This link has been bookmarked by 17 people . It was first bookmarked on 24 Mar 2008, by Vicki Davis.
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28 Mar 10
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sticky, compelling, and memorable messages and ideas share six common attributes: Simplicity, Unexpectedness, Concreteness, Credibility, Emotions, and Stories. Ask yourself how your presentations rate for these elements
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good presenting is like good writing, you’ve got to pare it down and dump the superfluous and the non-essential. But since we are so close to the material it is hard for us to see what works and what does not, or what is repetitive, etc. This is why you cannot only rehearse alone
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Turn off the computer, grab some paper and a pencil, and find someplace quiet. Think of the audience. What is it they need? What is it you want to say that they need to hear. Identify what’s important and what is not. You can’t say everything in a twenty-minute talk
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The problem with most presentations is that people try to include too much. You can go deep or you can go wide, but you can’t really do both
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By the way, if you ask the audience to bear with you as you try to make the computer work, you might as well stick a fork in it because you are done
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13 Jul 09
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17 Mar 09
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24 Mar 08
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04 Feb 08
Raúl Hernández GonzálezUna entrevista acerca de cómo hacer mejores presentaciones en público
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03 Feb 08
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27 Jan 08
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19 Jan 08
jose muriloAll hail Garr Reynolds! He has written the definitive book about making great presentations: Presentation Zen: Simple Ideas on Presentation Design and Delivery (Voices That Matter).
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17 Jan 08
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15 Jan 08
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14 Jan 08
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