These are some of my view:
1) Confident - Firstly, we must have confident to speak to the audiences. In order to get good confident, we must prepare the presentation earlier and have all necessary things that will use in the real presentation. Besides that, we must believe the points in the power point are correct.
2) Eye contact - We must look all the audiences and do not look some people only or not always looking at the slide show.
1) Confident - Firstly, we must have confident to speak to the audiences. In order to get good confident, we must prepare the presentation earlier and have all necessary things that will use in the real presentation. Besides that, we must believe the points in the power point are correct.
2) Eye contact - We must look all the audiences and do not look some people only or not always looking at the slide show.
3) Start your speech with a phrase that catches the public’s attention – “Right ladies and gentlemen”, “Shall we begin?”, “Fine everybody. Let’s get started”. “Ok guys. Are you all ready?”
4) Use video and audio to convey our message more effectively - this is a great way to engage our audience. Using audio that helps convey our message can also help us keep our slides clean and approachable, such as by adding recorded narration to slides when sending our presentation to others to view on our own.
5) Use graphics to emphasize key points - A well-chosen chart or diagram can often convey much more to the audience than boring bulleted text. Fortunately, creating charts and graphics has never been easier.
6) Start by outlining our presentation - Take time to outline our presentation before we begin to create our slides. Doing this can save our time and help us to give a more clear and effective presentation. We can create our outline by typing a slide title and bullets points for our main topics on each slide. But we can also use the outline pane to type our entire presentation outline in one window and add slides to our presentation as we go.
7) Practice - A good presentation is hard work. Spend time researching, writing, and honing the presentation. Talk in front of a mirror, a friend, or a pet.
8) Speak loudly and clearly - Sound confident and make sure the audience understand what we want to delivered to them.
9) Always Have a Plan B - Unexpected things happen. Be prepared for any disaster. Example, what if our projector blew a light bulb (and we forgot to bring a spare) or our briefcase was lost at the bus station? Our Plan B should be that the show must go on, no matter what. Going back to item 1 once again , we should know our topic so well that we can make our presentation "off the cuff" if need be, and the audience will leave feeling that they got what they came for.
5) Use graphics to emphasize key points - A well-chosen chart or diagram can often convey much more to the audience than boring bulleted text. Fortunately, creating charts and graphics has never been easier.
6) Start by outlining our presentation - Take time to outline our presentation before we begin to create our slides. Doing this can save our time and help us to give a more clear and effective presentation. We can create our outline by typing a slide title and bullets points for our main topics on each slide. But we can also use the outline pane to type our entire presentation outline in one window and add slides to our presentation as we go.
7) Practice - A good presentation is hard work. Spend time researching, writing, and honing the presentation. Talk in front of a mirror, a friend, or a pet.
8) Speak loudly and clearly - Sound confident and make sure the audience understand what we want to delivered to them.
9) Always Have a Plan B - Unexpected things happen. Be prepared for any disaster. Example, what if our projector blew a light bulb (and we forgot to bring a spare) or our briefcase was lost at the bus station? Our Plan B should be that the show must go on, no matter what. Going back to item 1 once again , we should know our topic so well that we can make our presentation "off the cuff" if need be, and the audience will leave feeling that they got what they came for.
10) Use these expressions to close our speech – Asking for questions (Have you got any query? / Would you like to ask?) and Thanking (Thank you for / It’s been a pleasure to).
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