Today I am back in Redmond, Wa. delivering another Extreme Presentation workshop at Microsoft. I always enjoy debating the causes of (and solutions to) "Death by PowerPoint" with the makers of PowerPoint themselves, and today was no exception.
The question of audience focus came up a lot today, which reminded me that I'd promised to go into more detail about the seven deadly mistakes presenters make, mistakes that result from being presenter-focused, not audience-focused.
Here are the first two:
Mistake #1: Setting presentation objectives in terms of what the presenter intends to do.
Your objectives should not be about what you—the presenter—intend to do in your presentation. Those are not objectives; they’re an agenda. Your objectives should be about how your audience will change as a result of your presentation: how will they think and act differently after they leave the room. If their thinking or behavior is not changed as a result of your presentation, then why are you wasting their time—or yours?
Mistake #2: Focusing on what you want from your audience.
Most of the time, you deliver a presentation because you want something from your audience. You are selling a product or an idea; why else would you go through the bother of writing and delivering a presentation? But that’s your motivation for being there. What is their motivation for listening to you? The only reason your audience is listening to you is they are hoping for some information that will help them solve one of the many problems they are facing in life. If you want to capture and keep their attention, focus your entire presentation deliberately and undividedly on solving an important problem of theirs.
More to come.