Archive for the 'Education' Category

5 Ways to be a Better Presenter

DD speakingPublic speaking is an important part of my work, and something that I get great joy and satisfaction from. I’m not a natural public speaker though, in-fact I still get little nervous almost every time I get up to give a talk or presentation, but I’ve learned certain tricks and methods that help me “get those butterflies to fly in formation”. So, at the prompting of the guys at Missing Link, I’m going to be sharing some of what I’ve learned about presenting in a series of blog posts on the topic.

In this post I’m going to share what I consider five fundamentally important tips for presenting more effectively. They’re all simple, not necessarily easy, but can vastly improve the quality and impact of a presentation if they’re applied.

1. Know why you’re presenting

Before you give any presentation, it’s useful to get clear on the top reason you’re presenting, and what you need to achieve from your presentation. The reason you do this is because it’s difficult to achieve more than one high-level objective per talk. An example is: “To help people feel more confident about public speaking”.

2. Structure your talk

Audiences pay more attention when they have a sense that you’re in control of your topic, and are taking them to a meaningful conclusion. You’ll succeed to the extent that you make THEM feel smart, rather than by impressing them by how smart you are. Here’s a really useful outline that can be applied to improve the structure of almost any talk:

  1. Tell them what you’re going to tell them.
  2. Tell them.
  3. Tell them what you told them.

3. Be Entertaining

If you bore your audience you’ll lose them and your presentation will have been a waste of everybody’s time. Whether your presentation is drama, documentary, comedy or horror, don’t forget that people often feel before they think – there is an emotional component to any powerful message. Some technical ways you can be more entertaining are:

  • Don’t simply read your slides (you shouldn’t have so much content on your slides in the first place, otherwise you might as well just give a printed handout)
  • Tell stories to make your point. These can be case-studies if you wish. Or analogies.
  • Varying your tone of voice to emphasise different points
  • Varying your pace to emphasise different points. Don’t underestimate the power of a pause.

4. Be Honest, Be Yourself

The pressure to give a technically perfect presentation is what often leads to stiff, boring presentations where the audience can often actually see how nervous you are. If you’re able to speak naturally in conversation with a friend or a business colleague about your topic, then you should be able to present to a group… just turn the volume up. The key here is to present on stuff that you’re comfortable speaking about, so that you can speak naturally about it. Sincerity wins over flashiness.

5. Use Pictures

If you’re presenting with Powerpoint or Keynote, then try keep it to a maximum of one sentence per slide. This is important for a number of reasons: People can read faster than you can talk – so reading off your slides starts to seem like a hinderance to progress if that’s all you’re doing. Pictures add an entertaining element to your presentation, and often help people envisage what you’re saying.

If you’re not using presentation software, then this principle still applies. There’s a journalistic principle that says: “Show them don’t tell them” – use examples, stories and analogies to make your point, rather than simply stating it bluntly. So, for example, instead of stating that you’re a rockstar geek, rather describe how your last software demo culminated in a mosh-pit.

There are some technical aspects to presenting that I look forward to sharing in subsequent blog posts, but I think these are fundamentals. Anything else you’d suggest? Have you been to one of my talks before? If so, do you have any feedback on how I’ve applied these principles? Please share.

Top Tips for Succeeding in Unpredictable Times

While exploring my insurance options in the past week I became caught up in exploring the idea of Randomness and preparing for the unexpected.

As luck would have it, Elaine sent me an article about a chap called Nassim Nicholas Taleb who is a philosopher of randomness about the fallibility of human knowledge, and (according to the article) “now the hottest thinker in the world” (he has a $4m advance on his next book, and gives about 30 presentations a year to bankers, economists and traders for $60 000 a pop).

As a trader, Taleb has said he took a skeptical and anti-mathematical approach to risk and uncertainty and had a severe distrust of models and statisticians and a contempt for finance academics, especially economists. He accurately predicted the current market crisis – and made a fortune (estimated at half a billion dollars) from it.

Fooled by Randomness,  the title of one of Taleb’s books, has also become an idiom in English used to describe when someone sees a pattern where there is just random noise.

In his other book “The Black Swan“, he rejects the distinction between non-fiction and fiction.

Here’s  Taleb’s Top 10 life tips, drawn from Appleyard’s article:

1.  Scepticism is effortful and costly. It is better to be sceptical about matters of large consequences, and be imperfect, foolish and human in the small and the aesthetic.

2.  Go to parties. You can’t even start to know what you may find on the envelope of serendipity. If you suffer from agoraphobia, send colleagues.

3.  It’s not a good idea to take a forecast from someone wearing a tie. If possible, tease people who take themselves and their knowledge too seriously.

4.  Wear your best for your execution and stand dignified. Your last recourse against randomness is how you act — if you can’t control outcomes, you can control the elegance of your behaviour. You will always have the last word.

5.  Don’t disturb complicated systems that have been around for a very long time. We don’t understand their logic. Don’t pollute the planet. Leave it the way we found it, regardless of scientific ‘evidence’.

6.  Learn to fail with pride — and do so fast and cleanly. Maximise trial and error — by mastering the error part.

7.  Avoid losers. If you hear someone use the words ‘impossible’, ‘never’, ‘too difficult’ too often, drop him or her from your social network. Never take ‘no’ for an answer (conversely, take most ‘yeses’ as ‘most probably’).

8.  Don’t read newspapers for the news (just for the gossip and, of course, profiles of authors). The best filter to know if the news matters is if you hear it in cafes, restaurants… or (again) parties.

9.  Hard work will get you a professorship or a BMW, but you need both work and luck for a Booker, a Nobel or a private jet.

10.  Answer e-mails from junior people before more senior ones. Junior people have further to go and tend to remember who slighted them.

Extreme events do happen and have a big effect. Examples abound, including September 11th. The Internet with its various effects was scarcely anticipated, and it is a development that has had a significant effect. The effects of extreme events are even higher due to the fact that they are unexpected.

So, in short, I think Taleb’s teachings can be summarized simply as “expect and prepare for the unexpected”. I’ll be sorting out all my insurance posthaste!

Dirty Hands Wine Marketing Course

Wine Marketing Course

My mentor and friend, Graham Knox, owner of Stormhoek Wines, has put together a remarkable wine marketing course for UCT Graduate School of Business, called Dirty Hands – A Practical Approach to Wine Marketing. It aims to teach you how to be a success in the world’s second most competitive industry.

It is a distinctive offering in the wine marketing education space, because it actually takes delegates through the process of wine creation, while at the same time learning how each step is a selling point. At the end of the course, you will not only have created and bottled your own wine, but you will be able to sell it too!

“What excites me about this programme”, says Elaine Rumboll, Director of Exec Ed. at UCT GSB, “is the awareness that if a marketer is to understand the value proposition of wine from its making to its distribution that there will develop alongside of this stories and emotional connections which will help marketers in their distribution. To my knowledge, this approach is ground breaking and not on offer in any of the other wine marketing material I have viewed globally”.

The course runs from 24th-26th June 2008, and costs R7200.

I see that Wine Country is offering a free spot on the course, click the pic, or this link to see how you can get your place sponsored.

The Africa Media Leadership Conference in Kampala

Uganda

Later this week I’ll be going to Kampala, Uganda for the Africa Media Leadership Conference (AMLC) in Uganda.

From Wikipedia:

 

The Republic of Uganda is a landlocked country in East Africa, bordered on the east by Kenya, the north by Sudan, on the west by the Democratic Republic of the Congo, on the southwest by Rwanda, and on the south by Tanzania

The following is from the conference press release:

AMLC is an annual meeting among African media bosses. This year it is focusing on how the continent is embracing new media technologies to serve the changing needs and interests of their customers.

The conference will be attended by 40 senior editors and CEOs of media firms stretching from South Africa, Namibia and Swaziland in the south to Kenya and Ethiopia in the north and from Senegal and the Ivory Coast in the west.

The topic of the talk I am presenting is: How African Traditional Media can Tap Into New Social Media and Blogs.

The conference is co-hosted by Rhodes University’s Sol Plaatje Institute for Media Leadership (SPI) in South Africa and Germany’s Konrad Adenauer Stiftung Foundation.

“This year’s conference is looking at a range of digital media platforms that have emerged and continue to emerge around the world and the challenges that face media companies in Africa in adopting and adapting these platforms for their competitive advantage,” said Francis Mdlongwa, Director of the Sol Plaatje Institute (SPI).

“Given the breath-taking technological changes which are re-shaping and even redefining the entire media industry, we felt that Africa should pause, take stock, look at what works and does not work in our part of the world and why, and plan ahead,” he added.

The SPI is Africa’s only university-level institution offering high-level media management and leadership training programmes to both practising and aspirant media leaders from across the continent. It runs a post-graduate programme in media management and leadership and a series of certificated management programmes for senior editorial and business media managers.
Frank Windeck, the head of the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung’s Sub-Sahara Africa Media Programme, the sponsor of the Africa Media Leadership Conference series, said: “These meetings give Africa’s top media people a unique opportunity to network at the highest level and to examine key industry and other issues which concern them and to seek practical solutions by examining case studies drawn from Africa.”

The conference series was launched by the SPI and the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung in 2002 to promote high-level interaction among Africa’s media chiefs and to seek practical, innovative and creative solutions to challenges faced by the African media.

The conference meets annually in an African country, and past conferences have debated topics such as Revenue Generation for Robust African Media (Cape Town, South Africa); South Meets East: Strategic Challenges for African Media (Nairobi, Kenya); Managing Media in Recession (Mauritius); and Policies and Strategies for Media Viability (Maputo, Mozambique).

I’m looking forward to the trip, and to meeting and engaging deeply with the ideas of some of Africa’s top media people. I will, of course, be sharing as much as possible of the knowledge I gain with you on this blog.




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