Company Solutions

Need a solution so all presentations in your firm look consistent and are effective?

Learn more about our template creation and effective presentation courses services.
Learn More

Individual Solutions

Do you have to give an important presentation or inverstor pitch?

Find out how you can have a presentation they'll never forget!
Learn More

Speaking

Need a speaker for your next event to speak about effective presentations?

Reserve a date for an engaging talk that will initiate attendees into effective presentations.
Learn More

Posts Tagged ‘Darth Vader’

Presentation Lesson from the Dark Side

Palpatine_und_Anakin

I know we usually focus on the heroes of movies and stories to learn lessons, that’s why I’ve written posts about lessons learned from a Rebel Alliance leader, another from Obi Wan and one from Yoda. But today I want to go over to the Dark Side, which is always more fun. In the new Star Wars movies, no matter how bad they are, we can see a key moment in the saga’s history, how the Emperor turns Anakin to the Dark Side.

The interesting part is that in the first movies Lucas made, we saw Darth Vader (Anakin barbecued) try the same thing on Luke. However, and after the classic “Luke, I am your father”, Luke did not turn. What did the Emperor do different, why did his approach work? What’s the secret to turn people to the other side (switch companies, providers, ideas)?

The Emperor used the power of stories. The first thing the Emperor does is connect with Anakin telling him a story he can relate to: “Anakin, did you ever hear the tragedy of a Dark Lord of the Sith who could use the force to keep the ones he cared about from dying.” This relates deeply with the young Anakin, who is desperate for saving his loved princess’ life.

On the other hand, if we take a look at Darth Vader’s speech to Luke, we see that the only thing Vader did was list a series of analytical reasons why Luke should turn to the Dark Side: “You can destroy the emperor”, “together we can rule the galaxy”, “it is your destiny” and the all-time favorite “I am your father.” But there was no connection to what Luke was feeling at the time; there was no emotion, nothing in that speech but facts. It seems that Vader did not learn the power of storytelling from his master.

When we give a presentation, we always want to convince the audience of something, to hire our services, buy our product, adopt our idea… Whatever it may be, it always means leaving something behind; the same way Anakin had to leave his Jedi friends behind. To convince your audience to cross over to your side, you have to find that connection. Stand in their shoes and you will know how they feel and what they need. That way, instead of listing characteristics, you can tell them a story, something that will connect you to them and will make you look like a real person with emotions and who understands them. That’s what the Emperor did and turned Anakin to his side; however, Darth Vader recited the typical list (bullet pointed in any presentation) and he wasn’t able to turn Luke to his side.

Source www.presentationzen.com

Exemption of responsibility: Project Presentation does not take responsibility for the people who are turned to the dark side and end up taking over the world by using this method.

Until next time,

Byron Stanford for Project Presentation.

The Dark Side of Presentations

darth presentation

Another lesson Garr Reynolds talks about in his presentations comes from comparing what Darth Vader and Yoda’s presentation styles would be like. Truth is, apart from funny and original, it’s a good explanation of what the Dark Side of Presentations would be like.

According to Garr, Darth Vader is rigid and cold, so his presentations would be boring.

Does the style look familiar? It’s the typical slide you seen in most presentations. It has all the points he’s talking about to convince the audience (Luke in this case) to come to his side. But as we all know Vader didn’t convince Luke to join him, but lost him by presenting his arguments in such a scripted way. Not that Vader memorized the reasons, but when we give a presentation it should sound more like a conversation than a script. That’s where Vader fails.

On the other hand, as Garr says, Yoda is a kind and sincere “person”, so his presentation style would be close and personal, speaking to the audience 1 on 1. He probably wouldn’t use slides, more like Sir Ken Robinson’s style, or he’d use ones with plenty of whitespace to avoid bombarding the audience with information. This is the style you want to follow. Yoda is a clear example of how to give a presentation that feels like a conversation.

How do you go from the Dark Side to being a Presentation Jedi? It’s about practice, when you practice your presentation enough to lose your fear of being yourself in front of the audience, you will turn into a communicator like Yoda and have an actual conversation with them.

Until next time,

Byron Stanford for Project Presentation.

Source: http://presentationzen.blogs.com/presentationzen/2006/01/contrasts_in_pr.html

Search

Join our Facebook Page