Javascript Menu by Deluxe-Menu.com If you give presentations, be in tune with your roles

If you give presentations, be in tune with your roles

Which celebrity would you take career advice from?
Vote
Getting poll results. Please wait...
A skilled presenter needs to hyperspace from role to role depending on what the moment calls for. Although every presentation and audience is different, my best advice is always ‘know your roles, and prepare, prepare, prepare.’ This way it’s much easier to stay in tune with our audience and our presentation will have a lasting, worthwhile impact.
 
Why do we need to know different roles? Because the ability to stand up and talk does not a presenter make. Anyone can talk. It’s connecting with an audience that makes for a good presentation.
 
It’s my firm belief that connecting with an audience requires shifting among different roles, depending on the needs of the audience at a particular moment. This will be more true for someone conducting a long-term training program, but it also has application for the one-time presentation.
 
I started paying more attention to the roles of a presenter when I was conducting management and leadership classes for management teams. Someone had asked me to describe my role. The first thing that came to mind was that I comfort the afflicted and afflict the comforted. But the more I thought about it, the more I realized someone presenting or conducting training must serve in multiple roles, and some of them at the same time.
 
In varying degrees, the following roles can apply to long-term training, stand-alone workshops, and even speeches:
 
1. Comforter If we can help those feeling worn out to identify a “next step” action item and refocus their vision, we’re acting as a comforter. People in those situations need a lift – reassurance that things are going to be okay.
 
2. Afflicter  Sometimes people come to a class or presentation thinking, “I have nothing to learn here. I know all I need to know. This is a waste of my time.” Such people are unwilling (or unable) to examine the filters through which they see the world. Because the world’s body of knowledge doubles every few years, people in these mindsets need to be challenged.
 
3. Informer  The word inform means to take data and place it into a format (in-form) the learner can relate to. That involves finding common frames of reference and demonstrating how the data being presented has value and usefulness for the learner.
 
4. Confidant  In some workplaces, politics can be pretty thick. If presenters are outside the political loop, they’re viewed as safe, so people may approach a presenter for an ‘offline’ private conversation. Sometimes they want affirmation. Sometimes they want advice. Sometimes they just need to vent. Presenters must be able to handle delicate issues with tact.
 
5. Counselor Often part and parcel of being a Confidant is the role of Counselor. As such, need for this role often emerges during one-on-one discussions after a presentation. Active listening skills such as paraphrasing lets the audience member know you’re truly listening. And, a good counseling technique is asking leading questions that take a person to deciding on an appropriate “next step.”
 
6. Entertainer   Nobody likes sitting through dry, rote, uninteresting presentations. It causes people to check out – at which point they learn nothing. Being an entertainer does not mean being a court jester. It means injecting some fun into the subject matter, and also an appropriate level of humor. The first key in using humor is to recognize it as a painful situation told playfully. The second key is to be yourself. Don’t try imitating your favorite comedian. The third key is to be aware of audience reaction, and adjust accordingly.
 
7. Facilitator / Coach   The objective of any training is for those in the audience to learn, not for the instructor to look like an expert. Encouraging learners to talk about how they’re applying what you’re presenting—and then affirming their efforts—gives them motivation to continue their efforts.
 
I could go on because there are more roles, but I think you get the idea. A skilled presenter needs to hyperspace from role to role as the situation calls for it. To get to that point, a presenter must first know the responsibilities of each role.
 
It’s like anything else. If we want to become good at something, we need to become students of the craft. And conducting training or giving presentations is most certainly a craft.
 
Bottom line, don’t give presentations by the seat of your pants. The best way to serve your audience is to prepare, prepare, prepare.
 
Then make sure you’re comfortable inside your own skin, tune in to your audience, and do your thing.
Company: The Center for Workplace Excllence
Website: http://www.workplace-excellence.com/

Dan Bobinski is a training specialist, author, and an accomplished keynote speaker. He is also the president of The Center for Workplace Excellence, providing workforce and management training to Fortune 500 companies as well as smaller, regional concerns for more than 18 years.

In addition to being a certified behavioral analyst, Dan holds an M.Ed. in Human Resource Training and Development, a B.S. in Workforce Education and Development, and he is currently completing his doctoral work is in Adult and Organizational Learning at the University of Idaho.

Specializing now in Train the Trainer workshops and The Manager as Trainer classes, Dan's prevailing philosophy is that managers also need to learn to think like trainers, equipping those below them with the knowledge, skills, and attitudes needed for workplace excellence.

Dan can be reached at (208) 375-7606. Visit his company website at workplace-excellence.com, where he blogs daily on workplace issues.
Books By Dan Bobinski
    JobDig | Because everyone should dig their job | 877.456.2344