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Ten Tips on Giving a Presentation
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1. Introduce yourself, acknowledge your coauthors, and thank
your host.
Don't forget to do these. This will help you get
off on the right foot.
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2. Warm up your audience.
Say something interesting to capture their
attention. A short story or a joke will do fine - whatever you are comforabtle with.
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3. Communicate with your audience.
Look at your audience to get feedback from them.
Look at
their eyes and read their expressions. Talk to them. Communication is
two-way even if you're the only one who's talking.
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4. Think of your talk as a story, and be entertaining.
Describe your work as you would tell an interesting
story. People like to be entertained even if it's serious research.
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5. Give adequate background and motivation.
Tell them what you're doing and why you're doing
it. Motivate them
to care about what you're doing. Relate what you're doing to something
they might care about.
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6. State your main results carefully without lots of detail.
Be clear about what your results are. Minimize detail in favor of
clarity. Make sure they get the main idea. They can always read your
report or paper for the details.
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7. Have uncluttered slides.
View your slides as emphasizers and reminders about what you
want to say. The focus should be on what you're saying, not what
the slide says. Don't be a slave to your slides. NEVER read more
than a few words on a slide. The audience can read much faster than
you can speak and it's annoying for them to have you read what they
have already read.
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8. Speak clearly, not too fast and not too slow.
Both too fast and too slow are bad. Keep their interest, but
don't lose them.
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9. Time your talk and select your slides/vugraphs in advance
Have an idea how long your talk is. Running over is annoying
to the audience. Choosing your slides in real time shows a lack of
respect for the audience while they wait for you to decide what to
tell them. Go over the talk a few times in advance, see if there is anything you have overlooked, and give yourself a schedule. Write down the sequence of slides if that helps.
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10. Polish your slides and your talk.
The audience respects a polished, well timed professional presentation.
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