What not to do while Presenting

We have all attended presentations where glaring errors have been made and we are just irking to exit the room, out of either pain or embarrassment. Surprisingly they are quite easy to make and with a little practice, easy to avoid.

 

1)   Failing to engage emotionally.

Explicitly speaking about facts will lose your audience. Incorporate an intriguing storyline that makes the presentation more meaningful. Ask yourself “Why is this important?” and speak to how the effects will hopefully help a process or employees.

2) Asking too much of your slides.

Keep your slides succinct. Nobody wants to be constantly reading and digesting your slides. Try to keep expansive bullet points to a minimum. Additionally keep your teleprompter text hidden from the audience’s view.

3) Trotting out Tired Visuals

Think of visuals you can present that are original. People can almost always predict what visuals you are going to present, so include some that are a bit different. Avoid Cliché visuals.

4) Speaking in Jargon

All businesses and departments have their own jargon, however you really need to avoid this highly technical or industry specific jargon. If people can’t follow your train of thought they aren’t going to be following your ideas any time soon.

5) Going over your allotted time.

One of my biggest pet peeves; nobody appreciates presentations going over the planned amount of time. You will start losing your audience to shuffling and IPhone use and realistically they will not absorb the information you are presenting.. People in general have the attention span for presentations of 30-40 minutes; if you can try to keep no more than that you will stand a chance of holding your audience’s attention.

 

View the original article below:

http://blogs.hbr.org/2012/12/avoid-these-five-mistakes-in-y/

2 thoughts on “What not to do while Presenting”

  1. Henri, these are good tips. I think it’s also important to vary the style of your presentation. Allow the group to discuss amongst themselves for a few minutes. If you are spending half a day, make it clear up front what the agenda is and where the breaks are. This will allow people to plan accordingly and let them focus more of their attention on the present rather than thinking to the future and their to-do list.

  2. I actually just got back from a conference trip for work this past week and a few of these topics came up. More importantly, engaging with the audience is critical to a good presentation. I was given this statistic at the conference: a UCLA study showed that the communication impact of a presentation is influenced by what the audience reads (7%), what they hear (38%), and what they see (55%). So the communication impact of a presentation is influenced by 93% by how you deliver the presentation.

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