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I`d be pleased to help with any issues you might be facing related to public speaking, covering either content or delivery. We work with executives in a wide variety of fields to build confident communicators before diverse audiences.
I've had 20 years experience in journalism, followed by leading training at a global public relations firm and heading communications for a US Senator. My firm now offers communications training in public speaking, media training and crisis communications.
| User | Date | K | C | T | P | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| dimitrz | 05/28/08 | 10 | 10 | 10 | 10 | Thanks Aileen |
| Yusuke | 04/05/08 | 10 | 10 | 10 | 10 | thanks a lot |
Start by examining three things: Audience, Intent, Messages. Think about your audience. What do they already know about the course? What might motivate them to sign up for this one? Will it improve
Bonjour JD, I don't have personal knowledge of the company you're asking about, but if you are thinking of taking an on-line course, that can be a good starting point for building beginning presentation
Ronald, Thanks for the question. All speakers in my opinion, have "agendas". It may be to persuade or educate or entertain. Any of those may coincide--or not--with the motivation of the person issuing
Yusuke, I can offer some basic tips for presentation readiness. First of all, remember that an oral presentation does not have the same purpose as a written one. If you are asking people to
Mark, Look at this as an opportunity to show them what you've got. Performance-wise: Stay engaged and show your interest in what's going on(watch the body language--don't slouch back into your chair--sit
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