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GUIDELINES FOR
PREPARING EFFECTIVE PRESENTATIONS
A subcommittee was appointed
at the April, 1999 ENAR Business Meeting to compile guidelines for effective
presentations in response to comments about how badly many speakers presented
their papers. The problem usually was not with the subject matter, but
rather with how it was presented. The committee was charged with laying
out specific things speakers could do to make their presentations more
effective. The attached guidelines represent several rounds of thoughtful
comment and revision by the committee and ENAR leadership. While we think
they’re good, we don’t claim that they’re
perfect. Consequently, we
welcome your suggestions for improving their effectiveness. Please e-mail
your comments to Larry Gould at goulda@merck.com.
The committee consists of A. Lawrence Gould, Chair; Howard Kaplan; Peter
A. Lachenbruch; Katherine Monti.
Table of Contents
1. Background
2. Preparing
the presentation
2.1 Content organization
2.2 Preparing intelligible displays
2.3 Timing your talk
2.4 Loose ends
3. The
presentation
1. Background
The purpose of a presentation
is communication. These guidelines describe techniques by which presentations
can communicate ideas more effectively. The principles apply regardless
of whether the time for the presentations is presentations is short (less
than 30 minutes) or long. Poorly prepared displays (slides or overhead
transparencies) and poor delivery plague many technical sessions at statistical
meetings. The speaker often speaks too quickly or too quietly, or uses
displays that cannot be read clearly. Presentations often are “data dumps”
of the presenter’s work, accessible only to the few other researchers in
the room currently working on the same problem. Members of the audience
not familiar with the research area usually leave the session befuddled,
dazed, and annoyed rather than enlightened and engaged.
Complaints about poor presentations
have been received for decades and continue to be received. The ASA has
offered a short-course on presentation for many years, and routinely sends
“tips” to speakers to promote effective presentations. Unfortunately, these
recommendations often are ignored. An ad hoc committee was formed at the
April 1999 ENAR business meeting, to address this persistent and pervasive
problem.
Effective presentations make
learning and technical advances more likely. They also enhance the perception
of the presenter in the eyes of the professional community. Boring, ineffective
presentations are not paid much attention and the presenters often are
quickly forgotten, especially by planners of future invited sessions.
2. Preparing
the presentation
2.1 Content
organization
1. Your presentation will
be most effective when the audience walks away understanding the five
things any listener to a presentation really cares about:
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What is the problem and why
is it a problem?
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What has been done about it
before?
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What is the presenter doing
(or has done) about it?
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What additional value does the
presenter’s approach provide?
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Where do we go from here?
2. Carefully budget your
time, especially for short (e.g., 15 minute) presentations:
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Allow enough time to describe
the problem you address clearly enough for the audience to appreciate the
value of your contribution. This usually will take more than 30 seconds.
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Leave enough time to present
your own contribution clearly. This almost never will require all of the
allotted time.
3. Put your material
in a context that the audience can relate to. It’s a good idea to aim your
presentation to an audience of colleagues who are not familiar with your
research area. Your objective is to communicate an appreciation of the
importance of your work, not just to lay the results out. You always can
and should give references and a way to contact you so those interested
in the theoretical details can follow up with the literature or with you.
2.2 Preparing
intelligible displays
Here are some suggestions
that will make your displays more effective. They’re not hard and fast
rules, but you ought to have pretty solid reasons for not following them
because they are known to work well. These suggestions apply to material
created manually as well as by computer.
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Use at least a 24-point
font so everyone in the room can read your material.
Unreadable material is worse than useless – it inspires a negative attitude
by the audience to your work and, ultimately, to you. NEVER use
a photocopy of a standard printed page as a display – it is difficult to
overstate how annoying this is to an audience.
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Try to limit the material to
8 lines per slide, and keep the number of words to a minimum. Summarize
the main points – don’t include every detail of what you plan to say.
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Limit the tables to 4 rows/columns
for readability. Sacrifice content for legibility – unreadable content
is worse than useless. Many large tables can be displayed more effectively
as a graph than as a table.
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Don’t put a lot of curves on
a graphical display – busy graphical displays are hard to read. Also, label
your graphs clearly with BIG, READABLE TYPE
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Use easily read fonts. Simple
fonts like Sans Serif
and Arial are easier to read than fancier ones like Times
Roman or Monotype
Corsiva. Don’t use italic
fonts.
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Dark letters on light (or transparent)
backgrounds work well for overheads. Light letters (yellow or white) on
a dark background (e.g., dark blue) often will be easier to read when the
material is displayed using slides or LCD projectors.
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Use equations sparingly if at
all – audience members not working in the research area can find them difficult
to follow as part of a rapidly delivered presentation. Avoid derivations
and concentrate on presenting what your results mean. The audience will
concede the proof and those who really are interested can follow up with
you, which they’re more likely to do if they understand your results.
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Don’t fill up the transparency
or slide – the peripheral material may not make it onto the display screen
– especially the material on the bottom of a portrait-oriented transparency.
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Identify the journal when you
give references: Smith, Bcs96 clues the reader that the article
is in a 1996 issue of Biometrics, and is much more useful than just Smith
1996.
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Keep it simple. The fact that
you can include all kinds of cute decorations, artistic effects, and logos
does not mean that you should. Fancy designs or color shifts can make the
important material hard to read. Less is more.
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Finally, and this is critical,
always, always, always preview your slides. You will look foolish
if symbols and Greek letters that looked OK in a WORD document didn’t translate
into anything readable in POWERPOINT – and it happens!
2.3 Timing
your talk
Few things irritate an audience
more than a 30 minute talk delivered in 15 minutes regardless of how polished
the speaker’s delivery is. Your objective is to engage the audience and
have them understand your message. Don’t flood them with more than they
can absorb. Think in terms of what it would take if you were giving (or,
better, listening to) the last paper in the last contributed paper session
of the last day. This means:
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Present only as much material
as can reasonably fit into the time period allotted. Generally that means
no more than 1 slide or overhead per minute.
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Talk at a pace that everybody
in the audience can understand. Speak slowly, clearly, and
loudly,
especially if your English is heavily accented.
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PRACTICE, PRACTICE, PRACTICE.
Ask a colleague to judge your presentation, delivery, clarity of language,
and use of time.
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Balance the amount of material
you present with a reasonable pace of presentation. If you feel rushed
when you practice, then you have too much material. Budget your time to
take a minute or two less than your maximum allotment. Again, less is more.
2.4 Loose
ends
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Prepare a handout. If you use
a computer to prepare your visual displays, you can get a handout with
several slides or pages on a single physical page for essentially no extra
effort using available software (e.g., FinePrint (http://www.singletrack.com/)).
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PRACTICE, PRACTICE, PRACTICE
the presentation, with care to content, delivery and use of time. (In case
you missed this recommendation above.)
3. The
presentation
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Put on the microphone and be
sure that it is working before you start talking.
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Be sure everyone in the room
can see your material. With transparencies, this often means that you have
to pay attention to the position of the transparency on the projector because
only the top half of the screen usually can be seen from the back of the
room. Make sure you do not block the screen. Move around if you must so
that everyone has a chance to see everything. Handouts are a big help.
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Never apologize for your displays.
More to the point, make apologies unnecessary by doing the material properly
in the first place (see the recommendations above). If you say, "I know
you can’t see this, but ..." the reaction of many people in the audience
will be "why bother showing it, then?" (or, even worse, “Why didn’t you
take the trouble to make them legible?”)
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Don’t apologize for incomplete
results. Researchers understand that all research continues. Just present
the results and let the audience judge. It is ok to say that “work is on-going”.
If you say “I’m sorry that work is not done”, you invite the audience to
tune out or wonder why you are talking at all.
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