This document provides tips for creating a powerful presentation. It discusses the differences between a public speech and presentation, and provides advice on using signposting phrases, inversion, emphasis, alliteration, and tripling to structure a presentation and make it eloquent. Some key tips include using anecdotes or questions as hooks; incorporating demonstrations, humor and body language; and closing by summarizing main points and issuing a call to action.
The document describes different types of graphs used to represent data visually, including bar charts, pie charts, line graphs and tables. It also lists terms commonly used to describe trends in data, such as upward trends like increase and rise, and downward trends like decrease and decline. Finally, it provides examples of prepositions, approximations, verbs and phrases used to discuss and analyze graphs and data trends.
This document provides tips for creating a powerful presentation. It discusses the differences between a public speech and presentation, and provides advice on using signposting phrases, inversion, emphasis, alliteration, and tripling to structure a presentation and make it eloquent. Some key tips include using anecdotes or questions as hooks; incorporating demonstrations, humor and body language; and closing by summarizing main points and issuing a call to action.
The document describes different types of graphs used to represent data visually, including bar charts, pie charts, line graphs and tables. It also lists terms commonly used to describe trends in data, such as upward trends like increase and rise, and downward trends like decrease and decline. Finally, it provides examples of prepositions, approximations, verbs and phrases used to discuss and analyze graphs and data trends.