Planning for an excellent presentation

Good preparation makes all the difference to a presentation.

Planning and preparing for presentations clarifies your thinking and, if you know your material and practise well, it builds your confidence.

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2. Research the material well

Know more about the topic than you can present – you will feel more confident about handling the talk and answering questions on the day.

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3. Relevance

Make sure all material fits the brief, your course, the audience, your title and argument.

Student with a speakerphone with words coming out 'activism', 'facts' and 'ideas'.

4. Select carefully

Choose material that lends itself well to the format of a presentation, such as key data, core points, images, short video clips.

Hand with the note 'Don't forget'.

5. Less is more

Whittle material down. If you researched well, you will have more material than you need.

Remember that, typically, it takes longer to say it than to read it, and also that you should speak more slowly to an audience, so they can absorb what they hear.

Groupwork in presentations

Throughout academic study, you might need to work on a presentation with other students, in a group.

Learn how to prepare for group presentations in this topic: Ways of working with others

More from Bloomsbury

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Master your presentation skills

Explore more of Stella’s carefully curated content on how you can deliver a successful presentation, in the module: Presentation skills