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Well, I survived. It went OK, which I would have taken beforehand.
It was quite odd as I didn't feel that nervous before or during, but I guess I'm just not a good speaker - words just wouldn't flow from my mouth in a nice, consistent manner. I seem to have this problem when talking to people I don't know particularly well - unless I've had a few drinks or am able to put on a slightly fake, noddyney accent & swear!!
Doing this presentation has just confirmed to me that, now being in my mid 30's, public speaking isn't for me & I don't plan on doing it again in a hurry . . .
Thanks to everyone who offered advice. It probably made the difference between OK & a complete shambles!
It can be terrifying but don't stop doing it. Only way to overcome it is to practise - either keep on doing them as presentations, or go find your local Am Dram band and get on stage, which is how I learned it. I eventually did a course on presentation technique and discovered I'd been doing most of the right things all along!
Like all things it's about confidence and self-beleif. If you can talk in a meeting round a table, or hold the attention of three people in a pub, you can do presenting. What you're really scared of is being asked a question to which you don't know the answer in a formal, exposed scenario. Learn the subject and all else is simply technique.
Well, I survived. It went OK, which I would have taken beforehand.
It was quite odd as I didn't feel that nervous before or during, but I guess I'm just not a good speaker - words just wouldn't flow from my mouth in a nice, consistent manner. I seem to have this problem when talking to people I don't know particularly well - unless I've had a few drinks or am able to put on a slightly fake, cockney accent & swear!!
Doing this presentation has just confirmed to me that, now being in my mid 30's, public speaking isn't for me & I don't plan on doing it again in a hurry . . .
Thanks to everyone who offered advice. It probably made the difference between OK & a complete shambles!
My advice is as follows. Presenting is a series of small 'dramatic' effects:
- silence is powerful only in mid-stream because it provides a contrast. Use it for effect - and don't be afraid of it.
- talk to yourself aloud if you need to do something in front of an audience (e.g. I'll just plug this in and we'll be ready)
- pick a spot on the floor, stand there, and stick to it. Only move around every few minutes, or even sit down, but only move when you are changing the subject/tone/to do something.
- give the audience something to do/think about/read after about 15 minutes. You can shut up then (provides contrast).
- if eye contact is a bother then talk to the wall at the back of the room above their heads.
- briefly look (move your head) at what you want the audience to look at (e.g. a screen) - their eyes will follow yours, then look back at them (you'll see none of them looking at you!). Pointing helps too.
Tissues, wipe sweat from brow, clean up spilled water due to nervousness, offer to the bloke excavating his nose. All things I have been subject to. Yuk I know.
BGG is right voice & pacing is very important, stop and involve the people if a small group that decreases the chance of interruptions / heckling if they know there will be structured places to insert questions during the presentation.
Have a large glass of water, tissues, pad & paper with you. You will need them.
Um...exactly what sort of presentation are you giving ?
A casting couch performance ?
Which leads me in to my advice. I used to do public speaking, where you walk in to a hall with 400 people, walk up to a panel of 3 judges, take a sheet of A4, read it mentally for 1 minute, then you have to present to the audience.
1. Breath and speak normally...don't rush.
2. Don't talk in a monotone. On the other hand, don't talk like a wah-wah guitar either.
3. Pause often, to allow the audience time to absorb the material.
4. Put yourself in their shoes, and try to "hear" your own performance.
5. Look up at the audience and maintain eye contact. (If you find eye contact uncomfortable, look at the middle of their foreheads. This gives the illusion of eye contact)
6. Imagine everyone sitting their naked. (This helps you break down your own mental barriers that everyone is there judging you.)
HTH....
Alternatively, walk in, dump a load of A4 summaries in their laps, and say "have a look through this over a pint with me in the Dog and Gun. You can ask questions there".
Last edited by Board Game Geek; 17 August 2007, 00:25.
Reason: addendum
Create a flowchart / visual narrative before you start to write the presentation. Use that as your guide throughout. modify as neccessary.
Make the slides mainly visual, bullet points of only the major points. People will remember most of the slides if they are good. They will remember very little of what you say.You can back it up with slide notes and a copy of the presentation later.
Do not use bold transitions, absolutely no sounds unless relevant! Make sure you use corporate standard templates, some muppet will score points if you don't.
Write slide notes, practice them first on your own, then on the wife, finally on colleagues that way they will be reasonably polished before your wife or colleagues hear them also if the wife understands the gist then your Directors will. Anticipate questions, you won't get all of them but knowing the answer to most of them makes you look good. Other ones you can write on your pad and cover in 24 hours when you forward the presentation.
Make sure you only present facts, have figures to back them up, make sure the figures come from a reputable source in the relevant department, someone is bound to challenge you if you say 50% failure rate someone will call you a liar, if you say Operations have proven 50% failure rate with XYZ study then they have nowhere to go. Gartner etc are a good source for general stuff.
If you are proposing something make sure the major decision makers agree it in principle before the meeting, a nod or smile from the MD makes all the difference.
Make sure you are well rested and dressed. First presentation will be like 9 rounds with Parky.
Set equipment up early, then go to the loo & have a nice long relaxing coffee / ciggy etc before going in. Be in the room five minutes before start not 30 mins before start otherwise your nerve goes.
Have a large glass of water, tissues, pad & paper with you. You will need them.
Thanks - some good advice & also the usual rubbish. Both are appreciated
I'll be using ppt\lappy for the presentation. Perhaps I could video myself doing it beforehand & just run the video on the day!
I was once a best man & didn't feel nervous right up till the point where I stood up to speak, managed to hold it together although I did make the mistake of writing the speech out in full instead of having cue cards. Won't be doing that again!
I've got a few weeks to plan it thoroughly & will run it past a few colleagues for their input.
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