Presentation Training

Seminars & Workshops

• Exceptional Presentation Skills Training

• Individual Presentation Coaching

• Marketing Presentation Skills

• Media Interaction and Presentation Skills

• Presentation Reinforcement Through Visual Aids

• The Executive Presenter

• Complex Presentation Skills

• Consultative Telesales Skills

Presentation Tips:

Presentation Training Tips - Why Writing an Outline First is Never a Bad Idea

Presentation Skills - Delivery Or Content, Which is Most Important?

Good Presentation Practice Results in Good Presentations Training

Confident Presentation Courses Through Visualization

Presentation Training: An Open Letter to All Public Speakers

Political Passion Can Poison Persuasive Presentation Skills

Better Presentation Workshop

Presentation Skills Without the Butterflies

Presentation Skills - How to Find a Good Toastmasters Club

Mind the Three Ps For Effective Presentation Seminars

Top Ten Presentation Training Tips For Speaking To Asian Audiences

Color Theory Applied To Presentation Training

Giving Presentations Training: Public Speaking Secrets In A Nutshell

Here are the Seven Deadly Sins of Business Presentations and How to Avoid Them.

Presentation Training for the Big Pitch - 7 Deadly Sins Of Business Presentations

Influencing Your Audience With Your Presentation Course

Giving A Great Formal Presentation Workshop

PowerPoint To Flash - A New Trend In Presentations Training

Presentation Skills Training: The Law Of Performance

Business Presentations With A Punch

Presentation Training and the Self-Confidence Question

Presentation Training: You Are Here

Presentation Courses - Closing the Off Ramps

Questioning Strategies for Presentation Courses: Scheduling

Presentation Courses - PowerPoint: Corporate Karaoke?

Avoiding A PowerPoint Slumber Party - Dynamic Presentation Skills

Eight Keys to Better Presentation Skills

Making an Engaging and Dynamic Presentation Workshop

Storytelling: Successful Presentation Seminars

No More Slide Stupor: Bring Your Presentation Seminars to Life!

Practice Before You Preach - How to Prepare Strong Presentation Skills

Which is Better in Presentations Training - Impressing Or Expressing?

Presentation Skills and The Hassle of the Heckler

Be Bold, But Not Aggressive in Business Presentation Courses

Presentation Skills Training - The Art of Good Oration

Student Success Skills - Presentation Skills

Presentations Training - The Voice of Leadership

Presentation Skills Training for Handling Questions and Answers

Presentations Seminar Confidence Builder - Improve Your Eye Contact

Presentation Skills Training - The Simple Art of Breathing Properly

Presentations Training - Taking the Terror Out of Presentations

Presentations Training - The Rule Of Three

Presentation Training for Q&A - The Top 10 Myths About Handling Tough Questions

Presentation Courses - Three Keys to Engage Any Audience

The Number One Secret for Great Presentation Skills

Presentation Skills - Speaking Anxiety? Try Identity Theft

Presentation Skills - Becoming Relevant

Presentation Workshops - Your Voice: A Vehicle of Self-Expression

Presentation Skills - Imagery through Words

Presentation Seminars - How To Hold Attention

The Secret of Great Presentations Training – Simplicity

Preparing To Speak- Presentation Training

Presentation Skills for Teaching - Organize It So They'll Get It

Presentation Courses - 7 Steps for Corporate PowerPoints

Presentation Classes Tips For Success

Are They Snoring 'Cause You're Boring? Better Sales Presentation Skills

What Not to Include in Your Next Presentation Training Workshop

Keynote Speakers for Presentations Workshops and Conferences

Presentation Seminars For Today's Audience

Presentation Seminars - Presenting Your Business Effectively

Presentation Training - Does Uptalk Make You Upchuck?

Presentation Training - Your Presentation Topic

Presentation Courses - Using the "Columbo Technique"

Fine Tuning Your Presentation Skills

Presentations Training Tips

Presentation Classes for a Presentable Presentation

Crafting a Perfect Presentation Training Workshop

What You Need to Do in Your Presentation Workshops That You Probably Don't Do

When Not To Use Powerpoint Presentation Skills

A Pleasant Look Helps in Presentation Seminars

Presentation Training to Eliminate PowerPoints with No Power and Little Point

Presentations Training for the Seven Dwarfs

Presentation Skills - Zero In On Your Smilers

Presentation Courses - Think of Yourself as a Speaker

Presentation Classes: When Presenting, Give Signs, Like Nature

Presentation Classes: Keep Their Attention on You -- Not Their Smartphones

Presentation Workshops - How to Handle Blunders and Mistakes on Stage

Presentation Workshops - Why Public Speaking Is NOT Acting

Presentation Seminars, Profit and Power

Presentation Seminars Suggestions for Using PowerPoint Effectively – or Not at All

Presentation Skills - Who Says You’re a Poor Presenter?

Presentation Class: When Your Speech Is Too Fast, You're More Likely to Have an Accident!

Sales Presentation Skills Training - How to Talk to a Sales Prospect

Presentation Courses - Dialing Up the Conflict

Presentation Skills: How to Improve

5 Presentation Course Secrets to Eliminate Your Fear of Speaking in Public

Presentation Training for the Self-Published Presenter

Presentation Skills - Hey Baby, Come Here Often?

Presentation Skills - Don't Speak Too Little

Presentation Training: Making your Presentations Sexy

Presentation Training - How to Know Thy Audience

Challenge, Inform or Get Off The Stage - Presentation Skills and Powerful Public Speakers

Presentation Skills and the CEO: Why the Chief Explanations Officer Has to Get It Right

What You Can Really Learn From Obama’s Presentation Skills: This Isn’t Acting

Never Give a Presentation Training Without Having a Potato

Presentation Skills for Women to Boost Credibility

Presentation Training - Become a Presentation Rockstar!

Presentation Skills For Handling Hostile Audiences and Interruptions

Presentation Training for Webinars

Practical Presentation Training Tips

Great Presentations Training: 3 Common Mistakes to Avoid

Good Presentation Skills: Versatility Is The Key

Passion and Your Presentation Skills

Better Presentations Training

Presentation Skills to Get Your Audience's Attention Inside a Minute!

Business Presentations Training - How to Sell to an Audience

Building Rapport and Team Presentation Skills

Spectacular Presentation Training - Top Three Presentation Mistakes

Presentation Training - Take Your Nervousness For a Ride!

The Performance Edge - Seven Steps to Dynamic Presentation Skills

 

Presentation Training: Skills & Development

 

Presentations Skills Training Seminars

Presentations training seminars are provided across the country via public open enrollment seminars in major metropolitan areas and can also be delivered on-site via private sessions. Our seminars 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 approach based on client needs. All presentations seminars are limited to a maximum of twelve participants so as to increase seminar effectiveness and provide the individual level of coaching and interaction that is associated with the Presentations Training Center.

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

 

Presentation Seminars, Profit and Power

You pitch proposals and ideas to prospects; present annual or quarterly reports to boards; updates to current clients, and co-workers; new policy and procedures or several cheerleading speeches to your employees; and other presentations to myriad audiences. Some of these topics may seem boring, but no topic is boring - it's the speaker. That's right, even the most in-depth technical, financial, legal or institutional report can have stories, testimonials, word pictures, and even humor - if you want presentations that bring you both profit and power.

If you think your audience doesn't want and need story, humor and information, then you haven't been an audience member. I doubt that's the case.

Have you ever been enthralled listening to a speaker? What helps you remember a point or points? Usually it's a picture: words that create images and emotions. You remember a story, metaphor, or point that grabbed you emotionally. You may not remember it completely, but its message stayed with you long after someone put the lectern in the closet, folded and stored the chairs, and turned out the lights.

The most important part of any speech or presentation is to know your audience. Who are they and what do you have to offer them? They relate to you and your message through your experiences, expertise and stories. Stories and personal experiences make your points stick to your listeners. You want them to "see" your words and points. Audiences recognize themselves within stories; therefore, relate to and remember your point(s). Stories equal relationship speaking; your audience relates to the point because they can see if, feel it, or remember a similar situation. Stories and metaphors break down the experiences that substantiate your ideas and points.

Paint word pictures. Give the listeners substance, sizzle and self for a well-received message.

Organize your presentation in a logical manner to give the most benefit to your listeners. I know you're not the person who "just wings it" are you? Good. Planning and organizing are paramount for the most profit and power in your speech.

Here's an easy ten-step presentation process to follow:
1) Identify your listeners and their needs and knowledge level
2) Plan your message: the result, points, action steps
3) Organize your points
4) Prioritize them: the most important is first, the second most important, last
5) Cultivate stories, metaphors, or testimonials that illuminate the points
6) Write out the whole presentation
7) Edit, delete, rewrite
8) Practice
9) Present

Define your presentation as one of the following:
1) Instructional
2) Inspirational
3) Informative
4) Persuasive
5) Entertaining
6) Motivational
7) A combination

Your listeners are eager to commit to listening and learning if they know you committed time, research, time, practice, and yourself to the message; you care about them and their needs. What are the take-aways for your listeners? What will they gain from your expertise? Audiences want to have their lives changed and you have the power to help do that for them.

To add that special creative voice, add humor. No, you don't have to be a comedian, you just have to allow the audience to laugh with you. Make fun of yourself and some of your experiences, and they will remember the point. Energize them through humor. A humorous story - either personal or not - keeps the listeners in the palm of your hand: you have the power. Everyone from the CEO to the administrative assistant has a story to tell, from several years ago or several hours ago. Everyone from the CEO to the administrative assistant loves to laugh.

The opening of your presentation is the hook. Grab 'em early. The body of your presentation reveals the information, details, facts and benefits of your message. Make it count. You have approximately 30 seconds to grab the audience's attention. Use your stories and humor to elaborate the points, give facts that define the points, and benefits to keep your listeners aware of the value of your presentation - it's about them and their future, not about you. Your closing repeats your opening and gives the result, the call-to-action, and the repetition of the major "hook."

A few other tools and techniques that will help:
• Know the audience - How much do they know about your subject - never assume
• Know your material - Practice it by yourself, then in front of a friendly audience - get feedback
• Breathe, pause, relax; Breath, pause, relax - before, during and after
• Visualize yourself as successful - see the audience's positive reaction
• The audience is your best support group - they want you to succeed
• NEVER apologize for any short-coming(s) - it makes the audience nervous
• NEVER read your speech - it insults your audience
• Use PowerPoint as a tool, not a read-along-with-me
• Practice, practice, practice - it makes a good speech better, and a better speech riveting

Your opening and closing are bookends: they pull the presentation full circle. You have approximately 30 seconds to hook your audience. Grab them early, keep them enthralled and end with your initial "grab."

A memorable presentation attracts profits and exudes power. Now let the words begin.

Source: Dee Dukeheart link

Related: Presentation Seminars

 

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