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Steps in Preparing A Presentation PDF

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22/1/2020 Steps in Preparing a Presentation

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Online learning tutorials for essential college skills.

Steps in Preparing a Presentation


Planning Your Presentation
Preparing a presentation can be an overwhelming experience if you allow it to be
one. The strategies and steps below are provided to help you break down what you
might view as a large job into smaller, more manageable tasks.

Step 1: Analyze your audience

The first step in preparing a presentation is to learn more about the audience to
whom you'll be speaking. It's a good idea to obtain some information on the
backgrounds, values, and interests of your audience so that you understand what the
audience members might expect from your presentation.

Step 2: Select a topic

Next, if possible select a topic that is of interest to the audience and to you. It will be
much easier to deliver a presentation that the audience finds relevant, and more
enjoyable to research a topic that is of interest to you.

Step 3: Define the objective of the presentation

Once you have selected a topic, write the objective of the presentation in a single
concise statement. The objective needs to specify exactly what you want your
audience to learn from your presentation. Base the objective and the level of the
content on the amount of time you have for the presentation and the background
knowledge of the audience. Use this statement to help keep you focused as you
research and develop the presentation.

Preparing the Content of Your Presentation


Step 4: Prepare the body of the presentation

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After defining the objective of your presentation, determine how much information you can present in the amount of time allowed. Also, use your knowledge
about the audience to prepare a presentation with the right level of detail. You don't want to plan a presentation that is too basic or too advanced.

The body of the presentation is where you present your ideas. To present your ideas convincingly, you will need to illustrate and support them. Strategies to help
you do this include the following:

Present data and facts


Read quotes from experts
Relate personal experiences
Provide vivid descriptions

And remember, as you plan the body of your presentation it's important to provide variety. Listeners may quickly become bored by lots of facts or they may tire
of hearing story after story.

Step 5: Prepare the introduction and conclusion

Once you've prepared the body of the presentation, decide how you will begin and end the talk. Make sure the introduction captures the attention of your
audience and the conclusion summarizes and reiterates your important points. In other words, "Tell them what you're going to tell them. Tell them. Then, tell
them what you told them."

During the opening of your presentation, it's important to attract the audience's attention and build their interest. If you don't, listeners will turn their attention
elsewhere and you'll have a difficult time getting it back. Strategies that you can use include the following:

Make the introduction relevant to the listeners' goals, values, and needs
Ask questions to stimulate thinking
Share a personal experience
Begin with a joke or humorous story
Project a cartoon or colorful visual
Make a stimulating or inspirational statement
Give a unique demonstration

During the opening you want to clearly present your topic and the purpose of your presentation. Clearly articulating the topic and purpose will help the listeners
focus on and easily follow your main ideas.

During the conclusion of your presentation, reinforce the main ideas you communicated. Remember that listeners won't remember your entire presentation,
only the main ideas. By reinforcing and reviewing the main ideas, you help the audience remember them.

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Practicing and Delivering


Step 6: Practice delivering the presentation

Most people spend hours preparing a presentation but very little time practicing it. When you practice your presentation, you can reduce the number of times
you utter words and phrases like, "um," "well," and "you know." These habits can easily diminish a speaker's credibility. You can also fine-tune your content to be
sure you make your most important points in the time alloted.

In addition to planning the content of your presentation, you need to give advanced thought to how you want to deliver it. Do you want to commit your
presentation to memory, use cards to guide you, or read from a script? Or, you might want to use a combination of methods. To help you decide, read the

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advantages and disadvantages of the four delivery methods described below.

Speaking from Memory

A distinct advantage of speaking from memory is your ability to speak to the audience without relying on notes or a script. This allows you the flexibility to move
away from the podium and to maintain eye contact with the audience. However, speaking from memory has disadvantages, too. Presentations from memory
often sound rehearsed and the possibility exists that you'll forget an important point, present information that's inaccurate, or completely lose your train of
thought. If you decide to deliver your presentation from memory, have notes handy to jog your memory just in case!

Speaking from Notes

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Many people like to speak from notes. Typically these notes are either on cards or paper in outline form and contain key ideas and information. If you are using
an electronic presentation tool, you may be able to include your notes in the presentation itself. The benefit of delivering a presentation from notes is that you
sound natural rather than rehearsed and you can still maintain relatively good eye contact with the audience. The down side is that you might not express your
key ideas and thoughts as well as you may have liked had you planned your exact words in advance.

Speaking from Text

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Speaking from text involves writing your speech out, word for word, then basically reading from the text. As with speaking from memory, an advantage of this
method is that you plan, in advance, exactly what you're going to say and how you're going to say it. A disadvantage is that you might appear to the audience to
be stiff or rehearsed. You will need to make frequent eye contact and speak with expression to maintain the audience's interest.

Using a Combination of Methods


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You may find the best method to be a combination of all three. For instance, experts suggest you memorize the first and last ten minutes of your talk so that you
can speak flawlessly and without notes. Notes may be suitable for segments of your presentation that you know very well, for example, relating a personal story.
Finally, speaking from a text might be appropriate when you have quotes or other important points that you want to make sure you communicate accurately and
completely. You can make a smooth segue to written text by saying something like: "I want to read this quote to you verbatim, to ensure that I don't distort the
original intent."

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