Communication and Presentaion Skillss
Communication and Presentaion Skillss
Department BS English
Subject Communication and Presentation Skills
Semester 3rd
Course Instructor Mahnoor Fatima
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1: Introduction
Communication
The English word ‘communication’ has been derived from the Latin word, ‘is
derived from the root ‘Communis’ which means to make common or to share.
Definition
Types of Communication
1. Verbal Communication
It is one of the most common types, often used during presentations, video
conferences, phone calls, meetings, and one-on-one conversations. Verbal
communication is important because it is efficient. It can be helpful to support
verbal communication with both nonverbal and written communication.
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Here are a few steps you can take to develop your verbal communication
2. Nonverbal Communication
3. Visual Communication
4. Written Communication
Formal Communication
Memo
Meetings
Conferences
Formal One-on-Ones
Bulletin Boards
Handouts
Letters
Presentations
Speeches
Notice Boards
Organizational blogs
Emails from managers and leaders
Informal Communication
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Receiver: The receiver is the individual or group for whom the message is
intended.
2: Purpose of Communication:
To convey information:
This defined as the process through which people attempt to influence the
beliefs or actions of others. In many cases persuasive communication involves
people who are important to each other parents influence children, children
influence parents, and friends influence each other.
Building relationships:
Gaining acceptance
Avoiding conflict
Maintaining social norm
Importance of communication
To create awareness
To give expertise and skills
Flow of information
Preparing People to Accept Change
Developing Good Human Relations
3- Presentation skills
A presentation is a form of communication where a speaker shares information,
ideas, or messages with an audience through a structured and organized format. It
involves conveying a message, telling a story, or showcasing a product or service
to engage, inform, or persuade the audience.
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Types of Presentation
2. Discursive. Here you will need to debate the strengths and limitations of an
approach or develop an argument, exploring and weighing up different
perspectives, challenging your audience to accept a different viewpoint. For this,
you will need to decide your ‘angle’ – are you for or against it, weight pro and
cons? Pull your audience in, challenge and confidently debate.
STRUCTURE
Whether the audience can understand what you are trying to communicate will be
determined by how you structure your presentation. You should focus on the
development of a clear structure that will help to map out and guide you in your
preparations and in your final delivery.
An introduction, outlining the aim of your presentation and the areas your talk will
focus on
• The main body, containing the substance of your talk and developing the ideas
outlined in the introduction
• A conclusion, drawing together the main points and containing the ‘take home
message’ for the audience
INTRODUCTION
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Instead of starting with a series of statements about what is coming next, you could
consider stimulating more interest by posing a question, presenting a puzzle or a
conundrum, showing a picture, or telling a story.
MAIN PRESENTATION
This will be influenced by the general context and aim of your presentation and
the expected audience. You may need to decide between a big picture approach
and one that selects a smaller area with more detail. As you develop your
knowledge of the topic, you will feel more confident about what to include and
what to exclude. Identify the key messages. Three or four main points are normally
sufficient for a presentation of up to a half-hour. For a longer presentation, do not
exceed seven main points in order to avoid overloading your audience. Rember,
less is almost always more. You should also decide what is best covered through
speech, text, images and what could be given in a handout rather than used as
presentation content. Support your key ideas by choosing clarifying examples.
CONCLUSION
Knowing the ins and outs of your presentation will help build your confidence.
You should know what each slide on your presentation says, and you should also
know what you're going to say about each slide. You don't want to read off of your
slides. Instead, do your best to learn your presentation's subject matter by heart.
Your accompanying PowerPoint presentation is just a visual aid.
As the popular saying goes, practice makes perfect. While you don't have to aim
for 'perfect,' delivering a presentation that actually meets your goals should be at
the top of your list.
Knowing who you're speaking to will help you deliver a presentation that will
resonate with your audience. Find something that's common with your audience
and mention that in your presentation
Be on time
Think Positively
Thinking positively can go a long way in helping you overcome presentation fear.
If you think your presentation's going to be a disaster, then it is going to be a
disaster. However, if you think it's going to be a smashing success, then you're
going to do your absolute best to make sure that happens
FORM OF LANGUAGE
Make Eye Contact No one wants to sit through a presentation where the
presenter is fixated on his or her shoes, his computer screen, or anywhere
else but the audience. The truth is most of us would think the presenter is
being disrespectful.
Having a sense of humor is great. Learning how to put that to good use in
your presentations is even better.
Be Flexible
Be Confident
Final Words
OBJECTIVES:
• To improve your research and design skills, and strengthen your delivery
techniques
• To enhance your use of different support electronic and other visual tools
• To increase your confidence level in interacting with audience and control your
nervousness
TIMING
Inexperienced presenters attempt to write down the whole speech, even including
‘Good morning ladies and gentlemen’. They prepare a closely drafted text, each
line filled, with very little space left. Experienced presenters have their own style
of notes, but never fill the page with text. You can organize your speech notes in
many ways and it is very much a personal preference.
You should find out when your presentation will take place. Another important
aspect of planning concerns the location of your presentation. This can have
significant implications for how you plan your content and organize yourself. Go
to see the room in which you will be presenting in advance of arriving for the
actual presentation
If you use more pictures and diagrams than text, you will possibly help the
audience to understand better what you are saying. This is because after three days
an audience will have retained 7% of what they read (bullet points, or other notes
on the screen), but 55% of what they saw pictorially (charts, pictures, diagrams).
You should be aware that visual aids are complementary to the presentation and
you should not focus too narrowly on visual aids because you will lose the key
point of presentation. If you use more pictures and diagrams than text, you will
possibly help the audience to understand better what you are saying. This is
because after three days an audience will have retained 7% of what they read
(bullet points, or other notes on the screen), but 55% of what they saw pictorially
(charts, pictures, diagrams). You should be aware that visual aids are complementary
to the presentation and you should not focus too narrowly on visual aids because
you will lose the key point of presentation.
4. A dark background (deep blue or black) and light coloured text (white or
yellow) for contrast will make your words stand out (Use of colour that detracts
from the main content of the slide, or that makes reading the text difficult.)
5. Use a font size of 20 or over: use a 36 point for titles and a 28 point for body
text
7. Use pictures and icons and beware of the special effects, e.g. spinning words or
sound effects
8. Keep the presentation consistent, e.g. background and style. Do not suddenly
switch fonts half way through. You may not notice but your audience will
9. Less than 30 words per slide, 5–6 words for headings a maximum of five bullet
points per slide
10. Keep the number of slides down to one per minute or even one per 40 seconds
(Malthouse, R., Roffey-Barentsen, J., 2010), (Craig, C., 2009)
Eye contact:
Eyes are one of your best tools for involving the audience in what you are saying.
Good posture, movement and gestures will be of little use if you fail to support
them with appropriate eye contact. Great presenters understand that eye contact is
critical to building trust, credibility, and rapport. It is advisable to maintain eye
contact with your audience at least 90% of the time. It is appropriate to glance at
your notes or slides from time to time, but only as a reminder of where to go next.
You are speaking for the benefit of your audience. Speak to them, not the slides.
Body language:
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You will also need to think how you communicate using body language. Body
language can distract people from what you are saying or even irritate. People can
bite their nails, twiddle with things, and sniff and so on. If you have distracting
habits, find a way of controlling them. Hold your hands behind your back or hold a
sheet of paper so you can’t fiddle.
Gestures:
Using your hands can help in the same way that whole body movements can: to
relax, stimulate and illustrate. If you find it hard to use your hands naturally, then
the best policy is to hold them by your sides.
• Clasp hands behind the back. This looks much too formal.
• Keep them stuck in your pockets throughout the presentation. This can look
either casual or nervous.
• Scratch, poke or stroke yourself. As you have probably observed, this is quite a
common nervous reaction amongst stressed presenters.
• Wring your hands together. This can look dishonest or slightly peculiar.
• Fiddle with keys, pens, pencils, coins, lucky charms, worry beads, etc. You will
just look nervous