12-07-2015, 08:37 AM
A slide that introduces your subject, and what you'll be talking about. Try using a simple chart with one statistic like "did you know that 9/10 people do XYZ?" Make it slightly fun to get their interest.
You can also, on the same slide, or at another point, ask a question that requires a show of hands. It's a lovely time waster, and your audience will like it more (more fun) than the other droning presentations.
Don't hesitate to speak slowly. Spend a few precious seconds walking to the other side of the screen to point something out on the projection. Press the wrong button after the second slide, so it goes back to the first. It'll spend a few seconds and will likely get a chuckle from the audience if you play it well.
Introduce your points of a slide on the screen one by one, that way you really flesh out what you wanted to say before moving onto the next, rather than hurrying on ahead because you know everyone's skim read the whole slide already.
A Q&A at the end, if you're allowed as part of your time. Before your presentation, tell your audience that they can interrupt you at any time if they're unclear about something or if they have a question. Hopefully they will, and you can spend as much time answering as you want.
Just a few tips !
You can also, on the same slide, or at another point, ask a question that requires a show of hands. It's a lovely time waster, and your audience will like it more (more fun) than the other droning presentations.
Don't hesitate to speak slowly. Spend a few precious seconds walking to the other side of the screen to point something out on the projection. Press the wrong button after the second slide, so it goes back to the first. It'll spend a few seconds and will likely get a chuckle from the audience if you play it well.
Introduce your points of a slide on the screen one by one, that way you really flesh out what you wanted to say before moving onto the next, rather than hurrying on ahead because you know everyone's skim read the whole slide already.
A Q&A at the end, if you're allowed as part of your time. Before your presentation, tell your audience that they can interrupt you at any time if they're unclear about something or if they have a question. Hopefully they will, and you can spend as much time answering as you want.
Just a few tips !