Showing posts with label presenter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label presenter. Show all posts

Saturday, June 12, 2010

OSHA says, , , By Wayne Kronz (Slideshow to come)

OSHA Says, , ,

Do we believe what they say? Back in the early and mid ‘90’s the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) claimed to have done extensive research into what really works, visually, in organizational training.

(And I believe they did.)

They published a report, , , Presenting Effective Presentation with Visual Aids.

The problem, , , do we really believe what they say? If we do, , , and I do, , , then every presenter should set about to learn as much as possible about visual communications.

I have a short two-slide presentation to come, entitled, OSHA says, , , that every speaker should tattoo on the inside of their eye lids.

Watch it several times and relish its’ simplicity and then make it your lifetime project to learn as much as possible making your point with visual aids.

Enjoy, , , Wayne.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Dreams, from the Terri Guillemets, and QuoteGarden.com

Attention all teachers and public speakers at any level, speaking on any subject. One more time I want to remind you about the value of Terri Guillemets' QuoteGarden.com files. There may be larger quotation websites out there, but none organized any better for a public speaker.

The way I see it, , , every presenter should check out this site before every presentation. You simply can't find a better resource for crisp, meaningful quotations.

So I put a quotation slideshow together on the theme of Dreams. This slideshow, alone, is a great source for quotations you can use in tomorrow's speech.

Wayne

P.S. If you like this show, embed it in your blog, link to it in emails and social sites, or give it a "favorite" or "thumbs up." Thank you very much!

Saturday, May 8, 2010

MOJO, Marshall Goldsmith

Mojo: How to Get It, How to Keep It, How to Get It Back if You Lose It is an interesting book. Marshall Goldsmith has packed it full of wisdom any public speaker or presenter can use in their next presentation. For personal improvement speakers it is a gold mine.

So I have built another quotation slideshow to help you see the value of Goldsmith's book.

Enjoy,

Wayne

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

10 Ways The Presenters Brain Uses a Theme Model

To so many presenters in the world today, the term "visual aid" means PowerPoint. The minute they are told that they will making a particular presentation, they run to their computer and open up PPT and then one of its templates, and they start "filling in the blanks."

A few days later and they wind up with what I call "a slide a minute" slideshow with an average of 5.6 bullet-point elements on each slide.

What a pity!

According to the world's best mind (that's my opinion), , , in the presentation industry, Dan Roam, author of the best-selling book, The Back of the Napkin (Expanded Edition): Solving Problems and Selling Ideas with Pictures, "people only pay attention to the first five or six slides."

And I believe that. I've watched it happen many times.

I'm going to say this, , , and I'll probably say it again, , , "Using a many-slide, bullet-point riddles slideshow is a third rate teaching method." All the hard work of putting such a program together is simply "lots of time wasted."

Today we are going to look at this whole ordeal, strictly from the presenters point of view. The title of this article says 10 Ways The Presenters Brain Uses a Theme Model. I'm going to break this writing into two sections (Part One and Part Two).

When you go the PowerPoint direction, you pass up on several benefits you gain as a speaker. Some of them are,

1. Organize. When you follow someone else's template, you seldom crystallize your your presentation like you do if you were fine-tuning it to three, five or even seven key principles.

You simply keep generalizing, , , and never focus on what is critically important to your audiences.

And you wind up reading the slides to your learners. Bad!

You'll never get really organized for a presentations until you can put your whole pitch into a handful of principles that can be illustrated in a simple and understandable graphic. It's the preferred method of teaching of world-class presenters like Jim Collins, Stephen Covey, Robert Kiyosaki, Micheal Porter, and Peter Senge.

2. Clarify. One of the biggest flaws in a typical business presentation is clarity. Everything is "up for grabs." Audiences don't know what's important and what is not.

It's only when your whole topic is reduced to it's simplest form, does the reality of ease of understanding come into play.

3. Evaluate. When I just mentioned "clarity" I was speaking of the clarity of the message to the presenter. As a clear understanding of what you are going to be teaching strikes you, fuzzy and confusing points may come to your mind.

At this point you may want to re-think parts of your message. And seeing it in a simple hand-drawn theme model will certainly bring this point home to you.

4. Prioritize. One thing that I teach is the concept of hierarchical thinking. People must know what is vital and what is not so important. And a whole bunch of slides will not underline what is key and what is not important at all.

And, again, having your whole message condensed into a quick and easy diagram will help you pass it on to your audience in the most usable fashion.

5. Patterns. One thing that will work as your partner while you are teaching is when your audiences begin to see patterns in the elements of your message. And nothing can illustrate that like a strong, well designed theme model.

The problem, in almost all of the above cases is that PowerPoint just doesn't really prepare you to teach these many details and inner workings of a typical business or behavior presentation.

Look for Part Two of this presentation, , , or the "second five" ways the presenters brain uses a theme model.

Wayne.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

5 Reasons Speakers Play Games

One visually impacting tools savvy public speakers use are “games.” It takes a little extra work to conjure up an effective game to play with your audience, but it’s a mighty fine time investment.

Even a trivia contest, left side of the room against the right side, can really draw an audience into your presentation.

The best flight I ever had on Southwest Airlines was the one a creative flight attendant helped us play the “ugliest drivers license picture” game. Try it, , , everyone will have a ball.

There are many benefits to using a game as visual re-enforcement of your message. Here are my top five. . .

1. Gain and Hold Attention. For instance, it is often difficult to hold an audiences attention during the first session after a lunch break. So plan to include a lively game during these times.

2. Draw Out Emotion.
A good game can trigger many feelings. A spirit of competition. Excitement. Togetherness. The joy of winning. And the “agony of defeat.”

3. Springboard to Your Topic. Any presenter can spin their talk off of one of the above emotions. Or they can use any other aspect of their game as a jumping-off point for their presentation.

The more you can get your game and your topic together, the better the whole activity will propel your speech.

4. Teach Teamwork. An effective game should promote relationships, collaboration and working together. Again, the more you can tie the two together, the more of a winner everyone will be.

5. Teach Dealing with Defeat. It seems trite to say but, “every time there is a winner there is, at least one loser.” Every job-hunter has to apply for forty or more jobs to finally find one. No sales person closes ever sale. How many of us have lost at love?

As speakers, we are often have to deal with this reality of life. And the game you orchestrate into your presentation can help a lot.

These are a five of the huge benefits you’ll receive when you begin to “play games.” There will be a lot more on this topic in the future.

Wayne