1 / 21

Boston College Case Study Program A Presentation on Presentations…

October 28, 2005 Jim Rowan Deloitte. Boston College Case Study Program A Presentation on Presentations…. Agenda. Think About It Build IT Prepare For It Present It. Before you get started building a presentation…. Before you get started building a presentation…. Think. Plan ahead!

june
Télécharger la présentation

Boston College Case Study Program A Presentation on Presentations…

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. October 28, 2005 Jim Rowan Deloitte. Boston College Case Study ProgramA Presentation on Presentations…

  2. Agenda • Think About It • Build IT • Prepare For It • Present It

  3. Before you get started building a presentation… Before you get started building a presentation… Think • Plan ahead! • Who is the audience? How many people will be attending? • How long will I have to speak? • What equipment will be available? Do I know how to set it up and operate it? • What are my objectives? What are the audience’s objectives? • Is there a specific template I should use? • What medium should I use to deliver my presentation?

  4. Storyboarding Think • Creating a Storyboard Provides an Outline for the Presentation and the Path You will Follow Webster’s Dictionary defines a storyboard as “a series of panels on which is tacked a set of… rough drawings depicting… the important changes in scene and action…” • Storyboarding: • Maps out the storyline of a presentation • Allows the reader to skim pages for key messages and relevant support • Is supported by both horizontal and vertical logic. • Helps organize work • Establishes evaluation frameworks and criteria used in the assessment • Facilitates greater productivity and higher quality • Keeps an engagement focused

  5. Storyboarding Flow Think • When structuring a storyboard, you must first consider the narrative, logical flow of the presentation topics (horizontal logic) • Can the headlines be scanned to determine the context of the presentation? • Can the presentation document tell a story (at a high level) without you there to explain it? • If the presentation document did not have page numbers, could your audience put it in the correct order based on how the headlines flowed? Presentations require key threads Threads flow through the entire deliverable This creates a narrative story A narrative’s logic should be easy to follow

  6. Storyboarding - Content Think • Ask Yourself: • Does the content of the page match the heading? • Is the page clean, simple and uncluttered? • Does the page convey a message through the use of tasteful graphics and text? The company should build a warehouse in Chicago. E-tailers must focus on increasing Volumes. • Seen increase in volumes over 3-year time period.

  7. Agenda • Think About It • Build IT • Prepare For It • Present It

  8. Start with an agenda… Build • An agenda is a good way to highlight what will be covered • It gives a reader a sense of place in the presentation • During longer presentations, it is a good idea to come back to the agenda during the presentation to let your audience know where you are Remember… No Clip Art … Because people want to know what you will cover

  9. Tell a story using headers and footers on a slide Build • If the contents of the slide were gone and the header and footer remained, the slide would still tell a compelling story • Also note the effective use of text and graphics … because a story wraps the content of the slide together

  10. Use diagrams effectively… Build • Properly represented graphics provide clear representations of data • Be careful to not misrepresent the data to prove a point • Always source your data on the slide … because they can clarify a point and appeal to multiple learning styles

  11. Diagrams can help explain technical concepts… Build • Note the use of non-technical terms where possible when explaining the components • Avoid acronyms or provide a key to explain difficult terms … and make it easier for non-technical people to understand them

  12. Some Key Formatting Rules Build • The entire effect of the document can be lost if the message is difficult to read, slides are cluttered, or if formatting is not aesthetically pleasing

  13. Reviewing Build • After you have completed the presentation document, it is extremely important to review and edit prior to presenting • The following, simple checklist is helpful in assessing the quality of your presentation • Strong points developed using Storyboarding and Brainstorming • Logical flow to the presentation • Relevant visuals with insight to analysis • Consistent, proper formatting throughout the deck Now that you have an effective deck, prepare a powerful oral presentation!

  14. Agenda • Think About It • Build IT • Prepare For It • Present It

  15. Prepare Preparing the Presentation Review the purpose of the presentation and your intended audience and rehearse and rehearse and rehearse.... • Remember purpose of the presentation • Objective, Purpose, Mission, Goal of your talk? • Position, situation, issues, points you want to make? • End results, benefits of the recommended actions? • Identify audience of the presentation • Communication to partner group will be different to analyst group • Match the level of complexity to the target audience • Rehearse your presentation • Prepare a rough draft and review it • Rehearse to yourself first and then in front of colleagues

  16. Agenda • Think About It • Build IT • Prepare For It • Present It

  17. Present The Power of Delivery • Dress appropriately, greet the audience, introduce yourself and follow this formula for your oral presentation • Research results on what determines our communication impact: • 7% of our impact is determined by the words we use • 38% of our impact is determined by our voice: how confident and comfortable we sound • 55% of our impact is determined non-verbally: our appearance, posture, gestures, and movement, eye contact and facial expressions • 93% of our communication impact comes from the way we deliver our words

  18. Present Guidelines to Effective Delivery • How you speak is as important as what you speak • Speak to the audience, not in front of the audience • Don’t read from a script • Speak clearly, don't shout or whisper • Don't rush or talk deliberately slowly; be natural • Deliberately pause at key points to generate emphasize • Avoid jokes - always disastrous unless you are a natural expert • Keep to the time allowed, spending 2 minutes for each slide • Use your hands to emphasize points but don't overindulge • Move around but avoid moving too much • Keep an eye on the audience – their body language can tell you a lot about how you are doing

  19. Present Fielding Questions and Offering Answers • Questions • Encourage clarification questions during the presentation • Discourage impulsive ad-hoc questions during the presentation • Repeat the question before answering it • Answer questions briefly and to the point • Feedback • Get the feed back from your audience (project team and client) on content, presentation style • Seek comments on improving the presentation skills • Use feedback for your next presentation

  20. Present Habits to Avoid • Here are a few tips that can go a long way! • Don’t stand in a position where you obscure the screen • Don’t play with coins and keys in the pockets • Steer clear from distracting mannerisms like swinging a pointer aimlessly around • Try not to use a diagram that is too detailed and difficult to read from the furthest seat in the room • Try not to use too many Acronyms

More Related