1. What is presentation and public speaking
• Presentation skills are the abilities one needs in order to deliver compelling,
engaging, informative, educational and instructive presentation.
• A public speaking skill is any quality that helps candidates maintain a positive
presence, engage with their audience and communicate clearly to convey
their ideas.
• These skills allow public speakers to transform a standard presentation into
an engaging and exciting event for their guests or audiences.
13. What is Presentation?
• An excellent presentation is 38% your voice, 55% non-verbal
communication and just 7% your content. In other words, your
delivery matters even more than what you say, and this exercise
helps you refine it.
14. Activity 1
•30 Seconds Filler-Free
• Filler words like “uh” “um” and “y’know” not only make your talk more
difficult to listen to, but they also make you seem less prepared and
authoritative. For this exercise, record yourself giving a talk on any topic for
30 seconds, taking care to omit all filler words. Whenever you use a filler
word, start over and try again. Do this exercise ten times, filler-free.
15. Activity 2
•Make a Commercial
• Presentations are all about selling an idea, so you should practice the art of
sales and persuasion to be the best you can be. Choose an item in your home
and create a one-minute commercial about it. Record yourself saying what
makes it special, how it can enhance lives, and why everyone needs that item
in their corner.
• https://youtu.be/hg82w49GJcI
16. Activity 3
•Where Did That Name Come From?
• This is another exercise that’ll make you a better storyteller on stage. Pick an
item in your home, like a stapler, and tell a story about how it got its name.
The idea here isn’t to be accurate, so by all means, make something up; this is
just to get you in the habit of finding and developing interesting stories from
anything.
17. Activity 4
•Tell a Photo Story
• Storytelling is critical to engaging your audience and helping them retain the
information you’re sharing. To practice developing narratives, find an
interesting photo online and record yourself presenting a story about it.
Discuss what you think the backstory is, who the people are, their dreams,
their motivations, and anything else that’ll tell a compelling story about them.
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31. The Fear of Public Speaking
• The fear of public speaking is called glossophobia.It’s a recognized
psychological condition with symptoms such as:
• Sweating
• Accelerated heart rate
• Shaking
• Dizziness and lightheadedness
• Nausea
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33. Famous Book on Public Speaking
• Dale Carnegie wrote in the “Art of Public Speaking, 13th Edition”:
• “If you believe you will fail, there is no hope for you. You will.”
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35. Seven Important elements of Public speaking
• The seven elements in the communication process that apply to speech are:
1) speaker 2) listener, 3) message, 4) channel, 5) interference, 6) feedback,
and 7) situation. The speaker is the source of information and
communication and is the individual who delivers or expresses their idea on a
topic.
36. • How to Be a Better Public Speaker:
• Confidence is also crucial. Whenever we are uncertain of our abilities to do
good, we feel uncomfortable. So practice public talks, and practice a lot. In
the words of Dale Carnegie,
• “Practice in speaking before an audience will tend to remove all fear of
audiences, just as practice in swimming will lead to confidence and facility in
the water. You must learn to speak by speaking.”
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38. Five good presentation and public speaking
skills
• Tip 1: Maintain eye contact while presenting and smile. ...
• Tip 2: Use of gestures and facial expressions. ...
• Tip 3: Avoid distractions. ...
• Tip 4: Be prepared: Practice makes perfect. ...
• Tip 5: Be confident.
39. Activity
Continuous Story
• This is best done with a group of people. Each
person gets up and might speak for anywhere
from 20 seconds to a minute and they start
telling a story.
40. Activity 2
• Funny Image Game
• This is similar to the impromptu game, but basically what you do is you give
the speaker a funny image; you can find these easily just searching through
Google and you get them to talk about that image.
• You can pretend it’s their life experience and how this impacted my life or
they can talk about why this image is important and what this image means
or what’s the story behind this image.
41. Conclusion
• The conclusion is the last impression, and is often the lasting impression the
audience has of the speech.
• By ending on a powerful note, the audience is more likely to take away an
overall positive impression of the experience.
• Introductions and conclusions are very important parts of the speech.