The document describes a game called PowerPoint Karaoke. It involves volunteers giving an impromptu 3-minute presentation on randomly assigned PowerPoint slides they have not seen before. Participants have to be creative in coming up with a coherent presentation. The slides will rotate without regard for the presenter. A jury then judges the presentations. The game is meant to be fun and test participants' public speaking skills under pressure.
3. How To Play PowerPoint Karaoke
How To Play PowerPoint Karaoke
The concept of Powerpoint Karaoke is simple.
p p p
Let the participants make a unprepared
presentation to a randomly chosen Powerpoint
presentation.
Let a jury make a judgment.
It's all great fun!
4. How To Play PowerPoint Karaoke
How To Play PowerPoint Karaoke
Participants have to give a 3‐minute presentation
p g p
on 10‐15 slides that they’ve never seen before.
The slides will rotate without regard for the
participants, and they’ll have to give it their best
creative shot to come up with something
creative shot to come up with something
coherent.
8. Slide 4 EVOLVING CUSTOMER SEGMENTATION
WHERE TO START
Picket Fence
mers
Numbe of Custom Mass Marketing CRM
Highest Value
g es a ue
er
Customers
Customer Value
Source: Peppers & Rogers Group
The PRISM Organization
9.
10.
11.
12.
13. You d
Y do not j t measure
t just
y
your heart beat
21. All you really need:
y y
+ +
Flickr: Insanity Theory KellyPuffs
22.
23. customer
partners relationships
product
selection
content selling stuff mass
Amazon.com
management on the Web customer
distribution
warehousing Web2.0
Amazon S3 Internet API
& distribution companies
product
search
A9 product e-commerce
data services Internet
search sites
Amazon.com
data grid
selling stuff
IT infra
data storage
fees
marketing
search engine
revenues
25. Module 1: Introduction to Critical Thinking
1. What is Thinking? 3. What is
2. Types of Thinking
Critical Thinking?
7. Characteristics of
a Critical Thinker 4. Critical Thinking
g
Standards
6. Barriers to 5.
5 Benefits of
Critical Thinking Critical Thinking
28. 1998 200K
2001 300K
2002 500K
2007 ??
More & more IT projects are starting each year
29. Facial Expressions
• Face is the index
of Mind
• The eyes the
eyes,
lips and the
muscles express
many feelings
• It can also be
deceived by
p
manipulation
30.
31. 6 aspects of leading by example
1. Priorities
2. Urgency
3. problem solving
4. standards of performance
p
5. Ethics
6. Co-operation
34. Critical Thinkers Uncritical Thinkers
1.7 Characteristics of a Critical Thinker
Have a passionate drive for clarity, precision, accuracy, Often think in ways that are unclear, imprecise,
relevance, consistency, logicalness, completeness, and inaccurate, etc.
fairness.
Are sensitive to ways in which critical thinking can be Often fall prey to egocentrism, sociocentrism, wishful
skewed by egocentrism, sociocentrism, wishful thinking, thinking, etc.
etc.
Are intellectually honest with themselves, acknowledging Pretend they know more than they do and ignore
what they don’t know and recognizing their limitations. their limitations.
Listen open-mindedly to opposing points of view and Are close-minded and resist criticisms of beliefs and
welcome criticisms of beliefs and assumptions
assumptions. assumptions.
assumptions
Base their beliefs on facts and evidence rather than on Often base their beliefs on mere personal preference
personal preference or self-interest. or self interest.
Are aware of the biases and preconceptions that shape Lack awareness of their own biases and
the way they perceive the world. preconceptions.
Think independently and are not afraid to disagree with Tend to engage in ‘group think’, uncritically following
group opinion. the beliefs and values of the crowd.
Are bl to t to the h
A able t get t th heart of an issue or problem,
t f i bl Are
A easily di t t d and l k th ability t zero i on
il distracted d lack the bilit to in
without being distracted by details. the essence of a problem or issue.
Have the intellectual courage to face and assess fairly Fear and resist ideas that challenge their basic
ideas that challenge even their most basic beliefs. beliefs.
Love truth and curious about a wide range of issues. Are often relatively indifferent to truth and lack of
curiosity.
Have the intellectual perseverance to pursue insights or Tend to preserve when they encounter intellectual
truths, despite obstacles or difficulties. obstacles or difficulties.
47. Have you ever heard
anyone say, "His actions
say His
spoke so loudly I couldn't
hear what he said?"
48. To find something comparable, you have to go back
500 years to the printing press, the birth of mass media
500 years to the printing press, the birth of mass media –
which, incidentally, is what really destroyed the old world of kings
and aristocracies. Technology is shifting power away from the
editors, the publishers, the establishment, the media elite.
editors the publishers the establishment the media elite
Now it’s the people who are taking
control.”
– Rupert Murdoch