Presentation Training Skills

 

Learn Effective Presentation Training Tips

Speech and Drama Skills For Impact

Successful Transitions For Your Presentation

Break Your Addiction to Ineffective PowerPoint Presentations

Tips for Better Presentations

How to Leave a Lasting Impression

Performing Your Presentation

Switching Focus

Presentation Training Course Lessons from Japan

No One Likes to Be Told What to Think

Tips For Using Props in Your Professional Presentation

8 Top Presentation Training Course Tips For Powerful Presentation

Become A Better and More Confident Presenter

Persuasive Presentations Training Classes

Nonverbal Communication in Presentations Classes

5 Presentation Training Classes Tips To Open A Presentation Professionally

Are You Boring Your Audience to Tears?

Five Presentation Training Class Tips For Putting Together a Great Presentation

Prevent Presentation Bloopers

PowerPoint Delivery Presentation Training Class

Sales Presentations Training Workshops

Secret To Presenting Masterfully

Conquering the Elevator Speech

How To Close Presentation Training Workshops on a High Note!

Presentation Paranoia

How-To For Presentation Introduction

Things To Think About When Presenting

The 5 Ws Of Effective Presentation

The Anatomy of a Great Presentation

  1. more...

Presentation Training

Presentation Training is provided across the United States and Canada. Participants have three options to attend and participate in our presentation training. Presentations are delivered via public open enrollment courses in all major metropolitan areas and are also available to be delivered on-site via private courses. The 3rd option is to attend Online Webinar Presentations Skills Workshops. Our face to face Presentation Training can be provided as off-the-shelf sessions, ready to be delivered to a diverse audience or can be customized to provide a tailored and personalized presentation training approach based on client needs. All presentations courses are limited to a maximum of twelve participants so as to increase presentation course effectiveness and provide the individual level of face to face or online coaching and interaction that is associated with the Presentations Training Skills Center.

For more information on our presentations skills training courses please contact us.


Presentation Classes - Mind-Tickling Ways To Make Your Presentation More Memorable

< Award Winning Presentation Training skills & presentation skills training seminars courses are world class leaders in public speaking training. >

Raw information tickles the logical mind and bores the rest of the mind to sleep. The result of an overly logical presentation: bored, sleepy listeners who remember nothing and do nothing. Great presenters start with raw information, add their opinions, color it with imagery, and give it personality. The more of the mind you tickle, the more retention and motivation you reap. Additional parts of the mind you can tickle include: long term memory, imagination, and emotion.

Long Term Memory

Adults know a lot. Unlike children who come to us with clean slates, adults harbor vast reservoirs of knowledge and experience. Great presenters do not fear this knowledge and experience. They use it to their advantage.

The fastest way to create learning is to link the unknown with the known. Since adults know so many things, opportunity for linking abounds. Simile and metaphor provide the means. A simile uses the words "like" or "as" to bridge the unknown with the known. Example: It tastes like chicken. I don't care what food I'm discussing. You now know how it tastes. Metaphors link without the words "like" or "as". Example: That business is a three-ring circus. You can probably think of multiple businesses that fit a three-ring circus description.

One year, the city that hosted the Super Bowl was vying to host an upcoming Summer Olympics. A reporter interviewed the mayor of that city and asked about his confidence level in hosting an Olympics after the recent success with the Super Bowl. The mayor responded by acknowledging the recent success, but then cautioned, "Hosting the Olympics is like hosting 15 Super Bowls per day."

A COO of a healthcare organization used a wonderful bridge to lead into a brainstorming session on marketing ideas. He mused, "Suppose we were in the business of attracting squirrels. How would we attract them? We would climb up a tree and act like a nut. Now, what kind of nuts do our squirrels like?" Employees laughed and joined in enthusiastically to offer new "nuts".

Imagination

The mind loves pictures. We dream in pictures. We daydream in pictures. We remember faces and forget names. We forget street names and remember landmarks. Have you ever given someone directions like these? "Go about one mile. Then you'll see a big white church and a nursery across the street. Take a left. When you come to the fire station..."

I participated in a research study in college that still fascinates me. To earn extra credit in a psychology course, I agreed to be a guinea pig for the graduate students' research project. The graduate students sat me down and told me they were going to read 20 sentences to me. My job, visualize or imagine each sentence as vividly as possible for 30 seconds. Then we would proceed to the next sentence. Based on only that information we began.

Being the good student, I visualized intently, practically crinkling my nose to see the images. After 20 sentences, the graduate students blindfolded me and walked me down a hallway to a water fountain. They told me to take a drink of water. They blindfolded me again and escorted me back to the original room. They took my blindfold off, handed me a blank piece of paper, and instructed me to write as many of the 20 sentences as I could remember in 60 seconds. Despite my unnerving walk down the hall, I wrote down 18 sentences exactly as they had read them to me within 60 seconds. I had no idea a test was coming.

Visual aids provide a perfect opportunity to incorporate pictures into a presentation. Yet, most presenters squander the opportunity by using bulleted lists of words and numbers as their visual aids. Challenge your bullet points. Clipart programs abound. Dress up boring graphs. For high profile presentations seek the assistance of a graphic artist or employ internal talent.

If real pictures elude you, paint word pictures on your listeners' minds. Similes and metaphors, by their nature, paint vivid pictures like the 15 Super Bowls or the squirrels and the nuts. Take conceptual or technical ideas and create pictures for them. In a former life I used to be an actuary in the insurance industry. I recruited from colleges and gave presentations about the actuarial profession. To educate students about actuarial science and motivate them to pursue the career, I defined an actuary as a mathematical fortuneteller. Reaction from students, "Hey that sounds pretty cool." (Now do you believe word pictures are powerful?)

Emotion

People take action for emotional reasons not logical ones. Most people logically understand the hazards of cigarette smoking, yet they continue to smoke. Most people logically know that healthy diet and exercise keep them vibrant, yet they eat chocolate cake and watch TV instead. Sales professionals claim that people buy for emotional reasons then justify with logic. Have you ever purchased something you couldn't really afford? Enough said.

In general, people are motivated emotionally by "moving towards" happiness or "moving away" from pain. When your alarm clock sounds in the morning, why do you get out of bed? If you answer, "Because I love life and I can't wait to start another spectacular day. Carpe Diem!" You would be motivated by "moving towards". If you answer, "Because if I don't get up now I'll be late for work and get fired." You would be motivated by "moving away".

Add an emotional element to your presentations by explaining to listeners the rewards of action (moving towards) and the consequences of inaction (moving away). Be sure to address both ends of the spectrum. If you only dangle rewards, the "moving away" listeners tune out. If you only threaten doom, the "moving towards" listeners sour.

A recent prospect wanted presentation skills coaching for their software experts because for the first time their Users Group conference included other companies. I advised that if they went forward with the coaching, the improved presentations would create a buzz that would drive some of the increased traffic into their sessions. Then I warned that if they didn't pursue coaching, lackluster presentations might cause an exodus of once guaranteed audience members to other companies.

Summary

Raw information tickles the logical mind, but bores the rest. To increase motivation and retention, tickle more of the mind by appealing not only to logic, but long-term memory, imagination, and emotion. Use similes, word pictures, "moving towards", and "moving away" to join the ranks of great presenters.

Source: Mary Sandro link

For more info on our presentation skills training, please contact us.


Related: Presentation Training