Wednesday, December 1, 2021

6 TIPS TO GIVE THE BEST VIRTUAL PRESENTATION

Preparing well for your virtual presentation ahead of time will give you confidence and poise once you’re in front of your audience. Use these six tips to master your public speaking skills before you launch your next virtual presentation. 

1. Set Up A Clean Shot

Even though you don’t have to worry about booking a venue for a virtual presentation, you should still plan to set up in a quiet, well-lit area.

Make sure the place where you’ll be doing your presentation is clean and free from distractions. Let your coworkers, family, or roommates know you’ll be giving a presentation so they know not to disturb you. 

If your background is messy or loud, your audience will be more focused on what’s going on behind you than what you’re actually saying. Keep it clean, simple, and pleasing to the eye.

To help see what your audience will see, set up your camera so that you’re not too close or too far from it. The ideal shot frames your face, neck, and shoulders. If you are able to stand for your presentation, it could also help you maintain good posture and give you the opportunity to use hand gestures when appropriate. 

Good lighting will also ensure your online presentation keeps your audience engaged. Cast lighting on your face instead of behind you.

If available to you, natural lighting is best. Consider opening the blinds and facing the window for your presentation, and pay attention to any shadows your lighting casts to eliminate distractions. Just don’t stand with a window behind you. Having a light source behind will make it difficult for your audience to see you.

Now that your shot is all set, practice making eye contact with your online audience. Speaking into a camera instead of in front of people can be difficult and awkward. Practice speaking and looking into your camera lens to ensure your audience sees you as if you’re looking right at them on their screen.

Ensure you’re framed the right way and place your camera at eye level. To make online public speaking even easier, try putting a picture of a person or two eyes staring back near your lens if it helps.

Once your shot is set up, you can also turn off any self-view you have set up so you’re not tempted to look at yourself while presenting. 

2. Get Familiar With Your Technology

When giving online presentations, you rely on fast, reliable internet to carry your message and voice all around the world. So make sure you have a good internet connection.

If your internet is slow or cuts in and out, you run the risk of frustrating and losing your audience due to a poor user experience.

If you’re not in an area with fast internet, consider changing the location of where you plan to present so you have a better internet connection.

Another technology tip to consider is to ensure you mute your audience upon entry to the presentation. This will prevent distracting background noises and accidental conversations or noise during your important talk.

With that said, also be sure your own distractions and noises are removed.

Put your phone on vibrate, turn off notifications on your phone and computer — except for those pertaining to your meeting — and place your technology on a surface away from your setup so your audience won’t hear it if it happens to make a sound.

Becoming familiar with the features your hosting software offers will help you eliminate technology distractions faster, as well as improve your presentation experience.

Knowing how to share your screen, read comments, unmute participants, break participants into discussion groups, run polls, and so on will make your presentation run smoothly and keep your audience engaged.

Additionally, consider having a co-presenter run the technical aspects of your presentation so you can focus more on presenting. 

3. Set Expectations For Questions Early 

Audience participation is a key part of successful public speaking. It’s important to answer questions the audience may have, but timing is also essential.

Have a plan for answering questions that are set up ahead of time. Before jumping right into your virtual presentation, explain how your audience can ask questions and how they should expect them to be answered. 

Again, co-presenters can be very helpful in this regard, since they can be answering questions in the chatbox for you. Make sure your ground rules specify what types of questions will be answered and when. 

Technical issues, however, such as not being able to hear or not receiving a download should be addressed immediately. Other questions can wait for breaks or pauses to be answered so your audience is still listening to you instead of reading the chatbox.

Don’t forget to ask your audience questions as well, and let them respond in the chat!

This is an important way to keep participants engaged during a virtual presentation, where losing their focus is much easier than during a live presentation.

4. Practice, Practice, Practice

Know your material and have your presentation well planned out so you can give a confident, impactful presentation. An important element of this is to speak about something you’re passionate about. 

Put your camera on video and take some practice runs speaking into the camera. Then, go back and watch your recorded sessions to critique yourself and improve for the live presentation. Consider asking a friend, family member, or colleague to give you honest, constructive feedback, as well.

Remember to check the following while you practice:

  • How’s the lighting?
  • Are you looking at the audience?
  • Are you smiling and relaxed?
  • Do you show that you care about your audience?
  • Are you an expert on your topic?

Don’t forget to practice the technical aspects of virtual public speaking too. Know how to split your screen or use two screens so you can have your presentation software open, the chatbox and participants in view, and your documents or slides accessible at the same time. 

5. Close With A Bang!

At the end of your presentation, deliver a powerful, memorable closing to help further gain trust as a presenter and drive your points home.

As an online presenter, your goal is to deliver valuable information, engage your audience and motivate them to take action — which includes coming back for more of your content. 

WAYS TO END YOUR VIRTUAL PRESENTATION

The opening and closing lines of your speech will often be the ones your audience will remember most. Make sure your main points don’t get lost with a closing that falls flat. Here are three of the best ways to close your virtual presentation with a bang:

  • Close with a story. Recap your talk by telling a story that illustrates what you’ve shared with your audience. This will give them a tangible example of how to apply your principles. Likewise, you can end with an inspirational quote to motivate your audience to take action.
  • Always end your speech with a call to action. Make it clear what you want your audience’s next steps to be, and deliver your request with enthusiasm and confidence.
  • Make it apparent that you’re done. Avoid ending with, “Well that covers it, thank you for coming.” After you deliver your call to action, make a bold statement that your presentation has ended instead of allowing it to drag on. 

Let your audience know you’ll follow up with any lingering questions by email. Smile warmly into the camera as you end your speech. Allow some silence and discipline yourself to refrain from fidgeting, then disconnect the presentation software.

6. Provide A Follow-Up Destination

The beauty of giving a virtual presentation is that your audience is already in front of a computer. Utilize that and point them to your website or another follow-up to continue reaping the benefits of your talk. 

You can also take the opportunity to open up a future Q&A session on your social media page or group.

Follow up by sending a recording to those who signed up to attend your speech. This will help you establish your reputation and grow your audience as you become a motivational public speaker.

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