How to Represent yourself by your Awesome Presentation ?

in steemit •  7 years ago 

The panel are usually judging:

The quality of your ideas
The clarity of your thinking – for example if you are able to take a strategic perspective
Your verbal communications skills, especially your ability to influence and engage your audience.
Your organisation skills: how well you prepare beforehand and manage your time within the presentation
Your formal presentation skills where this is a key part of the job.

  1. Have a Clear Message
    Work out what you want to say in two or three sentences before elaborating your ideas. In order to make an impact you need to have clear recommendations, backed up by convincing arguments.

  2. Structure your Presentation
    Make sure the structure of your presentation is clear. You need:

A short introduction explaining what the presentation is about and what you are going to cover.
Clear sections or themes within the presentation (there might be one slide per theme), ensuring your argument has a logical structure
A summary of your arguments
A clear conclusion with specific recommendations, identifying the resources required to deliver them.

  1. Less Is More
    It is better to keep your presentation succinct and allow the audience to ask follow-up questions at the end rather than rushing through a mound of information. It is especially important that any slides you use are visually clear and not text-heavy. Restrict slides to 3 or 4 for a 5 minute presentation, and 6 or 7 for a 10 minute presentation.

Remember, you don’t have to put all your points onto your slides – it is fine to put some top-line points on a slide but then elaborate on them verbally. If your presentation requires more detail, this can be given as a supporting hard copy handout.

  1. Manage your Time
    It is important that your presentation lasts the amount of time you have been given – too short and you can appear a lightweight candidate; too long and you seem poorly organised – and you may be cut off halfway through. It is always a good idea to have a timed run through of your finished presentation but this is not always fool proof (nerves often lead people to speed up). Give yourself some flexibility by having an extra slide or two up your sleeve to add in if you are running ahead of time and/ or decide in advance on a slide which you will be able to skip if you are running over.

  2. Do Your Research
    Make sure you have researched your topic thoroughly . Find out how the institution or department have handled this issue in the past. Research what their competitor institutions are doing in this field. And have some relevant facts and figures to illustrate key trends at your fingertips – this can enhance your credibility and show impressive levels of preparation.

  3. Know your Audience
    Before writing your presentation, consider your panel members. What are their job responsibilities, priorities, professional backgrounds and interests? You can find out a lot through online research on sites such as LinkedIn, or ask others who work for and with those individuals. Think about your presentation from their individual perspective and consider what aspects of the topic will most interest them. Give some thought to any internal politics between members of the panel and how you might deal with these diplomatically.

  4. Predict Follow Up Questions
    Go through your presentation and work out what questions the panel might ask, especially given their job roles and personal perspectives. Make sure you have an answer ready for these questions. Typical follow up questions might include: Why are you recommending x option and not y? What resources would be required to implement this? How would you go about getting sign on to your recommendations with key stakeholders? What are the risks of this plan of action and how would you minimise them? How do your recommendations fit with the institution’s wider activities and strategies?

  5. Test It Out
    It is a good idea to run through your ideas for the presentation with colleagues who are well informed about the topic before you finalise the content. Ask your colleagues to test you with follow up questions and see how well prepared you are.

  6. Take Back Up
    Always make sure you have a Plan B if the technology is not working or a vital piece of equipment is not available. If you are delivering a powerpoint presentation, email it to yourself as well as taking it on a stick just in case. It can also be helpful to print off some hard copies in case there are problems with the projector.

  7. Build Rapport
    The more familiar you are with your material and the more thorough your research, the more confident you will feel. The best way to engage your audience is to maintain strong eye contact ; avoid looking at the screen or reading notes. Use keywords on a card as prompts rather than memorising sentences as a ‘speech’ as this will appear more natural. Remember to smile and to pause at key points.

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