Lousy opening to your presentation
The purpose of your opening is to build
interest in your presentation. Your opening is like the opening paragraph of an
article or the first chapter in your book. The question it should answer is
“Why should the audience listen to your presentation?”
Sometimes we need to experience a bad
example to really appreciate the difference. Here is an example of a bad
opening---
The speaker said:
Good morning, good afternoon or whatever.
Guess I’m a little jet lagged. Ha.Glad to be here in
I’m the founder of…
We are based in California.We have offices around the world.
Where’s Robert?
There he is. He is my local licensee.
We’re running 15 minutes late and I had
planned to speak for one hour and fifteen minutes and I plan to use all of that
time.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The purpose is to build interest in
listening to the rest of the presentation. Nothing he said in his opening did
that. From that opening one might surmise that this speaker would be a pompous
braggart and an inconsiderate boring speaker.
The audience makes those decisions during
your opening.
We know what he didn’t do. Let’s dissect
his opening to recognize what he did wrong.
That’s cliché and boring. He started
speaking at 4:00pm yet he didn’t know the time of day. That demonstrates lack
of awareness and disregard for his audience. We don’t care about his alleged
jet lag. That was his way of bragging that he travelled to get here. Glad to be
in Toronto
sounded insincere and it was cliché.
The place for that information was in his
introduction. It was in the introduction and for some reason he felt that he
needed to repeat that. Why? Was he insecure? It seems those things were
important to him and perhaps his mother?
At some point Robert and his relationship
might become significant. At this point, who cares?
Did he just criticize the organizers? Then
he added that he was unwilling to adapt and didn’t care about the audience time
expectations. He implied that the time of the audience was unimportant to him.
It was more important that he exercise his desire to speak as long as he likes.
Would you like this person?
Would you feel interested in his
presentation?Would you want to do business with his company?
Presentation Tips on Twitter Presentation Skills Club on Facebook Executive Speech Coach, Business presentation tips from George Torok, the Speech Coach for Executives
3 comments:
Good walk-through on presentation. That is called the best guidance. I am glad to read this info.
Most of the people would never think that a simple "good morning" and some situational insecurity can undermine your whole presentation, though they can! Absolutely right about this, George, thank you for the insight, really. Fascinating observation.
Nice blog!!! The main purpose of making presentation is to convey messages properly to an audience. Thanks for sharing with us!!!
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