HOW TO GIVE A GOOD PRESENTATION
WHY BOTHER GIVING A GOOD TALK?
First impressions matter! Theres no point doing good work if others dont know about it or cant understand what you did. Good practice for a teaching career! Good practice for any career! Helps you sort out what youve done, and understand it better yourself.
TYPES OF PRESENTATIONS
Quick 1-minute what I do talk 25 minute conference paper presentation Project presentation Thesis defense Job talk What they have in common: Never enough time to talk about everything All of them reflect on you & need practice/polish Focus on a clear goal and message.
TOP 10 POINTERS FOR A GOOD TALK
1.
Be neat Avoid trying to cram too much into one slide
Dont be a slave to your slides.
2.
3.
Be brief
use keywords rather than long sentences
4.
Avoid covering up slides Use a
5.
large font
TOP 10 POINTERS FOR A GOOD TALK
6.
Use color to emphasize Use illustrations to get across key concepts
May include limited animation
7.
8.
Make eye contact Be ready to skip slides if time is short Practice !!
9.
10.
A TYPICAL PROJECT TALK OUTLINE
Title/author/affiliation (1 slide) Who am I? Forecast (1 slide) Give gist of problem attacked and What is the problem? insight found Outline (1 slide) Background
Motivation and Problem Why is it important? Statement (1-2 slides) What have others done? Related Work (0-1 slides) Methods (1-3 slides) What is my approach? Explain your approach; illustrate algorithm
A TYPICAL PROJECT TALK OUTLINE
Results (2-6 slides) Present key results and key insights. This is main body of the talk, but dont try to show ALL results. Summary (1 slide) 3 Things to Remember! Future Work (0-1 slides) Backup Slides (0-3 slides) Optionally have a few slides ready to answer expected questions.
OTHER THINGS TO CONSIDER
Oral communication is different from written communication
Keep it simple and focus on a few key points Repeat key insights
Be sensitive to your audience
The same talk may need to be adjusted for a different audience
Make the audience want to learn more Handling Q&A is as important as the formal talk itself
HOW TO IMPROVE?
Practice by yourself Practice in front of friends Practice in front of a webcam
Watch footage later alone as painful as that may be!
Take note of effective speakers and adopt their successful habits
THE BIGGER PICTURE: COMMUNICATION AND YOUR CAREER
Expressing yourself technically helps you make and use professional connections wisely You are joining a long-term community Communicate your ideas to forge mentoring and technical relationships in the service of professional goals