Who are we talking to?
Colleagues? Strangers? Existing or potential customers? A mix? Do we know them and do they know us (what’s our relationship)? Understanding (or researching) the demographics of our audience will help us to pitch information at the right level and to know when to avoid (or occasionally embrace) jargon.
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On presenting, appealing, persuading, influencing and communicating, and on seeing presentations as an ebb and flow caused by our own gravity, a tide under our control and to our service, not the other way around.
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What do we intend to talk about?
To answer this we should think about what our audience needs or what they’re hoping for. Most people will be thinking WIIFM (what’s in it for me?) when they’re listening.
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Even the most conscientious among us occasionally fails to apologize. When this happens, it’s usually for one of two reasons:
It can be a challenge to make a potential partner agree to collaborate with us. If it is a known acquaintance or someone who owes us a favour, the task becomes a bit easier. If there isn’t any strong, pre-existing relationship, we have to demonstrate logic, rationality and mutual benefits,
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