Udemy - Presentation Skills
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25-10-2021, 00:28
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Created by Management Study Guide | Last updated 9/2019
Duration: 36m | 1 section | 5 lectures | Video: 1280x720, 44 KHz | 286 MB
Genre: eLearning | Language: English + Sub
Created by Management Study Guide | Last updated 9/2019
Duration: 36m | 1 section | 5 lectures | Video: 1280x720, 44 KHz | 286 MB
Genre: eLearning | Language: English + Sub
Let's unlock the door to Presentation Skills...
What you'll learn
Introduction - What & Why
Engaging Audience
Structuring Powerful Presentations
Dealing with Challenges
Delivering Effective Presentations
Requirements
No prior knowledge is required
Description
While hard work & good ideas are essential to success, ability to express those ideas and get others to join you is just as important. As you grow in your career, there will be times when you will need to face an audience. If this thought makes you nervous, you are not alone. Many speakers lack the skills & confidence to make effective presentations. But the Good News is - Skills required to give a good presentation can be developed.
Presentation is the practice of showing and explaining content of a topic to an audience or learner. In the business world, there are sales presentations, informational & motivational presentations, interviews, briefings, status reports, image-building, and training sessions. An effective Presentation is the positive experience that you create for the audience.
Based on the purpose of the presentation, each presentation type requires a specific technique to ensure they are understood & remembered by the audience. *Presentation Skills are very important as a person grows in his career.
There could be various types of Presentations depending on the purpose of the presentation.
*The four different types of Presentation are:
Sales / Persuasive
Informative
Training / Instructional
Arousing / Decision Making
The three core ingredients of any presentation are:
Content
Audience
Self
The worst audience [from the speaker's point of view] is a tired audience. That audience needs President Reagan's rule for after-dinner speeches:; 12 minutes, a few jokes, and sit down before the audience stands up
Who this course is for:TrainersTeachers/FacultiesSpeakersHuman Resource PersonnelManagers
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