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Article
for keynote speakers...
Hollywood Style or PowerPoint®?
by
Patricia Fripp, CSP, CPAE
Recently,
I was addressing one of the smaller National Speakers Association
chapters. The program was on "How to Design a Charismatic
Keynote--Hollywood Style." Even the most experienced
speakers in the room were amazed with the ideas, comparisons,
and performance level. Many of the guests were so excited
by the quality of the program that they decided to join, while
newer members asked how they could become more active. I was
a hit.
If you
are familiar with me or my work, you know I am a very high-tech
marketer and low-tech presenter. I was raised on stories about
Winston Churchill who got on the radio during World War II
and made average citizens willing and eager to fight in the
streets to defend their country. He did this with just the
power of his words. His audience couldn't see him, except
in their minds. Similarly, my style has always been focused
on the words and on the delivery and performance level of
a speech or seminar.
One of
the audience members at this NSA presentation, a first timer,
said he was surprised that I did not have PowerPoint®.
My product sign was hand lettered, and I used a flip chart
for my two diagrams. How, he asked, could the group hold me
up as a "professional to emulate?" I suggested-rather
strongly I admit-that if he judged my professionalism by the
absence of PowerPoint® and my handwritten sign describing
their purchasing opportunities, then he had totally missed
the point of my three-and-a-half hour program. (I did not
mention that renting PowerPoint® equipment would have
cost his group more than my airline tickets.)
I fully
appreciate PowerPoint® slides, and other wonderful visual
aids when they are used well. But often they are misused.
It is not my purpose to wage any kind of campaign against
Microsoft's excellent PowerPoint®,although I do believe
it is overused or misused. So does Edward R. Tufte, professor
emeritus of political science, computer science, statistics,
and graphic design at Yale.
The
Disadvantages of High-Tech
In an
article in the September 2003 issue of Wired magazine,
Tufte writes:
"Presentations
largely stand or fall on the quality, relevance, and integrity
of the content. If your numbers are boring, then you've got
the wrong numbers. If your words or images are not on point,
making them dance in color won't make them relevant. Audience
boredom is usually a content failure, not a decoration failure.
At a
minimum, a presentation format should do no harm. Yet the
PowerPoint® style routinely disrupts, dominates, and trivializes
content. Thus, PowerPoint® presentations too often resemble
a school play--very loud, very slow, and very simple.
The practical
conclusions are clear. PowerPoint® is a competent slide
manager and projector. But, rather than supplementing a presentation,
it has become a substitute for it. Such misuse ignores the
most important rule of speaking. Respect the audience."
(Edward
R. Tufte is the author of several best-selling and seminal
books on graphic design.)
So Hollywood
Style does not depend on expensive, high-tech equipment. It
is an attitude, an immediacy of exciting communication that
makes you a true star.
(569
words)
This
article was first published in In an article in Wired
magazine
Patricia Fripp, CSP, CPAE is a San Francisco-based executive
speech coach,
sales
trainer, and professional
keynote speaker. She is the author of Get
What You Want!, Make
It, SoYou Don't Have to Fake It!, and Past-President
of the National Speakers Association. Meetings and Conventions
Magazine named Fripp "one of the country's most electrifying
speakers!" PFripp@Fripp.com,
(800) 634-3035, http://www.fripp.com
We offer this article
on a nonexclusive basis. You may reprint or repost this material as long
as Patricia Fripp's name and contact information is included. PFripp@Fripp.com,
1-800 634 3035, http://www.fripp.com
Patricia Fripp offers
both one-on-one and group speech coaching for individuals, leaders and
sales teams for success through better speaking skills: http://www.executivespeechcoach.com
Patricia Fripp's CDs, DVDs, and video programs on public speaking and presentation skills will help you speak more effectively: http://fripp.com/publicspeakingresources/publicspeakingres.html
Find out about Fripp's
speaking school and other public dates when Fripp is "speaking on
speaking:" http://www.fripp.com/hearfripp.html
Learn the confidence
and skills you need for public speaking success!
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