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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/28758
Title: You, your slides and your posters: allies or foes?
Authors: Bandler, John
Keywords: story;persuasion;bias;trust;impact;fear;first impressions;citation;subtext;metaphor;theatricality;authenticity;articulation;etiquette;awareness;being remembered;slide composition;theme;respecting your audience;elevator pitch;ethics;admitting setbacks;Three Minute Thesis;3MT;science communication
Publication Date: 4-Nov-2016
Publisher: Bandler Corporation
Citation: Bandler, John, “You, your slides and your posters: allies or foes?,” McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada, Nov. 4, 2016.
Abstract: In the first few blinks of an eye after you stumble onto the stage, or make an opening stab at your slides or poster, most of your audience has likely made up its mind—and you may not even have “started” your presentation. Perhaps the projector isn’t working, or your microphone has a mind of its own, or you apologize for not finding the room in time. Perhaps your visitor(s) caught you eating at your poster, or you just returned from chatting with a colleague across the room and found someone squinting at your fine print. Whatever the case, the rest of your performance serves as confirmation of your audience’s bias and first impressions. And besides you, your slides and your posters have their own agenda, subplot or series of subplots that reflect you, your expertise, your authenticity, your passion for your subject, and your attention to issues like relevance, context, clarity, citations, acknowledgments, respect, consistency of fonts, spelling, and those excruciating details in your visual aids that you can’t bear to leave out, and even their artistic composition. At your poster, you have just moments to pitch the importance of your work. As for your oral presentation, remember that your audience may have already sat through several presentations that day. I use my expertise as a writer and director of plays as well as a professor and entrepreneur (with experience at trade shows) to elaborate on effective presentations at a conference: embracing your audience’s needs; gaining trust; the importance of clarity, citation and acknowledgement; the importance of “story” and admitting setbacks; those crucial first few seconds, and your first few slides; and how to identify and avoid potential traps and pitfalls.
Description: Bandler delivered this presentation at McMaster University, Nov. 4, 2016, Carleton University, Nov. 8, 2016, and University of Waterloo, Nov. 18, 2016. It is based on workshop presentations given by Bandler at McMaster University, May 10, 2016, at IEEE MTT-S Int. Microwave Symp., San Francisco, CA, May 25, 2016, then at IEEE MTT-S Latin America Microwave Conf., Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, Dec 13, 2016. Available on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHNGwW2n8zc
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/28758
Appears in Collections:John Bandler Slides

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Bandler_You_Your_Slides_Your_Posters_McMaster_Carleton_Waterloo_November_2016.pdf
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