how to give a talk (that doesn’t put your audience to sleep) ramesh raskar mit media lab
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How to give a talk (that doesn’t put your audience to sleep)
Ramesh RaskarMIT Media Lab
Overview Slide
• I will start with a statement that is too general • Mention terms I haven’t explained yet• I will talk about related work about topic you
don’t know yet• Tell you more about things you have no idea• I will show you results after you have already
lost me• I will conclude with conclusion
Getting Started
• Don’t start with an OVERVIEW slide• Start with a question or motivating example• Give the zeroth order idea in one sentence • Show the ‘magic’
– Conclusion goes first !– Make the audience wonder how you will get there– then on the next 2 slides after magic trick
• Gauge your audience and adapt. If you're not good at gauging, just stick with your original presentation plan.
Curve of Excitement
Time (or Slide #)
Audience Interest
People are excited even before you start because you have a great title/abstract
You have shown the ‘magic’ with a
question or motivating
example
Nitty gritty of the math/algo/implementation. You are
losing some people but its ok.
Cool results
Teaser results, people are
wondering how you got there
‘Whats in it for me’ You give
audience something they
can use with ‘Future Directions’
But there is more. Wait and see how
next year I will show you more
cool stuff. Go see my website.
Curve of Boredome
Time (or Slide #)
Audience Interest
No clue what the title/abstract, jargon words
Your Intended Curve
Real CurvePeople are excited anyway
Start with meaningless ‘Overview’ slide
Describe theory
Describe second order details
Share results which you were trying to keep secret till the end
Discuss future directions
Related work
Too late to share those cool results
We don’t know the context of the theory
Audience is lost because they don’t know ‘why’
The S curve of excitement
• The flipped S-curve of audience excitement vs. time line of your presentation. –
• First few units on the time scale should have content that causes maximum excitement.
• Then audience excitement level goes down as you get into details and explanations. It stays a constant low for the duration of your explanation
• The ending should be 'wow' again. • In essence, the audience is really listening to you only at the
beginning (and bit at the end) unless you engage them in an interactive activity or have a unusual happening in the middle.
Motivation
Motivate the context or application Why is what you are doing important? Why should people care? This could be audience background based
Setting up the problem/approach
• Overview diagram of the project should be at the beginning and not at the end.
Blank slides force people to focus on the speaker. You could also hit 'B' in Microsoft power point to make the screen go blank. ‘B’ again to show your presentation.
If you are digressing from the slide, audience may get confused by what is on your slide. Hit ‘B’.
• Have a photo/figure/sketch on every slide
• The image can be unrelated• If you run out of ideas for a
photo on each slide, just search for the keyword online (here I searched ‘unrelated;)
Last Slide
• Never end with a ‘Thank you’ slide !– This is the slide that will be up for a long time during Q&A– Last slide should be
• Summary of your talk• Website for further info• State problem. State conclusion. Contact info. Nice pictures
– Don’t end with Acknowledgement slide• Appreciated but not useful to most of your audience• Ack slide can be one before ‘Summary’
– How to encourage questions in Q&A• This slides should have take home points and conclusions• State some open questions at the end of the last slide.
Thank you Slide
• Never end with a ‘Thank you’ slide !• Last slide should be – Summary of your talk– website for further info
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