chapter twenty-eight business and professional presentations

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Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

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Page 1: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Business and Professional

Presentations

Page 2: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Table of ContentsDifferences between Public

Versus Presentational SpeakingTypes of PresentationsDelivering the Presentation*

Page 3: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Business and Professional Presentations

Presentational Speaking Reports delivered

by individuals or groups within the business or professional setting*

Page 4: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Differences between Public versus Presentational Speaking

There are clear differences between a speech given to the public and a presentation delivered in a professional setting: The audience for a presentation can be

as small as three people. Presentational speaking is less formal

than public speaking.*

Page 5: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Differences between Public versus Presentational Speaking

Topic SelectionAudience CompositionAudience

ParticipationSpeaker Expertise*

Page 6: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Differences between Public versus Presentational Speaking:

Topic Selection

Topics for public speeches can be assigned but are often left to the speaker’s discretion, while topics for business presentations are either assigned or assumed as part of one’s role in a project.*

Page 7: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Differences between Public versus Presentational Speaking:

Audience Composition

Listeners who attend a business or professional presentation are more likely to be part of a “captive” audience.*

Page 8: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Differences between Public versus Presentational Speaking:

Audience Participation

Unlike public speaking, in business or professional presentations verbal interaction is generally the rule rather than the exception.*

Page 9: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Differences between Public versus Presentational Speaking:

Speaker Expertise

Rather than “experts,” presentational speakers are more properly thought of as “first among equals.”*

Page 10: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Types of Presentations

There are five common types of business and professional presentations, each with its own purpose, audience, and organization.*

Page 11: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Types of Presentations

Sales PresentationsTechnical ReportsStaff ReportsProgress ReportsInvestigative Reports*

Page 12: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Types of Presentations:

Sales Presentations

A sales presentation attempts to lead a potential buyer to purchase a service or a product described by the presenter. Usually an audience of one or many

Alan Monroe’s motivated sequence (sometimes called the basic sales technique) offers an excellent way to organize sales presentations.*

Page 13: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Types of Presentations:

Technical Reports

A technical report provides detailed information about a procedure or device to an organization to help it decide whether to adopt or purchase it. Audience varies from an individual to a

group. Length and formality of the report

depends on the subject and its scope.*

Page 14: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Types of Presentations:

Staff Reports

Staff reports inform managers and other employees of new developments that affect them and their work. Audience is usually a group. Organizing a staff report:

State the problem or question.Provide a description of procedures and

facts.Discuss the most pertinent facts.Provide a conclusion.Offer a recommendation.*

Page 15: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Types of Presentations:

Progress Reports

A progress report updates clients or principals on developments in an ongoing project. Audiences vary greatly. No set pattern of organization.*

Page 16: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Types of Presentations:

Investigative Reports

An investigative report studies a problem on behalf of an organization that can’t solve the problem on its own.*

Page 17: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Types of Presentations: Investigative Reports

Audiences for investigative reports are usually groups whose planning and decisions depend significantly on the results of the investigation.

Organization: Indirect method: presents conclusions

and recommendations last Direct method: begins with most

important conclusions and recommendations*

Page 18: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Delivering the Presentation

The range of delivery styles may be broader for presentations than for speeches.*

Page 19: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Delivering the Presentation

Informational DeliveryInstrumental DeliveryRelational DeliveryTransformational Delivery*

Page 20: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Delivering the Presentation:

Informational Delivery

The informational style of delivery is precise, disciplined, focused, clear, logical, and well organized. Best used when your presentation is

fact-based*

Page 21: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Delivering the Presentation:

Instructional Delivery

The instructional style of delivery is stimulating, engaging, consequential, decisive, and action-oriented. Involves audience interaction*

Page 22: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Delivering the Presentation:

Relational Delivery

The relational style of delivery is open, candid, honest, believable, plausible, and trustworthy. Hinges on presenter’s credibility*

Page 23: Chapter Twenty-Eight Business and Professional Presentations

Delivering the Presentation: Transformational Delivery

The transformational style of delivery is emphatic, powerful, insightful, expansive, and visionary. Used for audience motivation*