How to Plan A Presentation

If You Fail To Plan, You Plan To Fail!

How to Plan A Presentation
How to Plan A Presentation
How to plan a presentation

The success or failure of a presentation is determined long before you walk into the venue and try to engage the audience. Let’s consider how you can plan your presentation effectively, making it as relevant, concise and targeted for your audience as possible. They’ll really appreciate your efforts!

If you struggle with planning, it’s really all about the 6 essential planning questions: why, who, what, where, when and how?

If you can answer these in relation to your presentation, you have a plan!
WHY? Let’s start here.

Why are you delivering the presentation – what’s your goal or objective? What are you trying to achieve? You need to know this! Presentations usually have one of two purposes – they’re either informative or persuasive. You’re telling or you’re selling. In fact, you’re always selling. You’re selling you. And if the audience buy you, they’ll buy what you’re saying!

If you’re telling, the aim could be to inform, update, advise, explain, clarify, teach, thank or congratulate the audience members. If you’re selling, the goal is to influence and persuade, to gain their willing buy-in and cooperation for whatever you are selling. This might be a product or service, or a new system or process, or way of thinking.

Make sure you are clear regarding the purpose of your presentation.
Who?

It’s time to KYA – know your audience! Another vital part of the planning process.

What would be useful to know about them?

• How many people will you be presenting to? Useful to know for room logistics, and your own nervousness!
• Who are they? Internal or external to the company? Colleagues, customers or suppliers? Levels of knowledge regarding the topic will vary greatly. Don’t tell them what they already know, or don’t need to know!
• Consider age and status within the company – will you use a formal, or quite informal delivery style?
• Have you presented to this audience before, and how did it go? Was it well received? Did you listen to the feedback and act on it?

What?

This question is all about the content of your presentation – what will you cover? You want the content to be relevant and targeted for your audience, so it’s time to use the following equation: why + who = what! You know why you are presenting, and to whom, which will help you to determine what to include. Some presenters focus too much on the ‘what’ question, without considering ‘why’ and ‘who’.

They brainstorm potential content and end up with far too much information, and no idea what to leave out!

Where?

This is about venue considerations. Do your homework – what can you find out about the room? Factors include the size, shape and layout, location, accessibility, resources available (projector, flipchart?), lighting, heating and refreshments. Find out what you can prior to presenting – it’s one less thing to worry about!

When?

When are you presenting? The morning is better, because after lunch the audience will find a siesta more appealing than listening to you! Also, in your introduction, let them know about timings and breaks.

How?

Finally, think about how you’re going to deliver the presentation. This includes your delivery style, formal or informal, what you’re going to wear, and any resources needed, for example visual aids, handouts or a microphone.

Conclusion

Some people struggle with planning a presentation, but it really is short-term sacrifice for long-term benefit. For your presentation, make sure you can answer the why, who, what, where, when and how questions. Remember, proper planning and preparation prevents poor presentation performance!

The Secret to Successful Presentations

The nature of nerves

Several years ago, a survey was conducted to identify the top 10 public fears. What came in at number one? Public speaking! Apparently, the scariest thing we can do in our lives is stand in front of people and speak. What is the secret to successful presentations?

The Secret to Successful Presentations

Why the fear factor?

Public speaking is often considered an umbrella fear (no, umbrellas were not on the list!), i.e., many different fears bundled together under one heading. We tend to focus on the many things that could go wrong when presenting:

  • our mouths will dry up,
  • our minds will go blank,
  • we will fall over,
  • we will burst into tears,
  • they’ll laugh at us or throw things,
  • we will embarrass ourselves and colleagues in the audience.

A wise man once said: the human brain is a wonderful thing. It starts working the moment we are born and doesn’t stop until we stand up to speak in public. Basically, we imagine the worst-case scenario and carry that with us into the presentation!

The physical effects

As soon as we perceive a threat and become nervous, we switch on that primitive survival instinct, fight or flight. Our brain releases 2 stimulants into our bloodstream, adrenaline and cortisol, which bring about physical changes within us.

Our heart rate increases – the heart is now working overtime, pumping blood and oxygen to the parts of us which need it most to keep us alive. Ultimately it just wants us to be physically strong enough to deal with the threat – to either fight back, or to run away (take flight).

Our body temperature rises – who doesn’t get sweaty when they are nervous? We also get the rush of blood to the head – this explains why a lot of people’s faces turn red when they are either angry or embarrassed.

The main message here is that the fight or flight instinct gives us a colossal amount of nervous energy – use it! With practice, this energy becomes our ally when presenting, not our enemy! If we send our nervous energy outwards towards the audience, it manifests itself as positive energy, enthusiasm, and vitality. It really works!

So, what’s the big secret?

How do we become more confident presenters? Is it acupuncture, aromatherapy, yoga, or hypnotherapy? Perhaps – but the answer is much simpler: practice. Practice, practice, practice and then practice some more!

These 4 key tips will also ensure productive presentations:

  1. Collaborate on the presentation
  2. Know the customer really well
  3. Tell the story with real people
  4. Visualize Data

The more we repeat any skill or behaviour, the more it becomes embedded and the more efficient we become. Whenever opportunities to present arise, grab them with both hands. Not an easy answer but the most effective one!

Conclusion

What, then, is the secret to successful presentations? If we get nervous before a presentation, that’s good! It means we’re human and not perfect presenting robots. With practice, we can harness the nervous energy and use it to be an enthusiastic and engaging presenter. Remember, Mark Twain once said this: “There are 2 kinds of public speaker. Those that are nervous, and those that are liars.”