Replies: 20 comments
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Unfortunately I'm already booked to give a talk on the 4th March, so I can't make the workshop on how to create a talk proposal. However, I'd be happy to provide guidance on how to prepare an effective presentation at some future workshop if that would be helpful to the community? |
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@robtweed I'm sorry we have a clash! @admataz is doing a lightning talk on talking at meetups at the start but if you have some words of wisdom to share then that would totally be appreciated! 🤘🥳 |
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I think having a handy timer (physical or digital - up to you) in the talker sight might be enough; politely soliciting the talker to wrap things up in a few mins might also be a good option. |
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A physical timer would totally work well good idea 👍 |
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Nice I love it! Thanks @robtweed |
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A presentation is like an ice-berg. That 20 minutes the audience sees hides many hours of work that it took to make it effective. A good speaker will make it seem very easy on the day. But actually it never is. If it looked easy, that's hard work and hard-earned experience at play! |
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All that being said, don't let it put you off giving a presentation. Like learning to drive a car, we all gave a first presentation at some time and it was one of the scariest things we ever did! But hopefully some of my thoughts/experience above will help you avoid a car crash on your first outing! :-) |
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On the subject of demos / live coding - once again think "so what?" Why are you demo-ing / coding what you're doing. What are you trying to get the audience to take away from that demo/coding? If it doesn't add to the message, don't feel you have to demo at all - instead is there somewhere you can send the audience too afterwards where they can quickly and easily try it for themselves? Or point them at a video you've previously prepared showing the live coding / demo |
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👏 👏 This is awesome! I'm bookmarking this for future use thanks rob. This is going to be really helpful it should totally be shared where it will get more 👀 than this issue. Thank you |
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You're welcome! I hope it helps :-) |
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One final thought: like any rules, feel free to break them, but I'd suggest only do so if you have the experience and/or confidence to do so. eg if you look at the video of my talk and count the number of slides I used you'll be shocked - there were over 100! But if you watch, I'm constantly skipping through them to provide a backdrop to what I'm saying. Many of the slides are actually builds on a previous one, but even so! A lot of rehearsal and thought went into each one and I stuck exactly to how I'd rehearsed it on the day. If they're relevant and have a "so what?", a rapid succession of a lot of slides can be a good way of retaining the audience's attention and adding a feeling of pace to the presentation. But only do it if you know you can get through them all within the allotted time! Nothing worse than being cut off by the chairperson and having a load of slides you wanted to show, particularly if you didn't reach the killer "so what?" message slide in your deck! And also remember that lots of slides can be too overwhelming - there's only so much your audience can absorb in 20 minutes! Until you have the experience and confidence, keep things simple and tightly focused. Less is almost always more when it comes to presentations! |
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And, like a good meal, it's usually better to leave the audience wishing for more rather than going away bloated! |
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Thanks Rob. I'm going to summarise this at our workshop. It's totally awesome. Thanks for all the time you put into writing it. You should totally immortalise it as a blog post or feel free to submit a PR to add it to the speakers GitHub repo! I for one will be referring to this frequently before any future talks. A GitHub issue is far too temporary for something this legendary! |
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I would also add that having a short break might help: unless there is an active networking session for job seekers (which is not always there), 25 mins of break are far too much, IMHO: most people lose focus/mindset to follow further talks. 10 mins are more than enough to grab some more food or drinks or catch up with other attendants, and 15 mins of extra sleep (going home earlier) are always welcome. |
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@lnug/organisers thoughts? I think we could do a 10-15 minute break. It would be fairer for people who need to get home. It also gives me more pub time! 🍻 |
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Yeah I can see this - I think if we're stricter we can keep the break tighter around the jobs table session (or whatever else we run) that might work - theres ample time to chat before/after so it could work. Lets try it next month and see? |
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Thanks, @GiacomoSorbi for really respectfully raising this on meetup. I have copied this over to a GitHub issue as it is a better forum to have a productive discussion around how we can change things.
The comment was
On LNUG format and the break
The plan is normally
7 pm start
7.15 pm first talk starts
7.35 pm break till 8
8 pm community announcements
8.15 pm start next talk
Obviously, that went out the window tonight. If people would prefer a different format to that tell us here.
Any suggestions to help us with timekeeping during the talks?
Somebody at the pub suggested giving all speakers a 10-minute warning, 5 minutes, 2 minutes, and 0 minutes warning.
If I was doing a talk I'd actually find that super helpful, do people agree? Any alternative ideas?
Thanks again for giving us feedback 💚
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