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Effective Presentations. Effective Presenters. Body language Gestures Eye contact Voice Filler words. Body Language. Rapid eye blinking Dilated pupils “Steepling” fingers Clenching fists Folding arms. Body Language. Hands touching mouth or nose Raising eyebrow Tilting head forward
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Effective Presenters • Body language • Gestures • Eye contact • Voice • Filler words
Body Language • Rapid eye blinking • Dilated pupils • “Steepling” fingers • Clenching fists • Folding arms
Body Language • Hands touching mouth or nose • Raising eyebrow • Tilting head forward • Leaning away • Drumming fingers
Gestures • Let them help emphasize points • Don’t plan gestures; let them happen • Bring gestures above waist
Eye Contact • “Connect” with the audience • Distribute evenly • Hold for 3-5 seconds • Look them in the eye
Voice • Monotone • Too fast • Volume
Verbal • Organize • Don’t memorize • Organize following a logical sequence
Structure • Three parts of a speech • Tell them what you are going to tell them • Tell them • Tell them what you just told them
Practice • 5 Ps - Proper Planning Prevents Poor Performance • 90% of success is preparation • Location – time of day • With movements and gestures • With visuals • Videotape yourself • If possible, with an audience
Preparation Steps • Establish your purpose (objectives) • Analyze the audience • Create a winning title • Outline the body • 1 to 3 main points per objective • Help audience relate to key points • Summarize each key point
The P – I Diagram Informative Persuasive What is your presentation?
Opening • Must grab audience’s attention • Startling statement • Question • Quote • Personal experience • Humor • Visual aids • Begin with the end
Visual Aids • K.I.S.S. • Keep is Short and Simple • K.I.L.L. • Keep it Large and Legible • Be accurate • Be relevant • Be colorful • Use graphics
Color • Include no more than four colors/slide • Use dark print on light background or light print on dark background • Maintain same background color throughout • Don’t use red for text • Avoid red/green contrasts
Color • Red – stimulates emotion • Green – inspires involvement or interaction • Gray – indicates lack of commitment or neutrality • Blue – shows calm and conservative • Yellow – shows cheerfulness and hope for the future, restlessness and change, feelings of anxiety • Purple – implies mystical quality • Black – indicates power and sophistication
Graphics • Bar charts • Show comparisons or data over a specific time • Line charts • Show data over many time periods, show trends • Pie charts • Show relation of parts to a whole • Organization charts • Show hierarchy and reporting relationships
Graphics • Cartoons • Add humor and interest, get point across memorably • Photos • Add realism and personal recognition • Symbols • Represent concepts without words
Text • Use short titles • Create a lot of white space • 6-by-6 rule • Express only one thought per slide • Use uppercase and lowercase text • Don’t mix fonts • Sans serif vs. Serif (Arial, Times)
Q & A • A.L.A.R.M. • Anticipate and prepare • Listen • Repeat or rephrase • Answer concisely • Move on to next question
Team Presentations • Act like a team • Prepare • Appoint a leader or moderator • Decide on each person’s role • Plan your agenda
Team Presentations • Plan the transitions • Time each segment • Look at audience, not teammates • Don’t debate or interrupt • Plan the closing