PRESENT LIKE A PRO! Ten Ways to WOW Your Audience
PRESENT LIKE A PRO! Ten Ways to WOW Your Audience
By Alan Cutler, alan@leadershiptalks.com
"I do not object to people looking at their watches when I am
speaking. But I strongly object when they start shaking them to
make sure they are still going!" Lord Birkett
OK. You have been working in the company for a few years now
and, through hard work and enthusiasm, have risen up the ranks
to a responsible middle-management position. You know your job
backwards and are confident that you could rise to any challenge.
One day your Chief Executive asks to see you. You know you have
kept your nose clean of late so this can only be good news. No
doubt he has a job that needs doing and has looked no further
than you. A good choice!
He sits you down and, after a little polite chat, he says:
"As you know, our company is looking to develop its services
into other sectors and an opportunity has arisen to raise our
profile at a national conference. If we can make our name there
it could be the best thing that has happened to us in years. I
need someone that I can trust to pull this off and I have been
keeping an eye on you for some time. I would like you to make a
presentation about our company at the conference."
What would your reaction be? Perhaps:
I have never spoken in public before Everybody
will be looking at me! I am sure that I will forget
what I have to say! I may get asked a difficult
question! What happens if I screw up!
But it does not have to be so frightening. In fact, it can be
immensely stimulating and rewarding. There is no other feeling
like standing on a platform in front of people, with them
hanging on your every word. You can see by their rapt attention
that you have them in the palm of your hand. And afterwards they
come up to you and say how much they have enjoyed your
presentation.
You don't believe me! Well, read on and believe how even you
could PRESENT LIKE A PRO by applying my Ten Ways to WOW Your
Audience
Step 1 - Understand Your Audience
"Some speakers electrify their listeners, others only gas them"
Sidney Smith
The first lesson you must learn is that your presentation must
be geared towards your audience's needs, not yours.
Your audience will respond to your approach, based broadly upon
their:
- educational background - culture - existing knowledge of the
subject - technical expertise - position within the organisation
- enthusiasm for the subject and event - expectation of the
experience
Ask yourself the following questions: * How much does my
audience already know about the subject? * What do they expect
from me? * What interests them in the subject area of my
presentation? * What is their likely attitude towards me and my
subject? * Are there any 'hidden agendas'? * Is there any
internal politics or inter-group tensions I should be aware of?
* What 'language' do they speak? * Do they want to be at the
event? Were they pressed to attend? * What is the age range? *
What is their educational and social background? * What is their
cultural or ethnic background? * Could religion and/or politics
influence their reception to my presentation? * What positions
do they hold in the organisation? Is there a mix of grades
present? * What presentation style are they most likely to
relate to?
Step 2 - Set Your Objectives
"Men never plan to be failures; they simply fail to plan to be
successful" William A Ward
The key to planning a powerful presentation is to determine its
objectives. Again, these should be largely formed with the
audience in mind. For example, they may be to:
pass on pure information: the results of some recent
market research, perhaps improve the work performance
of members of the audience by imparting new skills or knowledge
to them change the attitude of the audience towards
factors that they have recently faced, or will be facing in the
future persuade key decision-makers to use a product or
service your organisation offers introduce new working
policies or procedures entertain and amuse
Step 3 - Structure Your Presentation
"A speech should be like a lady's dress: long enough to cover
the essentials, but short enough to be interesting" Anon
Have you ever heard anyone complaining that a presentation was
too short? No? I bet that you have heard the opposite, though!
Your presentation should be structured into three distinct
sections: The opening (5% - 10% of total time) has three main
functions:
1. To attract the audience's attention as a means of starting
the presentation on a positive note. 2. To explain the purpose
of the presentation 3. To advise the audience of any ground rules
The main body (75% - 85% of total time) should be split into a
number of main sections: from three to no more than six. This is
where you aim to fulfil your main objectives, be they to pass on
information; change attitudes; introduce new concepts; or to
entertain. Each section should be easily identified by the
audience as being separate to that which proceeds or follows it.
The use of bold visual aids with the title or description of the
section (possibly numbered) will assist in differentiating each
section.
The conclusion (5% - 10% of total time) is the most important
section of the presentation because people tend to remember the
last thing they hear.
The four purposes of the conclusion are to:
1. Recap the important points you made in the main body of the
presentation - although do not be tempted merely to repeat them
at length. Make them short and snappy. 2. Reinforce the main
message - which could be the dire consequences of not taking the
actions you have proposed. 3. Provide a springboard for action:
in other words what you want the members to do after the
presentation. 4. End on a high note. Do not let your
presentation peter out to a feeble, forgettable end.
Step 4 Practice, Practice, Practice
"When other speakers present, we applaud. But when Demosthenes
speaks, we arise and go to war!"
The above quotation refers to Demosthenes, a speaker in ancient
Greece, who had a stutter, but who practiced his speeches so
much, with pebbles in his mouth to counter his stutter, that he
became famous for his passion and eloquence.
Do not try to 'wing it' - the only way to guarantee a successful
presentation is to practice it until it becomes second nature.
Doing so:
o Helps reduce the possibility of nerves on the day o Improves
the delivery of the presentation o Determines the timing of it o
Allows you to refine the content o Familiarises you with any
aids you will be using
Step 5 - Arrive Early and Check
"There are risks and costs to a programme of action. But they
are far less than the long-range risk and costs of comfortable
inaction" J F Kennedy
It is essential that you arrive in plenty of time in advance of
your presentation, not least because it will allow you time to
gather your thoughts, have a glass of water and a deep breath,
and relax before you take the stage. Better still, visit the
venue days in advance, thus allowing you to take any necessary
actions or amendments to your plans.
The principle reason for arriving early is to check every aspect
appertaining to your presentation. You need to check out the:
Room Environment Equipment
Step 6 - Control Your Nerves
"The human brain starts working the moment you are born and
never stops until you stand up to speak in public" Anon
Let's get one thing straight first: to some degree, everyone has
butterflies in the stomach before having to speak to an
audience. The key is to have the butterflies flying in
formation.
Can you ever remember someone having difficulties when
performing or speaking in public? I bet that you felt for him
and his discomfort. I bet that you wanted to find some way to
help him; to reduce his discomfort. Audiences are not evil; they
do not want you to fail. And if things do get a little difficult
for you they will want to assist you through it, rather than
revel in your discomfort. They will wait patiently; suggest
words; tell you that you have missed out a page of notes; or put
the transparency on the OHP upside down. After all, it could be
them up there having to make the presentation! So put your fears
into perspective.
Step 7 - Build Initial Rapport With Your Audience
"A speaker who does not strike oil in ten minutes should stop
boring" Louis Nizer
You have researched your audience (Step 1) so you know a lot
about them. Hence, you have all the information you need to
build an immediate rapport with them. One-size-fits-all may
apply to socks but it does not apply to audiences. You must
understand what their 'hot buttons' are and be prepared to press
them from the outset. The over-riding objective must be to get
them on your side.
Try out these ideas to build an initial rapport:
* Boost their personal egos. * Stress the importance of their
roles, however menial they believe them to be. * Talk their
language. * Dress the part. * Establish your credibility. * Use
examples and anecdotes they will relate to. * Stress that you
understand the challenges they face.
Step 8 - Deliver with a Passion
"We communicate with passion - and passion persuades" Anita
Roddick
Once you have built an initial rapport with your audience, you
must maintain it throughout your presentation. People will have
come to hear you speak with some preconceptions and
expectations. They may initially have been negative but you have
worked hard in your initial five to ten minutes to grab the
audience's attention and raise expectations for the remainder of
your presentation. It is your job now to meet, or even exceed,
their high expectations. You must stand and deliver!
There is nothing more engaging in a speaker than for her to give
the impression that she is really enjoying the presentation
herself. It may be that she has given that very speech a hundred
times but the audience feels and believes that this is the first
time and that they are being given special attention. Yes, it is
about the professionalism of the delivery, but it is also about
the enthusiasm behind the delivery - the passion. Speakers must
make their audience believe that they, the speaker, are as
interested in, and committed to, the subject as they hope their
audience will be.
Step 9 - Tell Them a Story
"Once you get people laughing, they're listening and you can
tell them almost anything" Herbert Gardner
People have been using stories as a means of passing on
information and messages since time began. People would sit
around a fire and exchange experiences and these stories would
be passed on from generation to generation. People love to hear
stories - they hold our interest as they take us from level to
level, from incident to incident, building up our curiosity
until all is revealed at the ending. Our love of stories begins
in early childhood and never leaves us. The camp fire may have
been replaced by the bar counter or the dining room table but
the fascination remains. Effective speakers understand the power
of storytelling and use it to good, even dramatic, effect in
their presentations. Stories add variety and can be used to
illustrate and emphasise messages.
Step 10 - Use Visual Aids and Props
"Put it before them briefly so they will read it, clearly so
they will appreciate it, picturesquely so they will remember
it". Joseph Pulitzer
Visual aids are used to add interest for your audience, and
there is a wide range of such, including:
Slides (OHP or PowerPoint) Video
Flipcharts Slide projectors Props, models,
jigsaws, Lego pieces etc Graphs, charts
Demonstrations Cartoons Photographs
Handouts
Props. Even novice speakers should consider using props as well
as visual aids. Props are particularly good at adding interest
and humour to a presentation. Here are some props that I and
fellow speakers have used to good effect:
* A giant toy telephone to reinforce points about telephone
selling. * Throwing small toy dinosaurs or ostriches into the
audience when talking about people's resistance to change. *
Simple magic tricks. * Wearing costumes - from complete clown
outfits to a simple baseball hat. * Toy bombs or machine guns to
grab the audience's attention through noise. * Aerosol sprays to
invoke the sense of smell associated with a story, perhaps.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Alan Cutler is a Member of The Professional Speakers Association
and The International Federation of Professional Speakers.
Further details of his services are at www.leadershiptalks.com
This article is taken from his 48-page ebook 'PRESENT LIKE A
PRO! Ten Ways to WOW Your Audience'. Copies can be purchased for
immediate download for only $14.95 by clicking on
http://www.leadershiptalks.co.uk/productdetail.cfm?ProductID=14
Copyright Alan Cutler 2005
Permission is given for this article to be copied and used in
any way so long as it is not changed in any way