This very practical workshop has a simple objective: to help you prepare, design and deliver memorable and high-quality presentations.
This programme will help you:
Use a proven, structured tool-kit when designing and developing presentations
Benefit from short cuts and best practice when designing and using Powerpoint presentations
Select the right information, examples, exercises and activities - and use them well
Prepare and structure a presentation or session appropriate to the audience, and to best achieve your objectives
Maintain audience or group interest
Develop and practise presentation skills to improve your voice tone, speech power and body language
Use practical methods to control nerves and anxiety - develop higher levels of confidence and credibility
Command a room, hold attention and create a high impact
1 Introduction
Personal objectives
Key messages and learning objectives of the workshop
2 Presentation skills
What does good look like?
Exercise: Characteristics of high/low impact presentations
Presenting yourself as a 'winner'
The energy / attitude model
Exercise: Being a winner
3 Preparation skills - eight steps to preparing a great presentation, plus Powerpoint tips
•The magic circle• How to 'assume the role' when presenting• The eight steps• Step 1 - develop your objectives- The five questions that you must answer before preparing your presentation- Defining your objectives and outcomes- Creating a first draft- Step 1 exercise• Step 2 - analyse your audience- Doing your homework: audience, event, venue- Developing a pre-event check-list- Methods and means for researching your audience- Step 2 exercise• Steps 3 and 4 - structure the main body of your presentation and state the main ideas- Ways to structure your presentation for maximum impact- Balancing and managing content and topics- Organising your information: 6 options and methods- Your 'one main point' and creating a 30-second summary- Steps 3 and 4 exercises• Step 5 - decide on supporting information, using the toolkit- Making your case convincing: ways to support your claims- Selecting and using relevant and interesting examples- Quotes, case studies and printed material- Presenting statistics, tables and graphs- Ways of maintaining visual interest- Transitions and links, creating a 'golden thread'- Step 5 exercise: Creating compelling stories and anecdotes4• Step 6 - create an effective 'opening'- Claiming the stage and creating a good first impression- The three most powerful ways of opening a presentation- The five elements of a strong opening- Step 6 exercise: Participants work individually to prepare an opening, focusing onpersonal introduction, and then deliver to the group, with structured feedback• Step 7 - develop transitions- Step 7 exercise / examples• Step 8 - create an effective close- Signalling and sign-posting; the importance of, and how to do it effectively- Five ways to close a presentation successfully- Step 8 exercise / examples• Presentation design and Powerpoint- An interactive review of participants' own real-life past presentations and advanced tipsand techniques on using Powerpoint effectively
4 Facilitation skills
The three main types of group activity - triads, teams and main group
How to select the right activity, define the objectives, set it up and run the debrief
Using energisers - with examples
Exercise: Dealing with 'difficult' behaviours
Exercise: Working in triads, design and deliver
5 Tips and tricks: presentation and facilitation
10 reasons why facilitation fails
Five golden rules for success
Defining the session goals and the facilitation plan
Open and closed questions - why and when to use
Using a 'car park' to manage unresolved issues
Using AV aids - tips and tricks
Exercises: Including participants working in pairs to prepare a short section form of one of their own presentations
6 Putting it all together
Summary of key learning points
Action plan