Home business articles Facebook business articles Twitter business articles Subscribe
 
business articles
Published 8th Feb 2009
Posted by admin

If you are new to public speaking, then let’s start with an easy to understand presentation skills.

In short, the ability of the submission process is so efficient, effective, elegant and communicate your message and your audience.

Your message can be simple or complex.

Presentation techniques can vary depending on why you are speaking in the first place and what we’re trying to achieve: it can seek to persuade and influence your audience, or may be trying to inspire and enlighten, or it may be necessary to provide new knowledge and skills, or may be there only to report the facts and data.

Depending on what you are trying to achieve, you can use a number of presentation, like a blackboard, PowerPoint presentations with a projector or a whiteboard or flip chart.

In some cases, nothing is fine, again depending on what we’re trying to achieve.

The tone of his presentation may be more or less formal depending on the context. If you know everyone in the audience like a reunion of work colleagues, which is different than if you are making a presentation to a group of people you never met before.

Of course, the novice public speaker may need to deal with fear. View my other training, if you are afraid of public speaking.

Presentation techniques are limited to the use of various techniques that are easy to learn. With a little practice, anyone can become a polished presenter.

The best way to develop great presentation skills quickly is simply to have a very good presentation of Vocational Training (see my article on training on how to assess training in public speaking).

Here are some tips to help you with your presentation:

* If using PowerPoint, have a page of bullet point outline of the whole presentation at hand in case the computer crashes, the projector does not work, or for any reason you can not use your PowerPoint presentation.

* Use the “Rule of 3″: presentation at 3 distil key points you want covered. Tell them what you will say to them, they say, then tell them what I have said, the design of your presentation in 3 parts: first an overview of their key points, and then the details of their presentation and then a summary (and repeating basically a summary of the review in the beginning).

* Using the 5 Minute Rule “to conquer fear: most of my students to report any persistent fear of public speaking disappears in the first 5 minutes, once you get rolling with his presentation.

* If using PowerPoint, never read your slides aloud: and the public can read. Simply put up the points they want to remember what you speak.

* The opening and closing are the most important psychologists call “the primacy / recent”, but really the last thing you say is the last thing that will really listen and remember, so their main points and then hammer the final say “thanks” and that’s it.

business articles

Leave a Reply

   
 
business articles

Meta

About

Profile
Business articles, case studies and other business resources for a variety of business management issues such as communication, leadership, strategy and more.

Blogroll

business articles
business articles