This document provides guidance on giving effective presentations. It discusses four key elements to consider: the audience and purpose, content and structure, visual aids, and the presenter. For each element, it offers specific best practices. The audience and purpose section stresses understanding your audience's needs and desired outcome. Content and structure advises keeping content relevant and telling a story with an overview, core message, and summary. Visual aids should support, not replace, spoken content. As the presenter, it is important to appear confident through verbal, vocal, and visual cues like making eye contact and using hand gestures. The document concludes by noting the importance of practice and offers a checklist for self-evaluation.
2. A process of communication
Recipient
Sender
Problems can occur along the way. Effective communication
minimises these.
Message Channel Interpretation
What you want to
convey.
The idea,
information, etc.
How you convey it.
Spoken, written or
non-verbal;
Particular format.
How it’s
understood.
Appropriate for
audience.
6. 4 Elements
Elements to consider for good communication:
1. Audience and purpose
2. Content and structure
3. Visual aids
4. You (especially for presentations).
7. 1. Audience and Purpose
• Who is your audience?
• Type of audience (formal, informal, business, technical, mixed)
• Subject knowledge (experts or non-experts)
• Other considerations (disabilities, non-native speakers)
• Why is your audience there?
• Align to your audience: What is their desired outcome? Why are they
there? What level of detail do they need?
• What interests them? (technical/non-technical, driven by emotion or
logic, vested interests?)
• What do you need them to do? How do you need them to respond?
• Put yourself in their shoes (if you were them, what would you be
wanting?).
8. 2. Content and Structure
• Keep to your purpose: Everything should be relevant to the
purpose – stay on topic and avoid waffle and tangential
details/asides
• Organisation:
• Tell a story:
• Overview
• Core message
• Summary
• Flow is key – don’t jump around topics.
9. 3. Visual Aids
• Charts, graphs, tables, pictures, diagrams, etc.
• Visual aids help with communicating your message –
what’s the most appropriate way to communicate your
point?
• Reference them appropriately in your text/
presentation.
• Show, don’t tell!
10. 3. Visual Aids – using slides
• Should support you, not be the main focus
• Remember there’s a trade-off: reading vs. listening
• More words, fewer sentences
• Don’t underestimate images – a picture is worth a
thousand words
• Question: is it needed? What is it adding to the
message/understanding?
• Flipchart test: if you were using a flipchart instead, what
would you draw/write on it? That’s all that should be on
your slides.
11. 4. You
Albert Mehrabian – 3Vs:
• Verbal – what we say, which words
we use
• Vocal – how we say it, our tone of
voice, intonation
• Visual – how we appear, what our
written communication looks like
• Put these three Vs in order of
importance to communicating our
message (1 minute).
Verbal
Vocal
Visual
12. 4. You – visual confidence
• Smile =
approachable;
Straight-face =
serious
• Hand gestures,
but avoid nervous
movements
• Make eye contact
– but not just one
person
• Stand straight
and keep still!
13. 4. You – vocal confidence
• Slower = calmer;
faster = more
excitement
• Use pauses
• Loud and clear –
project your voice
• Articulate your
words carefully
and vary
intonation (rise
and fall in voice).
14. 4. You – verbal confidence
• Understand what you are communicating!
• Give the audience verbal cues – e.g. “I will now
talk about…”. “This is important because…”, “On the
other hand, …”, “Now that I have explained this, I want
to talk about…”
• Be clear and concise – think about
words/jargon
• Be complete – don’t miss out important
points
• Back up points with evidence and be
unambiguous
• Clarity – make fewer points well, not lots of
points badly.
15. A note on notes
• Notes affect verbal, visual and vocal confidence
• Avoid having a full script or lots of detailed notes
• Try some small cards with just the key points to help
you remember your structure
• Practise delivering your presentation with those ahead
of time.
19. Presenting online
Most of the advice in this guidance still applies, but also
think about
• Your environment – is your background appropriate?
• Lighting – make sure that you are well-lit and that the light isn’t
creating strong shadows: high the brightest light source in front
of you
• The positioning of your camera
• Ideally, it should be pointing straight at you, not up or down
• You probably want to make eye contact with it, so your audience will feel
that you’re connecting with them
• The balance between slides/visuals and the video of you talking –
your audience will need to see you (remember visual confidence)
• Your audio: use a good quality microphone and work in a quiet
space without background noise.
20. Have a go!
• Developing good presentation skills takes practice
• Start by preparing and delivering a 2.5 minute
presentation about a random topic
• You will deliver your presentation and your partner will
record it
• Look at your recording and reflect on how it went
• Use the checklist to help you – download from
www.garycwood.uk > Presentations, if you are online.