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.


Presentation Skills Training Classes - The First to Know

To fully understand the rules that govern just how much information you can include in your presentation slides, you need to appreciate a fundamental of human nature - namely, that we have an innate desire to be The First to Know.

Unfortunately, most of the presentation visuals that we see are designed with the mistaken belief that presentations audience s will actually wait for the presenter to walk them through them. Wrong.

When the technology of communications was slower, we took a more historical approach to news - news was about what happened. We were accustomed to waiting for the news, and news had a time: Did you see the morning paper? Did you hear the evening news?

But with electronic advancements, we came to think of news more in terms of what is happening at the moment. Film brought us motion, but video feeds brought us there. Screens eclipsed paper as the preferred venue for getting the latest. Newspapers folded, first afternoon editions and then even icons of Americana - think Herald Tribune. Instead of being the first source of news in the world, to survive newspapers became more feature oriented - providing value only for less perishable and less immediate content.

Cable News Network took a huge gamble that people all over the world would watch news twenty-four hours a day - news on the people's timetable, not the providers. News on demand. Fulfillment for those with the desire to be "the first to know."

What does all this have to do with presentation design? You don't need to be a news junkie to share a basic trait of humans and other intelligent animals - curiosity. Curiosity is basic to survival, and we have evolved as creatures that need to learn what we can quickly. So this same desire that humans have to be the first to know translates to every event that involves new information uptake. During a presentation, presentations audience  members want the same control, and are basically unwilling to wait for you, the presenter, to help them be the first to know.

Once the curiosity about a slide has been satisfied, presentations audience  members usually will give the presenter their attention.

But when a new slide first appears on the screen, all eyes, like moths to the flame, tune to the new image, and immediately begin the race to be the first to know what the slide is all about. It's not their fault! They're human!

Only when every member of the presentations audience  is thoroughly convinced that they know exactly what the slide means will they lend their attention back to what you are saying.

And until this point you realistically might as well not be there. Oh, sure, you can act as most do and begin to describe the elements in the slide, but for all intents and purposes, it matters little what you do. You could drop your pants. You could leave the room. You could tell off-color jokes. But until the presentations audience  has determined for themselves exactly what all the data and word tracks on the screen mean to them, you have approximately 0% of their attention.

With most of the slides we see in business presentations today, this is where the disaster begins. You see, the typical slide contains so much information that a typical presentations audience  member would need more than 30 seconds just to read the material, much less absorb it. The reading process is delayed, though, because first the viewer tries to decide for herself where to begin, and which piece of information is most important. Clues to the relative value of the information are often erroneous, however, as presentations audience s base them on such things as the size of the type or placement on the screen.

For this reason, you must ask yourself how long it will take the average person to discover for themselves all the information you have in your slide. The more time it takes the average person to absorb and assimilate the information they see, the greater the chance you have to lose your presentations audience .

So what does this tell us? Of course, there is only one truly viable solution, and that is to limit, by all means possible, the amount of information that is released with each click of your mouse.

The less time it takes the presentations audience  to discern the new information, the sooner they'll get back to you and start to listen to what you really mean to "say" on the slide.

Source: J. Douglas Jefferys link

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