Audience analysis
Presentations should always be tailored to your audience. Your knowledge of the audience to which you will speak is an important factor in the success of your presentations. When you understand your audience, their existing knowledge of your topic, and their desires, you can present from their point of view and give examples that relate to their interests. Audiences respond more favorably to presentations they believe are designed for them.
When preparing a presentation, you first need to do an audience analysis by working through the following checklist and then tailor your presentation to the findings:
What is their background (e.g., educational level, experience, gender, cultural influences, and age)?
Why is your audience present?
What knowledge does your audience have of your subject?
What is the audience’s consensus attitude toward your subject?
What is your audience’s attitude toward you personally?
Is there a particular group of audience members that your presentation needs to be geared toward?
What are the group dynamics of your audience?
Who are the leaders in your audience?
What will be the size of your audience?
How much time will you have to present?
Self-analysis
After finishing your audience analysis, you should perform a self-analysis to answer the following three questions:
What is your real knowledge of your subject?
Is your preparation time adequate for the type of presentation that you plan to deliver?
What is your real interest in the subject, the occasion, and the audience?
Once you have completed this self-analysis, collect your thoughts about the presentation by using the following system:
Make notes of what you already know about your subject
Make a list of subject information that you are lacking
Research and gather your missing information
Focus your research to:
Prove your points
Clarify your points
Add interest to your points
Gather a variety of information to use in your presentation
Examples
Quotations
Stories
Comparisons/Contrasts
Statistics
Audio-visual supports
Occasion-analysis
Your third and final presentation development analysis step is to perform an occasion-analysis by finding the answers to the following questions:
What is the purpose of the meeting where you will speak?
What is the location of the meeting?
What facilities will be provided to you?
What is the meeting agenda and your slot on the agenda?
What is your exit strategy after you make your presentation?
In order to be fully prepared for the logistics of your presentation, complete the following arrangements checklist before each presentation:
Contact persons name and contact information (i.e., phone, fax, pager, cell phone numbers)
Clear directions to the speaking location
Written confirmation of the time of your presentation
Travel arrangements
Parking instructions
Availability of speaking tools (e.g., podium; computer, power supply; microphone, lighting)
Seating arrangement of the room
Sound system availability
Water or beverages
Restroom location
Your introduction
The procedure to handle questions
Expectations following your presentation (e.g., meetings, reception, press statement)
Any necessary additional arrangements
Organizational outline
The last step of your presentation development is to prepare your organizational outline using the following format:
Introduction
Allocate 15% of your presentation time
Capture audiences attention
Preview your presentation by telling them what you will tell them
Body
Allocate 75% of your presentation time
Make no more than three main points
Arrange your main points logically in one of the following patterns
Time
Topic
Problem/solution
Support your main points with facts
Conclusion
Allocate 10% of your presentation time
Review main points by telling the audience what you told them
Ask audience to do something in response to your presentation
Close your presentation with a memorable statement
Lectures in PGS Programming
15 years ago