Thursday, January 29, 2009

Presentation Recommendations

I am putting together a series of slide presentations to be distributed at
Axiom Architectures at Google code

In writing these presentations I recognized that I was falling into the trap getting too caught up in covering every little detail. In other words I was writing a paper and passing it off as a presentation. The upshot was that the material was generating inertia rather than momentum during my talks.

So to better connect with my audience, I jotted down these presentation recommendations:

A. Comfort
  1. Recognize that you were invited because people believe in you.
  2. Take comfort from this belief.
  3. The audience wants to get to know you.
B. Narrative
  1. Tell a memorable story.
  2. Maintain a consistent thread throughout your story
  3. Tie in your personal experiences, perspectives, insight, opinions and humor.
C. Material
  1. Condense the slides to focus entirely in support of your story.
  2. Your slides are only sign posts for the audience to follow your narrative.
  3. Pull out any distracting diversions and props.
D. Profound
  1. List papers and references so the audience can stay connected with you and your knowledge.
  2. Consider suggesting some next steps.
  3. Close with a profound statement to invite stimulating questions.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Tom,

I can't tell you how excited I was to see such concise articulation of what audiences are looking for and connecting with in the tech space. Bravo! I can't wait to see this applied to your next talk. I know it will be a smash hit if it follows these items you've listed.

Impressed and looking forward to your talk at DOSUG,
Matthew J. McCullough

joedevon said...

Excellent post.

As someone who runs a lot of meetups I think a lot about how to get tech people comfortable with speaking and improving their skills. Recently I started going to Toastmasters and there's no better way to improve your speaking than that. They give you lots of little opportunities to speak in different contexts in a very supportive environment.