3 Presentation Secrets and a Wedding

If you commit any one of the offenses—regardless of how incredible your content may be—some audience members may quietly excuse themselves from your presentation, leaving you wondering what went wrong. Others—either those who are not at liberty to exit your presentation or those who truly want to hear your message and hope they can overlook the blunders — will suffer in silence. Neither is a winning reality. Here are three secrets that will delight your audiences but that they won’t tell you is part of the winning sauce to make them happy.

Your voice is part of the presentation.

Just as your attire or your slide deck is an extension of your presentation and can impact the impression people have of you and your overall performance, the same goes for your voice. It is part of the presentation package as well. A voice that drones on or that has no inflections can make for your listeners a painful experience. And, unfortunately, the richness and robust nature of your content may not be enough to move listeners past a voice that sounds disinterested or from a speaker who sounds disconnected from the audience.

To work to have a more animated voice, read a children’s book aloud, ensuring you embody the characters and the storyline. This is best done in the company of a child who can fully appreciate your efforts; however, reading it aloud to yourself will do the trick as well. Make your voice increase in speed and go higher in pitch if you read an exciting passage. Make it slow down and lower it an octave or two for scary or sad parts. Put space between words, punctuating the significance of each one when you want to place emphasize on a key message.

Don’t have time for that? 

Smile. Smile while you speak. Those pearly whites instantly add personality to your voice and your overall countenance and confidence.  The degree to which you speak with inflections is driven by your mood, and your facial expressions dictate your mood. A flat face with no expression leads to...you guessed it...a flat voice. Conversely, the energy from a smile will come through in your words, and your audience will thank you for it.

Refrain from reading.

Whether you speak with inflections and are animated or not, an audience truly prefers it if you do not read to them. Sure. There are those direct quotes that, if paraphrased, would not have the same effect. Definitely read those to your audience. However, resist the temptation to read your slides to your audience. First, the audience can silently read your slide faster than you can read it aloud to everyone. Second, a deck should contain no full sentences and should have no more than five to seven bullets per slide with up to seven words per bullet.  Finally, try this strategy so you don’t have to concern yourself with any of that: create slides that are each filled with a high-resolution, eye-catching image or graphic and just a few words, if any words at all. The words or, better yet, the image itself with no words on the slide serves as a trigger, reminding you of what you plan to discuss. For instance, if you plan to discuss the ups and downs of the stock market, consider an image of a seesaw, then go into your spiel. It makes for a more memorable experience for your listeners.

If it’s broken, don’t mention it.

Well...you can (and should!) mention it; just don't keep mentioning it. 

One of my friends and colleagues shared with me how all she could remember from a presentation she attended earlier this year was how the speaker constantly spoke of her inability to get the technology to work. Over and over again, she drew attention to what wasn’t properly functioning and how annoyed she was while waiting to figure out the technology. While the topic was interesting, all my friend could remember was the bungles.

Your audience will remember what gets your attention.  (This point reminds me of my wedding day. When I entered the sanctuary, ready to walk down the aisle and meet my oh-so handsome prince who was standing at the altar looking dashing as ever, the second I saw the flower arrangements that were waiting to greet me at the end of my journey as a single woman, I wanted to absolutely scream. I mean SCREAM. Those arrangements were NOT—UNEQUIVOCALLY NOT—what I had envisioned and that I had described to the florist. Let me tell you … I seriously wanted to throw down my own bouquet (which I really liked!), snatch up those flowers in a Herculean grip, and hurl them out a window somewhere! But. I couldn’t. You see, no one would have remembered how gorgeous my husband looked or how angelic I appeared in my gown. All they would have remembered was what got my attention, which, in a moment of lost self-control, would have been me going seriously mad on those floral arrangements!)

Remember. Your audience will remember what gets your attention. 

When you have a tech fail, do not make a big deal of it. If it fits with your personality, add some levity to the moment; tell a joke about an issue you've had with your smart phone or your work computer or make light of the situation. I recall a colleague who, at the start of a faculty development workshop, would tell professors, “Because this is a technology session, something will go wrong, and when it does, I want you to clap.”  And being the good students they were and because technology likes to meet expectations, the professors would clap and laugh right on cue when there was a tech hiccup! 

Consider coming prepared with a story to tell that connects with your presentation topic and that fills the time as the tech gets fixed. One of my fellow speaker friends did this, and the audience thought it was an official part of his presentation! 

I had a tech fail at the very start of a presentation despite arriving to the webinar 25 minutes early to check the tech and despite having a tech check session the week before. What did I do? I asked the participants to post to the chat questions they had about the presentation topic that I answered right there on the spot as I simultaneously worked to fix the tech problem. I was spinning plates like mad, but I made it happen; and just as I was about to move forward without the slide deck, everything feel into place!

However, if you have factored in a dramatic element that is most effectively created only if your technology is fully operable (and that was the case with my presentation), then purposefully stall with a one-minute conversation, e.g., instruct your audience to have a one-minute conversation with a neighbor about what they’ve learned thus far and a question they still want answered. Naturally, the conversations can go for longer than a minute. Take note of the questions and immediately answer them or save the answers for later. It buys you time while the tech gets up and running. 

Finally, and most importantly, know your content well enough to keep moving without the tech. And remember this point always: there will never be anything that any piece of technology can bring to your presentation that’s more dynamic, more interesting or more engaging than you.

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Image credit:  svklimkin

A version of this article by Bridgett also appears in Entrepreneur Online.

Bridgett McGowen-Hawkins