How You Can Present in Virtual Presentations and Look Like a Pro

How You Can Present in Virtual Presentations and Look Like a Pro

I have been coaching people virtually for at least 10 years. Even before Zoom was invented, I had my own virtual studio.

Although I still speak professionally, my major business now is helping other people with their presentations, whether they are executives, salespersons, engineers for technology companies, or other successful speakers and experts.

Many of my large Silicon Valley clients engage me to prepare their technical experts to speak at their customer conferences. Last year and this, they are virtual. In future years, I predict they will have both online and in-person conferences.

Here is my advice.

If you do not understand the technology, nothing else works. Certainly, Zoom is a popular platform; learn how to use it. You must up your game. It’s perfectly fine to work from your office, but I advise my clients to straighten out all the books on their bookshelves. It might be a bit busy, however, you need to make it tidy,

Everything we do adds to or detracts from our message.

That includes our background. If you have a noticeboard with bits of paper sticking out, pin them in so they’re all flat.

In virtual meetings, you must learn to create energetic intimacy. That means you must get used to looking in the webcam and notching up your energy by 10%. In a Zoom meeting, we tend to look at each other, however, if you’re projecting to your audience, they are on the other side of your webcam. If just looking into the webcam is uncomfortable for you, bring a couple of your friends or a family member in, and practice talking to them rather than to nobody.

When it comes to intimacy, whether you have a live audience of 100 or 1000 people, the secret is to always talk to one person.

At times you might say, “Welcome, members of the American Payroll Association.” When you talk to the audience, say, “you.” “If I were to ask you, how often have you found yourself in this situation,” you are talking to one person, and the 1000 people in front of you feel, “The speaker is talking to me.”

When I’m coaching engineers for a big conference, and they say, “Hello, everyone,” I say “You’re only going to be talking to one person. Instead, say, “Welcome. Thank you for your interest in . . .”

Structuring a script for a live presentation is the same as for a virtual presentation.

The virtual presentation would likely have more slides because it must be fast moving. What I recommend is to create polls and ask them to write in the chat.

For virtual presentations, I will usually have four segments of content for my slide decks. At the end of each section, I have a slide of question marks. That reminds me that this is the end of the section before I transition to the next idea. It is also a good time for the audience to ask questions and have the moderator read any comments that have been added to the chat.

When I speak, I always have a moderator.

If the group that has hired me does not have anyone in that role, I bring my own assistant, Paul. If you have a fairly large audience, you ask people to type their questions into the chat. Because it is important to make eye contact with the audience, I do not want to look down and skim through the questions. My recommendation is to always ask for short, specific questions around the subject. Paul knows that if they ask a general question, he might leave it until the end. Also, if it’s a fairly large audience, Paul can say, “Patricia, five people want to know this.” He can summarize the question rather than read a whole paragraph.

Here’s another suggestion:

In virtual meetings, chances are you’ll need a drink. It’s amazing how many sophisticated people glug, glug, glug as they drink from a water bottle. My goal is to not look ugly. I don’t want people to look up my nose.

One of the biggest contributions I have made to other speakers for virtual presentations is advising them to use a straw!

When your presentations deserve the best, talk to Fripp.

#expertadvice #presentationskills #keynotespeaker

Karen Fox

?? Award-Winning Speaker & Coach ?? | Helping You Achieve Business Excellence | Founder of AI Discovery Lab | Top 100 St. Louisans to Know | Top 15 St. Louis Coaches | ? AI Expertise ? Marketing Mastery ? Leadership

2 年

Oh Patricia I adore you! You are brilliant and such an amazing communicator!

回复
George Torok

Speak up and speak out with more confidence and clarity to deliver your intended message. Presentation Coaching for executives

2 年

Valuable advice. I agree with each point.

回复
Carl Seidman, CSP, CPA

Helping finance professionals master data, FP&A and CFO advisory services through learning experiences, masterminds, training + community | Adjunct Professor in Data Analytics | Course Creator | Advisor | Microsoft MVP

2 年

Good advice Patricia. Virtual and in-person bring many similarities but it’s the differences that speakers need to pay attention to. Even after a few years of Zoom experience, the bar for many presenters remains low. This offers opportunities for speakers who know the software/tech well to shine. I also like the suggestion of speaking to one person. I often use a second device (eg. a tablet) and sign in as a participant so I can see what the audience is seeing.

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