Key Points
It is much easier to overcome your fear of public speaking if
you have planned the content of your presentation properly. Earlier it was stated that a presentation could be thought of as a journey - by
which you take your audience to the destination you had pre-planned (the
presentations aim statement). In structuring your
presentation you may find it useful to divide your journey into a series of
stages. You are then faced with the challenge of deciding how many stages there
should be and what should constitute a stage. It was also recommended that you
should look at your aim statement and try to develop between three and five key
points that you would like to drive home. This represents as much information as
most people are able to take away from a presentation. These key point messages
can be considered as the intended destination for each stage of your journey. In
other words key points are synonymous with stages in the same way that the aim
statement is synonymous with the destination. Key
points are synonymous with the intended destination of each stage of your
journey. If you are working in a familiar subject domain the key points may well
be apparent; but what if the subject isn’t familiar and the key points are not
self-evident? Surely the fear of public speaking is the elevated?
Identifying Key Points
When you are preparing a presentation in an unfamiliar domain the most effective
way to identify the key points is to ask other people. The people you should ask
should be from a similar group as your intended audience. If they are
predominantly directives, as is likely in the scenario of a sales manager making
a case for equipping her field sales force with laptop computers then she should
ask relatively senior people within the organization. If she asked a colleague
in the training department their comments would probably be heavily biased
towards the training implications, whereas technical staff would be preoccupied
with the specification and interfacing of IT systems. Neither group is likely to
ask the sort of questions that are likely to be of most interest to senior
management.
By asking a representative group you should ensure that the key points are
properly targeted and that the audience remains focused. You should ask them a
question framed around your aim statement. What would you need to know which
would . . . followed by your aim statement. In the current example: ‘What would
you need to know which would . . . demonstrate the competitive advantage of
equipping the field sales force with laptop computers?’ Ask as many people, from
a representative group as you can, and record their comments as potential key
points. The biggest advantage of this approach is its speed. It is quite common
for people to spend hours sifting through information, collating it and then
editing down into digestible chunks - whilst still struggling to devise a
suitable presentation structure for it. Asking other people is a fast and
effective way of devising potential key points and has the added advantage that
the key points will be non-egocentric that is they will reflect what your
audience wants to hear and not just what you want to tell them.
These are the sort of responses that you might expect when asking the question
‘What would you need to know which would . . . demonstrate the competitive
advantage of equipping the field sales force with laptop computers?’
“How will giving them laptops improve their sales volumes?”
“How much will all this cost? And how long is the return on investment, in other
words a detailed cost benefit analysis.”
“Would we be able to cut the sales force as a result of their increased
productivity?”
“How long will it take to procure this equipment and software, and then how long
will it take to carry out the training required?”
“What are the main business benefits, apart from cost-related issues - you know
will the organization appear to be more professional, that kind of thing?”
Address Your Audience’s Priorities
Starting with the main body, your first task is to decide on what your key
points will be and order them in a way that will address the needs of your
audience. Once again, you should be prioritizing what it is that the members of
the audience want from the presentation. The key points should be presented in
the order that reflects their importance to the audience - with the most
important first. If you do not do this you will find it difficult to hold their
attention.
It may prove useful to write each key point on a piece of card and shuffle them
in a variety of different presentation sequences and consider the effect of each
on your audience. Ask yourself, or others, which will have the most impact?
Your next task is to divide the presentation up so that the correct
amount of time is allocated to each of your key points. This will ensure that
the overall time allotted to the main body of your presentation does not
overrun. For example if the main body is planned to last 10 minutes and there
are three key points, as in this presentation, then you might divide it into two
minute and one six minute segments. Alternatively you might create three equal
segments. Once again let the requirements of the audience determine this
division.
Keep Your Message Central
Plan the content around the message or messages you want to convey. The overall
message of the presentation should be embodied in the aim statement. It is
important to keep the focus of your presentation on the message and not on the
information and facts that underpin that message. This can be very difficult;
especially when the message is supported by a multitude of facts that you think
the audience should know.
If your presentation does consist of a series of facts and supporting evidence,
then the audience is likely to assimilate these and draw their own conclusions.
If this happens you will lose the opportunity to influence and shape the
audience’s interpretation. It is far more effective to communicate your messages
and then support them with an adequate level of facts and information - so that
the audience can line them up behind the message you wish to convey.
As you develop the content of the presentation you should devise a message, or
messages, to communicate each key point. You should only include sufficient
facts to support and validate these messages. Depending on the size and scope of
each stage it may be necessary to devise one or more sub-messages to communicate
the key point. Each message and sub-message should be supported by its own
support facts and information. From your research you
should have a surplus of facts and information available and the main challenge
facing you should be the selection of an appropriate sub-set to support each of
your messages. One of the best rules of thumb to adopt when screening your
research information is to: Stop adding facts when your point is clear and
present them in order of importance. Remember, whilst
quoting authoritative sources may be useful when presenting support facts and
information, your audience are unlikely to want a detailed explanation of all
the processes and investigations that you have carried out.
You should:
1. Devise a message, or messages, to communicate each key point.
2. Include facts on the basis that they support and clarify the message.
3. Stop adding facts when your point is clear and present them in order of
importance.
Identifying Messages - an Example
In the example used earlier - where a sales manager is trying to convince the
board of directors to equip the field sales force with laptop computers three
key points were identified, in order of importance, as shown.
1. Cost Benefits
2. Performance Projections
3. Business Benefits
Now each of these will require one or more messages in order to communicate the
key point effectively. Remember, it is important that the information you have
is communicated as messages - or the audience may carry out their own analysis
of the facts and draw their own conclusions. These key point cards show examples
of the kind of messages that might be used to communicate them.
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