Effective presentation strategies
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Transcript of Effective presentation strategies
Government Engineering CollegeBhavnagar
Project given by,
Dr. Chetan Trivedi
Dr. Himanshu Shrivastav
EFFECTIVE PRESENTATION STRATEGIES
PRESENTED BY:DHAVAL VALA (140210125122)RAJAI BHAVIN (130210125092)
VALVI RINKESH (140210125123)VASARA TRILOK (140210125124)
VAVADIYA ASHISH (140210125125)
Communication
the imparting or exchanging of information by speaking, writing, or using some other medium.
Organize your presentation into Three Major parts:
Introduction Main Body
◦Chronological◦Categorical◦Cause and Effect◦Problem-solution
Conclusions
There are four modes of delivery which can be used for making Presentations:
Extemporaneous
Manuscript
Impromptu
Memorization
KINESICS
Kinesics is the name given to the study of the body’s physical movements. In other words, it is the way the body communicates without words, i.e., through various movements of its parts.
E.g. Nodding your head, blinking your eyes, waving the hands.
Kinesics
Gestures Postures Facial expressions Eye contact Personal
appearance
PROXEMICS
Proxemics is the study of physical space in interpersonal relations. Space is related to behavioural norms. The way people use space tells you a lot about them. Speaker should use the psychological power of this space to your advantage.
Edward T. Hall in his ‘The Hidden Dimension’ divides space into four distinct zones:
Intimate
Personal
Social
Public
PARALINGUISTICS Paralinguistics features are non-verbal vocal cues that help you to give urgency to your voice. Your voice is your trademark; it is that part of yourself that adds human touch to your words.
Below mentioned points can be considered as characteristics of Paralinguistics
Quality:
Quality is a characteristic thatdistinguishes one voice fromanother.
Pace/Rate:
Rate is the number of words whichyou speak per minute. The normalrate is from 120 to 150 words perminute.
Articulation:
Speakers should be careful not toslop, chop, truncate, or omitsounds between words orsentences.
Pronunciation:
If articulation means speaking out all the sounds distinctly, then pronunciation requires us to speak out sounds in way that is generally accepted. The best way is to follow British Received Pronunciation.
Voice Modulation:
While intonation refers to the tonalvariations, modulation pertains tothe way we regulate, vary, or adjustthe tone, pitch, and volume of thesound or speaking voice.
Pauses:
A pause is a short silence flankedby words. A pause in speaking letsthe listener reflect on the messageand digest it accordingly.