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

 

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Presentations Skills Training Classes

Presentations skills training classes are provided across the country via public open enrollment classes in most major metropolitan areas throughout the US and Canada and can also be delivered on-site via private presentations classes. Our presentation skills training classes can be provided as off-the-shelf seminars, ready to be delivered to a diverse audience or can be customized to provide a tailored presentation approach or in house presentation training classes based on client needs. All presentations classes are limited to a maximum of twelve participants so as to increase the presentation training class or classes effectiveness and provide the individual level of presentation coaching and interaction that is associated with the Presentations Skills Training Center.

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


Powerful Presentations Class - Stuffing is for Birds, Not Brains

More often than not, when I'm helping clients build a presentation they say, "But I have to tell them this."

The "this" is typically some hugely-technical piece of information that makes the presenter look like Super Smarty-Pants, but does nothing to a.) make the presenter's real point or b.) increase the audience's understanding. In fact, very often the "this" is something important to the presenter, but NOT to the audience. Even worse, many presenters fill their presentations with all kinds of "theses" that increase their Smarty Pants quotient, but leave their audiences bored or confused, or both. These kind of "thises" do not a successful presentation make.

When you sit down to build your presentation, (once you've written in a sentence or two its purpose), get a big ol' piece of paper and brainstorm everything you can about your audience. That's right, not about your subject matter, about its intended target. Who are they? Why are they coming to hear you speak? What are their biggest concerns? How will your presentation address and (better yet) resolve those concerns? What might possible objections be to what you're proposing? How can you allay those concerns?

The answers to these questions must be the "thises" you include in your presentation, and ONLY these. I've said this before and I'll say it again, the audience only cares about what you're saying as it relates to them. Period. Confusing them by showing your Super Smarty Pants command of your material will only alienate and anger them. Not a good way to build rapport.

Once you've determined how the purpose of your presentation relates to your audience you must narrow this down to only those things that are MOST compelling to them. Why? People can only retain so much, even when you are talking about something of direct interest and importance to them. DON'T stuff their brains! In fact, if there is an organ in their body you want to appeal to, it would be their heart. You need to reach them on an emotional level. Give them ONLY the information they care about, and then only as much as they can comfortably digest and retain. How do you do that? That, my friends, will have to wait until my next article. (I wouldn't want to be found guilty of stuffing your brains.)

Source: Debbie Fay link

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