Presentation slides that make audiences sit up instead of switch off
Presentation slides that make audiences sit up instead of switch off
AUTHOR: Lolly
How to ignore those voices and get up on that stage to present.
I’ll let you in on a secret. I’m not a real writer.
Not by some people’s standards.
I don’t have a degree. Heck, I hardly have GCSEs.
I can’t explain to you when a semicolon should be used, and I think the subjunctive is a BDSM thing.
For some reason, for the last decade—and then some—the world’s biggest brands have paid me to write their stories. Because I am a fucking writer—education or no education. I understand people. I play with language like I’m in a sandbox. I know how to find people’s buttons and push them so subtly that they think all these great ideas are theirs.
But fuck yeah, I get imposter syndrome.
And fuck no, it will never stop me.
You are not a fraud. Everyone has a story. And your story is yours to own. And—if you choose—yours to share.
Doubting your place on any stage puts you among some of the most brilliant people in the world. Not terrible company to find yourself in. You’re unlikely to ever be the most knowledgeable person, so let go of the need to be the expert. You are an expert. And, as long as you’re working every day to build your understanding, you have every right to share your views—your unique views that the world needs to hear. Don’t let comparison take that from you. Instead, see yourself as part of the club of smart people who can see their own opportunities for improvement.
That’s all well and good, but accepting your imposter syndrome is not the same as telling it to fuck off. Preparation is. Preparation is confidence. If you know you’ve left no stone unturned in your preparation, what could you have to feel insecure or unsure about?
This doesn’t mean practicing a script over and over. It means knowing your subject matter inside out—so that you don’t need a script. Knowing your story so well, you just need a roadmap—key plot points to keep you on track and speaking with your audience as the hero, not from ego.
When you step out onto that stage, don’t underestimate the symbolic importance of body language. Take a beat to control your breathing, to whisper back to the screaming internal voices that you do, in fact, got this. Stand tall, make eye contact, and speak with authentic conviction and passion. And, if your voice wobbles, acknowledge your humanity—audiences lap that shit up.
And if none of that works, this might.
Your presentation story isn’t about you.
It’s about your audience.
How can you be an imposter in their story? The pressure is on them, really.
Reading is tough. Rest your weary eyes on this moving picture instead.
Slides that make audiences sit up instead of switch off.
© Copyright. All rights reserved.
Website imagery attributions: https://www.vecteezy.com/members/imajin-noasking / https://www.vecteezy.com/members/alwie99d / https://www.vecteezy.com/members/djvstock / https://www.vecteezy.com/members/lolaobruch143875 / href="https://www.vecteezy.com/free-vector/powerpoint-logo">Powerpoint Logo Vectors by Vecteezy
We need your consent to load the translations
We use a third-party service to translate the website content that may collect data about your activity. Please review the details in the privacy policy and accept the service to view the translations.