Learn Effective Presentation Training Tips
Speech and Drama Skills For Impact
Successful Transitions For Your Presentation
Break Your Addiction to Ineffective PowerPoint Presentations
How to Leave a Lasting Impression
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
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!
How-To For Presentation Introduction
Things To Think About When Presenting
The 5 Ws Of Effective Presentation
The Anatomy of a Great Presentation
Presentations skills training workshops are provided across the country via public open enrollment workshops in all major metropolitan areas and can also be delivered on-site via private training workshops. Our presentation training workshops can be provided as off-the-shelf workshops or training sessions which are ready to be delivered to a diverse audience or can be customized to provide a tailored training and personalized approach workshop based on client needs. All presentations training workshops are limited to a maximum of twelve participants so as to increase workshop effectiveness and provide the individual level of presentation coaching and interaction that is associated with the Presentations Training Skills Workshop Center.
For more information on our presentations skills training workshops please contact us.
Just in case you're feeling under-valued as a speaker at this point in time, this message is for you.
If you had more paid dates on your calendar you would most probably not feel under-valued and/or invisible. So, how do you become irresistible to decision-makers in your target market? You make your personal story and your presentation more relevant.
If you have a compelling story to tell, don't stop there! It's your responsibility to provide some steps or solutions to others who can relate to your story. And if it doesn't help others, it will not have value to meeting professionals.
Your story allows others to have empathy for you and your situation. Now you want to create an empathic transference-- meaning, help others with similar challenges and problems- through your presentation.
You may be thinking... some of the world's best loved motivational speakers didn't have steps to follow at the end of their presentation. It's true. So there were likely two reasons that they were hired: either to increase attendance at an event or for the purpose of entertaining. That takes care of the opening and closing keynotes. But what about all those paid presentations in between?
In 2010, your ability to make your message relevant will mean the difference in no dates and a full calendar.
I opened today's digital edition of The New Yorker and saw an article by Meaghan O'Rouke entitled, "Good Grief."
One autumn day in 1964, Elisabeth Kubler-Ross, a Swiss-born psychiatrist, was working in her garden and fretting about a lecture she had to give. Earlier that week, a mentor of hers, who taught psychiatry at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, had asked her to speak to a large group of medical students on a topic of her choice. Kubler-Ross was nervous about public speaking, and couldn't think of a subject that would hold the students' attention. But, as she raked fallen leaves, her thoughts turned to death: Many of her plants, she reflected, would probably die in the coming frost. Her own father had died in the fall, three years earlier, at home in Switzerland, peaceful and aware of what was taking place. Kübler-Ross had found her topic. She would talk about how American doctors-who, in her experience, were skittish around seriously ill patients-should approach death and dying.
There's much more in this great article, but the reason I wanted to share it with you is because the late Kubler-Ross's "stage theory" created a paradigm for how Americans die and how they grieve. She began to work on a book outlining what she learned in her work with the dying. It came out in 1969 (On Death and Dying), and, shortly afterward, Life published an article about one of her seminars.
She eventually wrote 16 books, all originating from this original compelling story and her "stage theory." She lectured and delivered her presentation across the world for many years.
Tell your story but be sure to turn it into a teaching opportunity to help your audiences. There are lessons to be learned from dramatic and traumatic life altering experiences. It's those lessons from which others can benefit that will drive your marketing activities.Source: Mary McKay link
Related: Presentation Workshops