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Persuasive Presentations. Faisal AlSager. Week 10. Purpose of this Lecture. To help you better understand your audience to be able to persuade them To help better prepare for giving persuasive presentations in a solid coherent structure. Audience Analysis. Strongly Agree Agree Neutral
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Persuasive Presentations • Faisal AlSager Week 10
Purpose of this Lecture • To help you better understand your audience to be able to persuade them • To help better prepare for giving persuasive presentations in a solid coherent structure
Audience Analysis • Strongly Agree • Agree • Neutral • Disagree • Strongly Disagree
If Audience Strongly Agree or Agree • Present new information • Excite audience’s emotion • Strengthen resistance to counter-persuasion • Advocate course of actions
If Audience Strongly Disagree or Disagree • Set reasonable goals • Find common ground • Accept differences of opinion • Use fair and respected evidence • Build personal credibility
Neutral Audience • Neutral audience are divided into three groups: • Uninformed • Unconcerned • Undecided • What to do? • Address audience needs • Focus on benefits
Organizational Patterns • Problem/Cause/Solution • Better plan • Overcoming objections • Monroe’s motivated sequence • Persuasive stories
Problem/Cause/Solution • Problem: what is the problem • Cause: what is the cause • Solution: what is the solution • Benefit: what are the benefits of the solution • Next Steps: next steps to start to implement the solution
Better Plan • There is a plan • What is it • How will it work • This plan will be better than current plans because: • ABC • XYZ
Overcoming Objections • People should do X • People know X is good • Many people don’t do X • Why people don’t do X? • Reason 1 • Reason 2 • How these can and should be overcome • Overcoming Reason 1 • Overcoming Reason 2
Monroe’s Motivated Sequence • Attention: get the audience’s attention • Need: show the audience that there is a problem related to their individual interests and needs that needs to be solved • Satisfaction: propose a plan of action that will solve the problem and satisfy audience needs • Visualization: describe what the audience’s life and/or the lives of others will be like once the plan of action is implemented • Action: ask the audience to act in a way that demonstrate their personal commitment to the solution
AIDA: Another interpretation of Monroe’s Motivated Sequence • Attention: get the audience’s attention • Interest: build their interest • Desire: stimulate their desire • Action: provide them with concrete action
Persuasive Stories • The following stories show why people should change their opinions/behavior • Unless people change their opinion/behavior. their will be more stories like A, B, and C • (action/proposal)
References • This presentation is given at Thunderbird School of Global Management