August 3, 2022
Effective Presentations
- Know your message. To plan, reduce your focus to one key sentence. This practice creates direction.
- Plan without tech. Organize your message using a pen and paper or Word document BEFORE creating a PowerPoint or other digital presentation tool.
- Keep attention on you. Do you need PowerPoint? If you do use a visual aid, keep text minimal.
Consider narrative structure. Use narrative structure to make memorable presentations.
- What is / what could be. Contrast our ordinary world with an idealized, improved vision. Use multiple, specific examples and identify steps to achieve positive change.
- The Hero’s Journey. Show how we learn and grow by facing trials and challenges.
- False start. Create a false impression of what the story will be, then change the narrative. Use this approach for stories of problem-solving, innovation, and flexibility.
- Petal structure. Highlight relationships among ideas. Cluster related stories around a central concept. In a group presentation, assign each member a story.
- In medias res. Put audience members into main action, then explain how you got there.
- Nested loops. Your first story is also your last story; your second story is your second-to-last story, etc. Maintain audience interest as you loop back to your central idea.
Building Confidence
- Practice! Confirm pronunciations; eliminate odd transitions, wordy slides, and fuzzy graphics.
- Acknowledge emotions. It’s okay if you’re nervous. The audience wants you to succeed!
- Build confidence through knowledge. The more you know, the easier it will be to share.
- Anticipate questions, but if you don’t know an answer, don’t panic: acknowledge and move on.
- Understand body language. Stand straight, walk around, use gestures, and smile!
- Fake it until you make it. Acting confident often helps us feel more confident!
Managing Group Work
- Take time to understand. Discuss opinions, personal commitments, strengths, and weaknesses.
- Assign responsibility. Agree on consequences for missed deadlines or low-quality work.
- Recognize contributions. Be accepting of other viewpoints. Value each team member’s work.
Improve your writing and study skills! Book an appointment with a writing advisor and/or academic coach on OSCARplus. Questions? Email skills@mcmaster.ca.
References
Sparkol. 8 classic storytelling techniques for engaging presentations. (2018, March 30). https://www.sparkol.com/en/blog/8-classic-storytelling-techniques-for-engaging-presentations