How House of Cards Can Help Your Presentation Skills
If you’re a fan of House of Cards, you’ve experienced the power of an acting technique called "Breaking the Fourth Wall" – where an actor suddenly...
There’s a fallacy in the world of presenting and demonstrating: delivering a good presentation should be a comfortable experience. That’s like a runner saying they are going to run a 10K without breathing hard. Runners “feel good” before the run (I’m doing the right thing) and when they finish (I’m glad I did that). But during the run? Nope. Doesn’t feel good.
Life as a presenter is the same. We can feel confident before our presentation (I’ve got a great story prepared) and after (I really connected with my audience). But during the presentation? Nope. That’s when we question the effectiveness of the techniques we are using. The weird thing about presenting is, that’s a good thing.
As presenters and demonstrators, we have to come to grips with two important realities:
Here are two practical recommendations:
Be an Audience Member:
Attend presentations where the techniques you are experimenting with are being used. Commit to being a true audience member. Don’t just be an observer; roll up your sleeves and be a full-on member of the audience. Now, having walked in the shoes of the audience, decide if the technique was effective or not. If it was, bring that realization to mind the next time you feel uncomfortable using the technique in your own presentation. Remember, it’s not how it feels to you as the presenter; it’s how it feels to the audience. Being a committed audience member gives you both data points.
Find the Outer Limit, then Come Back:
Remember you can always pull back a technique, but it makes no sense to do that until you find its outer limit from the perspective of the audience. If you don’t “push” a technique to an extreme, you will never gain the rewards of its effectiveness. Obviously, you don’t want to use a customer or prospect audience to determine this outer limit. You have to turn to your teammates.
So, find a trusted, open-minded colleague(s) and experiment with them. Together, practice your techniques fully in-role with one of you as presenter and the other(s) the audience. Push the technique to a point of discomfort; to that feeling you have gone “too far”. Discuss how each of you “felt” from your respective roles (presenter and audience member). Then pull back from there. Make sure each of you play both roles, paying special attention to how it feels as an audience member. A couple final thoughts: Take audience demographics and culture into consideration (company, geographic, generational).
Doing your in-role practice face-to-face certainly has its advantages. But don’t let that be the constraint. Web presenting tools can deliver a near-live experience for colleagues that do not office together. Also, recorded presentations enable colleagues with non-overlapping schedules to experiment together (e.g. time zone challenges).
Let me close by saying something that this may come across a little harsh: It is not about you as the presenter. It is about your audience. The closer you can connect with the experience of being an audience member, the better presenter you will be.
Because…
Great presenters are committed audience members.
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