impact • Ensure everyone can see, read, and understand • Keep it simple • The 7 x 7 rule • Fonts • Graphics • Remember Murphy’s Law • Practice, practice, and practice!
Don’t . . . • Let visual aids become distractions • Speak to your visual aids • Depend on an assistant without rehearsal • Apologize for technical or other problems • Expect visual aids to save a poorly prepared presentation