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From
www.emaze.com
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May 25, 12:08 PM
Emaze vision – to change the way people create presentations through a simple, fully automated process that generate powerful and engaging showcases. Via Baiba Svenca, Gust MEES
Jeff Domansky's insight:
On first look, this tool is definitely worth exploring.
Louise Robinson-Lay's comment,
May 25, 6:30 PM
Haiku Deck is currently my favorite. It has great features.
Louise Robinson-Lay's comment,
May 25, 6:30 PM
Haiku Deck is currently my favorite. It has great features.
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Jeff Domansky's insight:
Definitely qualifies as a "cool tool." Well worth experimenting and the digital voices are getting better and more realistic all the time.
Mats Öström's curator insight,
March 29, 3:15 AM
Har inte testat, men från Robins insight verkar det vara en riktigt cool produkt. Måste testa själv någon dag
Anita Rissler's curator insight,
April 2, 6:36 AM
Om du inte tycker om att lägga på din egen röst på ett bildspel med förklaringar, ska du absolut titta på den svenskutvecklade gratistjänsten SlideTalk.net. Idén är att man skriver text till varje bild som behöver förklaras. Sedan finns det sju svenska röster att välja bland som läser upp texterna (totalt finns 70 röster). Du kan påverka röstläget, lägga in pauser, välja snabbhet på talet och blanda manliga och kvinnliga röster.
Patricia Christian's curator insight,
April 7, 11:07 PM
Presentation using high quality voiceover which may be uploaded on You Tube. SlideTalk.net Show Describe and Share Delete the scoop?
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Avoid making a great presentation by following these 11 tips from MarketingProfs for bad presentation slides... or do the opposite and have rocking good ones.
Jeff Domansky's insight:
Very entertaining set of slides and presentation and speaking lessons. Delete the scoop?
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Everything about your physical presence should convey the sense that you feel comfortable being in control of the room.
Your posture contributes mightily to that impression.
[Speaking tips you can use from Brad Phillips - JD] Delete the scoop?
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Everyone would agree that Steve Jobs was a pretty good presenter. But he is said to have practiced two to three full time days before a major product launch speech. Two to three full time days! I bet if you put in that effort before your next presentation, you would be pretty close.
It may sound counter–intuitive, but you actually need to know your story inside out to be really spontaneous. There is no such thing as “winging it”. Your audience will notice, you will use “uh” and “oh” all the time, the key lines will not come out the way they should, you will repeat yourself all the time.... Delete the scoop?
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The Art Of Storytelling In Business Communications And Public Relations...
It’s hard to beat the TED Conferences when it comes to oral storytelling.
It turns out the speakers – or the folks helping the speakers behind the scenes – craft the titles of their talks with the same quest for attention. Ten of my favorites... Delete the scoop?
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Here are 21 questions you should ask yourself before every speech or presentation you ever deliver.
This post could easily have included 137 questions, but I’ve limited it to 21 questions you should ask before every speech or presentation.... Delete the scoop?
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Many presentation coaches say that PowerPoint makes most speakers look worse. But new research challenges that assertion. Who's right?
PowerPoint is an overused device used primarily by lazy speakers who are unable or unwilling to put together a more compelling speech.
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In today's guest post, you'll learn six great ways to be funny in your next speech - without any of the negative consequences humor can bring.
Here’s the insider secret that comedians don’t want you to know—delivering a line isn’t that difficult. Al Gore, who no one would mistake for a stand-up comic, opens his ‘An Inconvenient Truth’ presentation with a fabulous joke: “My name is Al Gore. I used to be the next president of the United States of America.” To paraphrase Larry the Cable Guy: “I don’t care what your politics are; that’s funny!” I promise you, if Al Gore can do it, you can do it.
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Public speakers can learn at least four things from stand-up comedians. You don't have to be a pro - or go for laughs - to learn important lessons from comics.
According to surveys, people are more afraid of public speaking than dying. And, we’re not just talking about a conference with 500 people. We find employees are just as afraid to present to five people as they are to 500!
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It is simply impossible to become a great leader without being a great communicator. I hope you noticed the previous sentence didn't refer to being a great talker - big difference. Delete the scoop?
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One of the most important sentences in any speech often comes at the very beginning when the speaker says, “I’m excited to be here.”...
But the majority of the time, the speaker utters that line without any discernible excitement. They’re saying that they’re happy to be there, but their voice and body language sends the exact opposite message.... Delete the scoop?
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...Obviously, you have to cover the basics: create compelling content; find out who will attend and why; understand the role each person will play; and learn what the participants think about the topic.First, define your ideal outcome. What result do you envision.
Be sure you don't overlook three other aspects of your preparation, though.... Delete the scoop?
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There is plenty of advice out there on how to create a great presentation. Most of it centers on two pretty common pieces of advice: Tell more stories.Use bigger fonts. Neither is always easy to do, but the more events I attend – the more I realize a single fact that still manages to surprise me about why people do (or don’t) connect with you as a speaker.
Having a good story or great visuals is not enough. Via Gregg Morris
Jeff Domansky's insight:
Great tips for speakers and presenters.
Judith van Praag's comment,
March 16, 1:48 PM
Having witnessed two academic lecturers within two days, neither of whom could keep my attention, I'm once again convinced that a great story and no visuals is a no-no for today's audience. Academia looking down on storifying their material miss an opportunity. Looking down on New Media is downright "uneducated". This is a bit beside the point made above, the timing triggers this comment.
Judith van Praag's comment,
March 16, 1:49 PM
PS The link leads to incomplete post, perhaps the author took down the rest, or subscription is necessary?
Gregg Morris's comment,
March 16, 2:17 PM
Hi Judith, I just checked and the post is totally different than it was yesterday. Rohit must have modified it for one reason or another.
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Susan Cain is the author of the New York Times bestselling book QUIET: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking, which is being translated into 30 languages. Her record-smashing TED talk has been viewed more than 3 million times and was named by Bill Gates as one of his all-time favorite TED talks and by the New Yorker magazine as one of five key talks. Susan is developing an online course on Public Speaking for Introverts (you can go here for more info). Here are six of her favorite tips....
Jeff Domansky's insight:
I particularly liked the Lady Gaga's a quote: “When I wake up in the morning, I feel just like any other insecure 24-year old girl. Then I say, ‘Bitch, you’re Lady Gaga, you get up and walk the walk today.’” Delete the scoop?
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A discussion of the necessary bond between storytelling and statistics, and how we can exploit the connection in our presentations.
[There are some very useful ideas for using storytelling to make facts and figures come alive ~ Jeff] Via José Carlos Delete the scoop?
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Sparksheet is all about big ideas, but sometimes we need someone to tell us how the smaller things are done. Presentation guru Nancy Duarte offers some tips for engaging senior executives. Delete the scoop?
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PowToon aims to enable you to create cartoon-style, animated presentation and video clips without professional illustration and motion graphics software. I test drove the beta version.
When you look at many cartoon-style videos you see that they are actually not that complicated from a graphics point of view. Usually they involve a number of scenes (slides), they use static characters, basic entrance, exit, and emphasize animations and sometimes a cute hand that puts items on the slide, all accompanied by some simple music....
[Cool tool worth a test drive - JD] Delete the scoop?
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We didn’t go into business to hate talking about our businesses. We went into business for freedom, flexibility, unlimited income potential, a way to impact the world around us while making money and achieving financial success. The classic “30 Second Elevator Speech” in my humble opinion, is everything but freedom. It’s a structure that nobody likes and everyone dreads....
[A fresh look at elevator pitches by Nancy Marmolejo - JD]
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Introverts can seize the microphone -- and bring the house down. By Susan Cain...
[10 great speaking tips and How to thrive in a world that can't stop talking - JD ] Delete the scoop?
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Snapseed is a powerful yet simple photo editing tool for all platforms including iPad, iPone, Mac and Windows. Very modest cost and you may never use photoshop for photo editing again. - JD Snapseed Home page and demo: http://www.snapseed.com/home/ Delete the scoop?
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From
www.ragan.com
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May 1, 2012 9:56 PM
Don't cram a lot of data into your presentation because you think your audience will read it later. They won't.
If you cram a lot of detail and data into your slides and expect your audience to absorb it later when you circulate your presentation, beware.
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The final part of the series teaches you to open a speech through humor, by referring to the conference, or by referring to a newsworthy item.
Over the past two days, you’ve learned that the opening minutes of a presentation are often the most important. And as you know by now, the authors of The Definitive Book of Body Language have found that the audience forms 60 – 80 percent of its impression of a speaker within the first four minutes.
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When telling stories, don't say things such as, the man was very rich. How old was he? How rich was he? Those abstractions kill an otherwise good story. Delete the scoop?
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Joe Pulizzi shares 15 public speaking and presentation tips that will make all the difference in getting your message to stick.
After my blog and my books, public speaking events have probably led more to growing the business than anything else I’ve done. Below are some of my presentation speaking tips that I try to integrate into every presentation I do (in no particular order). I hope they are helpful to you....
[Really great speakinbg tips from content marketing expert Joe Pulizzi - JD] Delete the scoop?
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