How Good are Your Presentation Skills?
Photo Credit: Euro Petroleum Consultants, Sochi, Russia, 2017

How Good are Your Presentation Skills?

Presenting effectively is a skill that needs to be learned and practiced. Very few people are born with the natural ability to deliver effectively. Enjoy it or not, it is part of daily business. For those of us who were not born with natural eloquence, especially in languages which are not our native tone, public speaking can be difficult in the beginning. However, with enough planning, preparing, and practicing, one can become as effective as anyone. Here are are a few simple tips I can share based on my experience.

Connect with your audience in the opening

Call your audience’s attention by asking the audience a question, giving a challenge, referring a key point from previous speaker, connecting with today's news to put your presentation in a context that the audience care. Humors and stories can and often fall flat with international audience. We all love to laugh, just not always about the same things.

Have an agenda so that the audience can follow

As your presentation progresses, keep referring back to your initial agenda by using highlights to show where you are up to. Otherwise, use appropriate transition to remind audience where you are in the flow and where you are going.

Give your conclusion first

Your audience will appreciate knowing at the beginning your key conclusions. The rest of the presentation is to validate your conclusions. 

Focus on your audience, not yourself

If you are talking about your product, your wonderful technology, start the conversation by imagining you are in the audience’s shoes and describing the issues or problems he or she has to deal with before you present your solution. Otherwise, half of the audience may have no clue what problems you are trying to solve.

Keep your slides simple - make one key point each slide

Human tendency is to have more, not less. For slides, less is more. Use short phrases, use charts, pictures. Use animation only if absolutely necessary. After you think you have cut enough words out of the slides, cut another twenty percent.

Know your stuff so you can be yourself

The best way to sound like you know what you are talking about is to know what you are talking about. Get to know your topic well and use the slides only as cue for your presentation. Remind yourself the two or three key messages you really wants to emphasize and repeat them.

Answer questions

If there is a question during presentation, give a brief answer. Do not worry that you are going to run out of time by answering a question. Take the opportunity to engage the audience and lead the conversation to one of the messages you want to convey if make sense.

Prepare a question for yourself

It can be awkward if no one is asking questions in the end of your presentation. You can always ask yourself a rhetorical or hypothetical question to warm up the audience. Once started, you will generally have more questions coming.

Develop a contingency plan

Things do not always go as planned. Keep a backup copy and a paper copy of your slides. Come with a plan for presentation by assuming you will have no projections for the first five minutes so that you do not get into a panic mode when faced with technical difficulties. You might be pleasantly surprised to find out that it is not a bad idea to start presentation without the slides for the first few minutes after all.

Finally, relax and be calm. Take a deep breath or slow down if you need to. Be confident and enjoy.

Lucy Chen

Executive Coach | Speaker | DTM | Advisory Board | Founding Member of Chief | Book of BUILD RESILIENCE | 4X Book Award Winner | Analytics & Risk Management Expert

2 年

All great points, especially a reminder of "Give your conclusion first". Thanks!

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Jamie Martel

Global Finance Executive | Strategic CFO | Manufacturing, Supply Chain & Business Transformation | P&L & Growth Strategy | Cost Optimization | M&A & FP&A Leadership

4 年

A clear and simple checklist new and seasoned presenters should review before any presentation. Well done.

赵新进

Leadership blogger, Aspiring Writer, Photographer, Marathon Runner

7 年

According to Adam Grant, in a presentation, 5% of people remembered a statistic, but 63% of people remembered a story.

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Bonjoon Ku

Leader in Industrial Services, Technology and Manufacturing | Drive Transformation | Accelerate Growth | Build Profitable Operations

7 年

Xinjin, this is a great guide!

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Will find out later today - presenting at the California Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Summit in Sacramento! https://www.californiahydrogensummit.com/programFall.asp

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