Summary

A discussion of Presentations formats and structures that are effective.

Presentation

Keep the message(s) simple. A presentation that has one or two strong, clear messages is better than a presentation that is "comprehensive". We can leave comprehensiveness to a handout.

If you were able to say only one sentence to the audience what would it be? Once you have that sentence, use it as a theme that runs through your talk.

Then use this formula:

  1. tell 'em what you're going to say (i.e. the sentence)

    • use this section to give a high level outline of the rest of the presentation
    • talk about the sentence from two or three different perspectives
  2. tell 'em, or better yet, show 'em (i.e. the sentence)

    • use this section to make the key concepts underlying the sentence concrete
    • show them what the sentence means using a demo
    • show them various aspects about the sentence using examples
    • talk about some non-obvious consequences of the sentence
    • talk about the positives and negatives (pros/cons) of the sentence
  3. tell 'em what you said (i.e. the sentence)

    • Use this section to provide a conclusion that your sentence is solid and correct
    • re-iterate the sentence referring back to key bits and pieces from the rest of the presentation.
    • if possible, use simple, straightforward "if A then B" style logic
    • imagine that section 2 above was ripped out. Does this section flow from section 1?

- John Arrizza