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21 Articles match "2005","Audience"
The Latest from the Speaking Pro Central Community
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Tuesday, December 22, 2009
Below are ten additional books I can highly recommend; three of them I have recommended before.
PRESENTATIONS & SPEAKING The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs: How to Be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience by Carmine Gallo. Since I began this website in 2005, I've talked about the presentation style of Steve Jobs ad nauseam (for example: here , here , here , here , here , and many more). To learn how to design and deliver better presentations, we need to pull from many educational sources. Books are good, but which ones?
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Wednesday, October 28, 2009
The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs: How to Be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience
Steve Jobs is the exception to the rule – a corporate executive whose product introductions captivate audiences as powerfully as the best motivational speakers. He’s a college drop-out whose eloquent 2005 Stanford University Commencement address has been watched [...]
...Tags: Tags: Public Speaking Speechwriting Technology Apple Computers Carmine Gallo Steve Job
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Wednesday, October 28, 2009
The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs: How to Be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience
Steve Jobs is the exception to the rule – a corporate executive whose product introductions captivate audiences as powerfully as the best motivational speakers. He’s a college drop-out whose eloquent 2005 Stanford University Commencement address has been watched [...]
...Tags: Tags: Public Speaking Speechwriting Technology Apple Computers Carmine Gallo Steve Job
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The Best from the Speaking Pro Central Community
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Friday, May 1, 2009
Unless you have some extraordinary professional experience that will make you instantly in demand on stage, you must establish a track record of inspiring or provoking audiences successfully. The skills you learn -- how to establish a kinesthetic connection with an audience, how to craft slides that are visually appealing, how to organize ideas, how to field questions -- are hugely valuable. Ben Casnocha: The Blog Welcome - Learn More About Ben: Bio / Background - Email Ben: ben@casnocha.com - First time here? See the "Best of Ben"
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Friday, March 6, 2009
I’ve been thinking about the anatomy of presentations, and what we can do to improve how we’re doing what we do. Start with WIIFM I have talked about this before , but the first and most important thing to talk about first is explaining what’s in it for me, the listener, the audience. “What’s And if you think of your audience as readers in a story, or viewers of a movie, or an audience at a play, you’re in the right mindset. What Is the Goal of a Presentation? chrisbrogan.com Home About Speaking Rockstars Newsletters Contact Best Of Make Better Presentations - The Anatomy of a Good Speech February 23, 2009 · Comments You deserve some great tools, so I’d like to share what I’ve been working on.
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Monday, April 7, 2008
How to Change the World A practical blog for impractical people. « A Brief History of Mine | Main | Resolution Assistance » December 30, 2005 The 10/20/30 Rule of PowerPoint I suffer from something called Ménière’s disease—don’t worry, you cannot get it from reading my blog. However, as soon as the audience figures out
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Monday, May 18, 2009
He led our Top Ten Communicators of 2005 list, even before the famous iPhone announcement , and was on the list most years since.)
While that's the way to do it) to keep the audience's attention on his
energy, With all the recent emphasis on the design of your PowerPoints (Keynote for the Mac), it's time to revisit the fact that your visuals are NOT your presentation. You and your Point of View are the centerpiece.
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Friday, May 1, 2009
Before I stepped on stage (in this case, it’s BarCamp, so the barrier to speaking is pretty low), I looked for support about the blog post, to see if it fit my potential audience. It is sometimes difficult to get good quality of a speech in front of an audience, and what's good for a room might not make for good web presence. Also one style I have is a throw back to my news anchor days, I use lots of soundbites usually, but not always take from the Marketing Edge podcast. The tool I used to shoot video of me, then have powerpoints and roll in soundbites and even other
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Tuesday, February 12, 2008
presentation at OSCON 2005 . Even though this talk is from 2002, his slide presentation style is still as fresh today as Axe Body Spray. Malcolm Gladwell’s Blink presentation at SXSW 2005 . He also uses slides to his advantage to persuade his audience that he’s right. Gladwell’s Blink presentation at SXSW 2005 BEST OF KNOWHR 10 Tenets for The New HR Top 10 Best Presentations Ever 5 Things HR Needs to Do to End Pay Inequality Now 10 Ways to Know When Its Time to Get Out of HR 65 Things I Believe About HR RECENT POSTS Interview Question of the Day: Do You Drive a Hummer? Our Job in HR is to Help People Healthy Disagreement in HR 65 Things I Believe About HR Back to Basics in HR CATEGORIES Select Category Alert Awards Benefits Blogging Books Business Business Slang Careers Change
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Tuesday, June 23, 2009
We are particularly interested in the physical organization of attention and distraction as audience members at a lecture or conference interact with one another across multiple channels and sites. In practice, with the introduction of networked technologies into the traditional academic setting, the attention of individual audience members is redirected from a single stream of speech to the presence of other audience members interacting with a global network of ideas. home submissions about dhq dhq people contact Spring 2009: v3 n2 Current Issue Previous Issues Winter 2009: v3 n1 Summer 2008: v2 n1 Summer 2007: v1 n2 Spring 2007: v1 n1 Indexes Title Author ISSN 1938-4122 Announcements Call for Reviewers Call for Submissions DHQ: Digital Humanities Quarterly Spring 2009 Volume 3 Number 2 v3:n2 >> | Print Article | Taporware Tools List Words Find Text Collocation Designing Choreographies for the "New
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Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Many audiences will demand that the sources for a statistic appear on the slide itself, but at the very least you have to say what your source is before you show the data. Bill's 2005 talk is not one of my favorites because of the delivery, but rather for the content and the story. Bill's delivery style below is not as engaging as some others, and I'd much prefer he had used a remote and moved away from When I was 17, before Macintosh was even invented, I gave my first multimedia presentation using two 35mm projectors. My topic concerned the environment and the dangers of air and
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Tuesday, July 11, 2006
The purpose of most keynotes is to entertain and inform the audience. Many speech coaches will disagree with this, but the goal of a speech is to entertain the audience. If I had to pick between entertaining and informing an audience, I would pick entertaining--knowing that informing will probably happen too. Understand the audience . If How to Change the World A practical blog for impractical people. « The Education of a Late-Adopter Blogger | Main | Addendum to How to Get a Standing Ovation » January 18, 2006 How to Get a Standing Ovation When I started public speaking in about 1986, I was deathly afraid of public speaking--for one thing, working for the division run by Steve Jobs was
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Sunday, March 1, 2009
The challenge is how to adapt to presenting with the back-channel. Photo credit : Pete Lambert Benefits of the back channel to the audience As a presenter, the idea of presenting while people are talking about you is disconcerting. But to balance that, there are huge benefits to the individual members of the audience and to the overall output of a conference or meeting. Pistachio Micro sharing. Macro results. HOME TOUCHBASE BLOG Your Suggestions? SERVICES Market Engagement
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