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9 Articles match "Handout","Statistics"
The Latest from the Speaking Pro Central Community
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Friday, November 6, 2009
You can use survey results, visuals, props, participation, sound, statistics, song and movie titles, sports analogies and stories.
You could also ask them to solve a puzzle that you've provided on a handout. How many times do you listen to a song? The first few times you listen to get the overall sense of it. Once you decide you
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Saturday, September 19, 2009
Use handouts. If your presentation involves statistics and analytical data, put them in a handout that the audience can refer to. Giving a Speech? 10 Tips for Public Speaking
An article on how you can be more effective when you deliver a speech and how to be better at public speaking.
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Monday, September 7, 2009
The handout has now been downloaded over 1600 times! You can find the handout at [link] .)
They also found cell phone use when dialing and texting to be dangerous, but just talking and listening didn’t lead to a statistically significant increase in risk.)
As reported in the August 24, 2009 issue of Time magazine, new research indicates that talking on a cell phone while driving, even using hands-free technology, can be dangerous.
In July, a previously-buried 2003 National Highway Traffic Safety Administration study was released and it identified the cell phone
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The Best from the Speaking Pro Central Community
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Thursday, July 23, 2009
Have a thorough knowledge of your subject matter, including aspects that you may not be covering in the presentation, anticipate what questions the audience may have and organize your physical material (handouts, slides, notes) so that you portray a confident demeanor. In Instead grab the audience's attention with a powerful opening like a startling statistic, a story or a clever definition or quote. Participants in my presentation skills workshops typically cite concerns about not being credible to the audience as one of the key contributors to their presentation nervousness and anxiety.
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Friday, May 1, 2009
Walk around, tell a story or paint a picture on how the stuff youre talking about affects them. Scientific/factual - graphs, statistics, diagrams: you know the score. Observe and reflect - these folk wont get involved or interact; they need time and space to take on board what youre saying before they risk a response. Perhaps it'd be a good read for the mozzers :) [link] Thumbs Up Thumbs Down 1 up, 0 down
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Friday, May 1, 2009
In formal presentations, it isn�t unusual to see an audience member peruse a newspaper hidden carelessly underneath their handout. Know your audience Before designing a presentation, you should familiarize yourself with participant statistics. Identifying factors such as types of careers represented, level of management responsibility, gender, age, and other pertinent information will help you build a program which is relevant and focused. MEMBERS LOGIN Home SPEAKER SERVICES Speaker Services Get Found Now! Club Proposal generator
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Saturday, September 19, 2009
Use handouts. If your presentation involves statistics and analytical data, put them in a handout that the audience can refer to. Giving a Speech? 10 Tips for Public Speaking
An article on how you can be more effective when you deliver a speech and how to be better at public speaking.
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•
Monday, September 7, 2009
The handout has now been downloaded over 1600 times! You can find the handout at [link] .)
They also found cell phone use when dialing and texting to be dangerous, but just talking and listening didn’t lead to a statistically significant increase in risk.)
As reported in the August 24, 2009 issue of Time magazine, new research indicates that talking on a cell phone while driving, even using hands-free technology, can be dangerous.
In July, a previously-buried 2003 National Highway Traffic Safety Administration study was released and it identified the cell phone
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Monday, July 20, 2009
Included in the Leading Materials (LM) category are quotations, statistics, props, handouts, exercises, visuals of all kinds, stories of all kinds, references to movies, music and other popular culture. Sift through your mind for ideas about the Leading Materials--an image, a quote, a statistics, etc.
Planning your speech or presentation involves putting specific information or content into your Speech Development System. Together the System and the Planning steps create a modular approach to speech or presentation writing.
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Friday, November 6, 2009
You can use survey results, visuals, props, participation, sound, statistics, song and movie titles, sports analogies and stories.
You could also ask them to solve a puzzle that you've provided on a handout. How many times do you listen to a song? The first few times you listen to get the overall sense of it. Once you decide you
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Saturday, April 5, 2008
Follow the overview with a deeper layer. Use the skeleton of the overview, but add supporting explanations, examples, flow charts, or statistics, as needed. In a document, this layer follows the executive summary. As take-away material, provide a detailed handout, an appendix, or a link to in-depth content a skeptic or a technical specialist will require.
Have you ever had the task of engaging people with differing needs in the same message? Do you wonder how to address executives and technical specialists with the same message? Here’s a strategy you can count on.
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Tuesday, June 23, 2009
2) Make numbers and statistics meaningful by putting them in context and illuminating them cleverly.
When you hear yourself saying I DON'T have time or money; and when you hear yourself saying I DO have to write detailed slides decks and open by thanking people and give the audience a handout with all the slides--stop yourself and think of Steve Jobs.
Steve Jobs has a well-earned reputation for being a dynamic, compelling and passionate public speaker. With all the expectations on his shoulders, he manages to break free from the boring CEO speech model; and he has relegated
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