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Do you start at the beginning?
Episode 1469th June 2022 • Irresistible Communication • Dr. Michael Gerharz
00:00:00 00:02:49

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Why most presentations get the beginning wrong and how you can do better …

Some things are easier said than done. But I’m here to help. Ask me anything about the art of communicating and I will answer it in one of the upcoming episodes. Head over to https://michaelgerharz.com/qa

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Michael:

Every presentation starts at the beginning and stops at the end.

Michael:

Unless it doesn't of course, which is the case for most presentations.

Michael:

I mean, of course every presentation starts and stops at some point.

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But that doesn't mean that it has a clear beginning and leads to a logical ending.

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It just starts and stops.

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It goes from the middle of somewhere to the middle of nowhere while

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delivering a host of facts that may or may not lead anywhere.

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To see what I mean, let's revisit what beginning and end really means.

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So let's take a step back.

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Every presentation that's necessary is about changing the minds of your audience.

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You might need the board of directors to acknowledge a strategic problem.

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Or you might want your customers to buy your product.

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Or you might want to inspire your employees to understand

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where the company is going.

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Whatever your change is, to make it happen you need the people in your

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audience to see the world differently after your presentation than before.

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It's this difference that determines the beginning and end of your presentation.

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When the audience enters the room, they have one worldview.

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And after the talk they have another.

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You pick them up at one point, the beginning and guide

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them to another, the end.

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It follows immediately that the beginning of your presentation isn't

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about you, your company history, achievements, organizational

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structure, portfolio, you name it.

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But it's about the audience.

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It's not about where you are coming from, but where your audience is coming from.

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Your audience needs to feel: “She's talking about me.

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This is where I’m at”.

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That's the beginning.

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And it's in stark contrast to the starting point of most presentations,

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which usually is all about the presenter.

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The end of your presentation is the point of no return for your audience.

Michael:

They can't unsee what you've made them see.

The thing is:

only when you know your beginning and end can you become the

The thing is:

guide that takes your audience from where they are to where they want to be.

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