Will You Add?
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Business > Presentation > Business Presentations with a Punch

Tags

  • engage
  • barrier
  • provides
  • still lacking
  • creative purpose
  • todays business

  • Links

  • Golf Shoes - Tips About Choosing Golf Footwear!
  • What Home-Based Business Is Right For You?
  • Building Wealth: Don't Waste Your Money on Real Estate Investment Schemes
  • Will You Add? - Business Presentations with a Punch

    Community Marketing Online - 20 Benefits of Marketing a Hometown Business Online
    What benefit does a brick and mortar business get from online marketing? Well, these days folks look online before they pick up a phone book, so if you’re not listed online and your competition is, you lose business.1. Easy access from home to your contact information, pr
    but the projector was poor. If you are using a large screen for your business presentation, the projector must be up to the job. Using a 2000-lumen projector in daylight conditions and at a distance that commands 3000 or 4000 lumens takes the punch out of a business presentation and reflects poorly on the presenter.

    4. The slide quality would be consi
    Flight Attendant Jobs: Who Is Hiring
    The news for US legacy carriers continues to worsen. Northwest and Delta recently filed bankruptcy while several others are teetering toward insolvency. Finding employment with one of these carriers is difficult, particularly if you are seeking a career as a flight attendant. St
    Even the hardest-hitting corporate executives sometimes need to punch up their presentation skills. Nick Paulus, an executive and business coach who offers online articles on effective business presentations, recently recounted his observations during an event sponsored by a highly esteemed investment bank. According to Paulus, "Although it was a big event, it was still lacking some of the basics."

    At the event, Paulus found four mistakes that are all too common in today's business presentations:

    1. The presenter - who was the company CEO - stood behind a conference lectern. While this traditional approach provides the speaker with a certain image and level of comfort, a conference lectern places a barrier between the speaker and his audience. It's much more effective - particularly when using PowerPoint presentations - to have a headset microphone or a wireless lapel microphone, and engage your audience by utilizing the entire area of the stage.

    2. Adorning the wall behind the CEO was a giant banner trumpeting the name and logo of the investment bank. If the event were being covered by the media, you'd want the company's name and logo broadcast and photographed. In the absence of media coverage, though, such banners are so common that they lose all effectiveness. The guests know where they are, and the space behind the speaker can be used for a more creative purpose.

    3. The screen was huge, but the projector was poor. If you are using a large screen for your business presentation, the projector must be up to the job. Using a 2000-lumen projector in daylight conditions and at a distance that commands 3000 or 4000 lumens takes the punch out of a business presentation and reflects poorly on the presenter.

    4. The slide quality would be consid
    Webinar Software - GoToWebinar Review
    If you're in the market for webinar software then you'd be making a mistake if you didn't check out and buy GoToWebinar. Webinars are fast replacing traditional meetings and conferences as we've come to know them, becoming the weapon of choice among presenters wanting to reach t
    s still lacking some of the basics."

    At the event, Paulus found four mistakes that are all too common in today's business presentations:

    1. The presenter - who was the company CEO - stood behind a conference lectern. While this traditional approach provides the speaker with a certain image and level of comfort, a conference lectern places a barrier between the speaker and his audience. It's much more effective - particularly when using PowerPoint presentations - to have a headset microphone or a wireless lapel microphone, and engage your audience by utilizing the entire area of the stage.

    2. Adorning the wall behind the CEO was a giant banner trumpeting the name and logo of the investment bank. If the event were being covered by the media, you'd want the company's name and logo broadcast and photographed. In the absence of media coverage, though, such banners are so common that they lose all effectiveness. The guests know where they are, and the space behind the speaker can be used for a more creative purpose.

    3. The screen was huge, but the projector was poor. If you are using a large screen for your business presentation, the projector must be up to the job. Using a 2000-lumen projector in daylight conditions and at a distance that commands 3000 or 4000 lumens takes the punch out of a business presentation and reflects poorly on the presenter.

    4. The slide quality would be consi
    Is Your Boss Out To Kill You?
    Do you dread going to work? Do you call in sick even when you’re well? Is it your job that you dislike, or is it really your boss?According to an ABC News survey, the No. 1 reason for quitting a job was because of a bad boss. Half of those polled said they would fire the
    barrier between the speaker and his audience. It's much more effective - particularly when using PowerPoint presentations - to have a headset microphone or a wireless lapel microphone, and engage your audience by utilizing the entire area of the stage.

    2. Adorning the wall behind the CEO was a giant banner trumpeting the name and logo of the investment bank. If the event were being covered by the media, you'd want the company's name and logo broadcast and photographed. In the absence of media coverage, though, such banners are so common that they lose all effectiveness. The guests know where they are, and the space behind the speaker can be used for a more creative purpose.

    3. The screen was huge, but the projector was poor. If you are using a large screen for your business presentation, the projector must be up to the job. Using a 2000-lumen projector in daylight conditions and at a distance that commands 3000 or 4000 lumens takes the punch out of a business presentation and reflects poorly on the presenter.

    4. The slide quality would be consi
    Changing Behaviour; Lessons from Safety Training
    Getting safety training right or wrong has immediately obvious and emotionally and financially tangible consequences. The rewards of: no deaths or disabling injuries, no grieving families, no grieving workmates, no damage to reputation, plant and machinery, no increase in compli
    t bank. If the event were being covered by the media, you'd want the company's name and logo broadcast and photographed. In the absence of media coverage, though, such banners are so common that they lose all effectiveness. The guests know where they are, and the space behind the speaker can be used for a more creative purpose.

    3. The screen was huge, but the projector was poor. If you are using a large screen for your business presentation, the projector must be up to the job. Using a 2000-lumen projector in daylight conditions and at a distance that commands 3000 or 4000 lumens takes the punch out of a business presentation and reflects poorly on the presenter.

    4. The slide quality would be consi
    Time or Attendance
    Wondering about the title of this article, yes, its very much referred in the industry by Time and Attendance. Try taking it this way, is it the time spent more important or the attendance or both equally. At most places its both. Department heads gives equal weight to both time
    but the projector was poor. If you are using a large screen for your business presentation, the projector must be up to the job. Using a 2000-lumen projector in daylight conditions and at a distance that commands 3000 or 4000 lumens takes the punch out of a business presentation and reflects poorly on the presenter.

    4. The slide quality would be considered acceptable for a junior communication team, but was unacceptable for the international audience in attendance. Two-dimensional, poorly contrasted graphs, small text that is difficult to read, and limited graphical creativity can spell doom for even the most compelling information. If you want to deliver substantive materially professionally, use graphics and animate your PowerPoint presentations.

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.atriclecheck.com/article/34844/atriclecheck-Business-Presentations-with-a-Punch.html">Business Presentations with a Punch</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.atriclecheck.com/article/34844/atriclecheck-Business-Presentations-with-a-Punch.html]Business Presentations with a Punch[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Professional Yellow Page Advertising Design Assistance; Do You Need It?

    Writing A Cover Letter-Stand Out From The Crowd

    Make 'em Laugh Customer Service

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com