Playbook for a Successful Presentation: The 8 Basic Components of Every Great Speech
Playbook for a Successful Presentation: The 8 Basic Components of Every Great Speech from Matteo Cassese
Transcript
- 1. LIKE THE magic behind the presentations you SHARE REMEMBER PLAY BOOK
- 2. There’s a common blueprint behind all the best presentations. Unforgettable TED talks, keynotes that model the business landscape, speeches that change history.
- 3. I've come to understand this universal playbook after a few years of study. And now is the right time to share it with the world.
- 4. I'm Matteo, by the way. I have a thing for presentations.
- 5. I'm Matteo, by the way. I have a thing for presentations. Give me 5 minutes and I will give you the 8 steps of the journey from presentation ignorant to presentation overlord.
- 6. Before we start, you can always download this presentation at preshero.co/magic You will receive the presentation in PDF format + a coupon to get 10% off any of my presentation courses. THIS IS A LINK!
- 7. 1
- 8. TELL YOUR AUDIENCE WHO YOU ARE
- 9. Does your audience know you?
- 10. even if the M.C. introduced you Tell them your name
- 11. Tell them your name Even if most everyone knows you
- 12. There’s always someone who doesn’t ! ! !! ! ? Even if most everyone knows you
- 13. Now imagine that your presentation is just beginning
- 14. What’s your job?
- 15. You need to motivate your audience What’s your job?
- 16. Stay between 5 and 20 words. Provide a bio.
- 17. Provide a bio. Make it easy for your audience to locate you
- 18. will highlight your humanity and make you easier to relate with Your name and your bio
- 19. 2
- 20. TELL YOUR AUDIENCE WHY YOU ARE THERE
- 21. What is your motivation for presenting? Make it clear.
- 22. Show how your perspective is unique
- 23. about the topic Show how passionate you are
- 24. If you care
- 25. Your audience will care as well If you care
- 26. It drives your audience’s motivation Your motivation is contagious
- 27. Sign an agreement with your audience
- 28. by revealing the structure and timing of your presentation
- 29. “During the talk I will tell you 3 stories that will last 5 minutes each” For example:
- 30. If your audience feels in control They are more relaxed and more open to your content
- 31. 3
- 32. TELL WHY THEY ARE THERE
- 33. Your audience showed up
- 34. The reason to attend was strong enough! ?
- 35. The reason to attend was strong enough! Now they need the motivation to follow through till the end ?
- 36. OUTCOMEProvide a sample of the outcome OUTCOME
- 37. Show, don’t tell!
- 38. What will they gain? + + + + + + + +
- 39. How will they be transformed? + + + + + + + +
- 40. Do it early in your presentation
- 41. 4
- 42. TRANSFORM YOUR AUDIENCE
- 43. Your presentation is about a transformation
- 44. The transformation may be shifting the point of view of your audience
- 45. Getting them to see something up close
- 46. Introduce them to a new concept
- 47. Changing the way they feel about your topic
- 48. Every presentation is about a transformation
- 49. You create a new concept in the minds of the audience MARKETING PITCHING
- 50. Your audience is transformed by learning TEACHING TRAINING
- 51. NO TRANSFORMATION NO PRESENTATION
- 52. BEGINNING END What is the transformation? The one thing that changes between the beginning and the end of your presentation
- 53. Your whole presentation is about a change BEGINNING END
- 54. 5
- 55. EVERYONE REACTS DIFFERENTLY
- 56. Your audience is made of individuals
- 57. And that’s fine! Each individual in your audience will react to your material in their own unique way
- 58. Every single reaction in every single moment is not so important
- 59. How do you please everyone?
- 60. YOU DON’T! How do you please everyone?
- 61. How do you please everyone? YOU DON’T! And don’t ever try to please everyone at the same time!
- 62. Give something to everyone. You should know your audience. How do you please everyone?
- 63. Your presentation has a hidden goal
- 64. Transforming your audience into a group is the hidden goal of any presentation But how would you achieve that?
- 65. How do you transform your audience into a group? The individuals in your audience become a group by experiencing your presentation together
- 66. They will progressively have a similar way of seeing, feeling about and relating to your topic
- 67. Until they react in unison
- 68. 6
- 69. MARK THE MOST IMPORTANT CONCEPT
- 70. If our presentation was a mountain we would be at the peak
- 71. In storytelling terms this is a climax
- 72. It’s the high point of your presentation
- 73. When you provide the most insight.
- 74. It’s the most transformative moment
- 75. Your audience instinctively understands this moment motivation reaction peak BUILDUP CLIMAX
- 76. Your audience will pay more attention to what you say
- 77. They understand something else...
- 78. They understand something else... vThe peak is the beginning of the end
- 79. Now that the energy is at the highest level...
- 80. ...it’s time for you to leave the stage.
- 81. 7
- 82. PROVIDE A SUMMARY
- 83. Now you need an effective way of ending your presentation
- 84. A summary helps your audience go back to their day, changed by the core transformation
- 85. A summary is the only moment when you’re allowed to use bullet points
- 86. A summary is the only moment when you’re allowed to use bullet points But a summary doesn’t need to be just a bulleted list...
- 87. Take your audience flying above your topic
- 88. Give them a bird’s eye view of your topic
- 89. Show how much you’ve covered
- 90. CLIMAX SUMMARY Provide a summary after the climax
- 91. CLIMAX SUMMARY to benefit from the excitement of your audience
- 92. You capitalize on this level of excitement in two ways: It will be easier for your audience to remember what you say to make sense of what you say
- 93. 8
- 94. PROVIDE ACTIONABLE TO-DOS
- 95. Translate the wisdom from your presentation into something practical
- 96. It’s ideally something that your audience can apply in their life It should become a habit.
- 97. It’s a gift, from you to your audience
- 98. E’ aperto il dibattito... come rendiamo data, meaning, memory e action? Your audience can make sense of your data and transform it into meaning. i DATA i MEANINGThey may even remember your data, but... MEMORY i
- 99. i MEANING MEMORY i ACTION E’ aperto il dibattito... come rendiamo data, meaning, memory e action? If you want to make sure they will remember what you said, transform your data into action.
- 100. Actionable to-dos will cement your presentation in their memory
- 101. You have reached the end of your presentation.
- 102. You can end with a business related call to action. You can end on a hope or a wish. You can end with a quote or word of wisdom.
- 103. You are allowed to ASK for something back. If you gave a lot away during your presentation
- 104. CLIMAX SUMMARY TO DOS ENDING
- 105. WHO YOU ARE WHY YOU ARE THERE WHY THEY ARE THERE CLIMAX SUMMARY TO DOS ENDING
- 106. WHO YOU ARE WHY YOU ARE THERE WHY THEY ARE THERE TRANSFORMATION REACTIONS CLIMAX SUMMARY TO DOS ENDING
- 107. YOU MADE IT
- 108. You just learned the core structure of all successful presentations. I’m so proud!
- 109. <------------------ contenuto ------------------> <------------------ eventuale box ------------------> What’s next? Getting even deeper into structuring, designing and delivering presentations with the Presentation Hero Academy.
- 110. Discover the most innovative and effective presentation training system waiting for you at: preshero.co ANOTHER LINK!
- 111. And if you download this presentation you get 10% off any Presentation Hero Academy course. preshero.co/magic DUH...
- 112. One more thing...
- 113. This presentation is now a Creative Commons content under the Attribution license. Matteo Cassese Presentation Hero Academy preshero.co
- 114. This means that you can build upon it, remix it, use it in your classes, publish it in your books and blogs. You can even create your own course based upon it. All you need to do is credit me, the Academy and link to preshero.co
- 115. Thank you, I appreciate you reading this far! You can follow me on twitter. I’m @matteoc
- 116. preshero.co preshero.co/magic @matteoc
- 117. PHOTOS - Creative Commons – Attribution (CC BY 2.0) Project 365 #169 by Pete on Flickr Public Domain Eiffel Tower Construction from 1889 World Fair from Public Domain Archive Public Domain Utenriksminister Trygve Lie besøker Sverige by National Archives of Norway from Flickr My New Plates by Tracy Hunters from Flickr Time is ticking out by mao_lini from Flickr Coquille d'escargot by Jrm Llvr on Flickr Splish by Jez Elliott on Flickr Structure de passerelle en acier by Frédéric BISSON on Flickr ICONS - Creative Commons – Attribution (CC BY 3.0) Crowd designed by Alex Kwa from the Noun Project Projection Screen designed by Garrett Knoll from the Noun Project Frame designed by irene hoffman from the Noun Project Transform designed by Daniel Hug from the Noun Project Independent designed by Griffin Mullins from the Noun Project Picture designed by Chris Clausen from the Noun Project Compass designed by Jens Windolf from the Noun Project Compass Rose designed by Proletkult Graphik from the Noun Project Book designed by Edward Boatman from the Noun Project CREDITS Smile by Nazer Khalid on Flickr Lexington Elementary Orchestra by Juhan Sonin on Flickr your choice! (cc) by Martin Fisch on Flickr Hide And Seek by Emilio Labrador on Flickr Public Domain Sherlock Holmes from Anglotopia Ovation by Ben+Sam on Flickr Hang Glider Jockey's Ridge by bobistraveling on Flickr Tandem flying by Ben Stanfield on Flickr
- 118. PHOTOS - Creative Commons – Attribution (CC BY 2.0) Ka’ena Point by Matt Bonam on Flickr A Mercators Chart by maps.bpl.org on Flickr Polka! by nicolaitan on Flickr It's a No! by smlp.co.uk on Flickr Snapseed Parashute by rodtuk on Flickr Sarangkot Flight by Dhilung Kirat on Flickr CREDITS
- 119. Matteo Cassese Presentation Hero Academy preshero.co