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Improving Academic Presentation Style

I give a lot of talks, and I've been trying to improve my presentation style, but I'm not sure how to do it in the context of my field. I am in a fairly quantitative science. I have to give presentations where I present results; I am 'selling' the result to the audience, but not in the same way, I think, that one would sell a product, or an idea, or a concept. I'm attempting to convince them that it's right, and that I was diligent in pursuing the result.

One common technique is to simply overwhelm the audience with lots of facts and charts and bullet points. Obviously this is a bad idea -- but on the other hand, if you don't give enough 'serious-looking' plots, you run the risk of being dismissed by members of the audience.

So how do I strike a balance? How do I keep my presentations in the manner of a good narrative, with appropriate display methods, when constrained by an audience that has a certain expectation of a larger number of quantitative figures and numbers?

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Appendix

At the end of your slide presentation, insert one extra slide that is all black (or has your contact details). End on this. But after that last slide create an appendix of additional slides. This will duplicate information that may appear in your handout but not in your main presentation. Bring up this information if someone asks specifically about it. Feel reassured it is there even if doesn't get mentioned. If you are presenting the same information several times, you can anticipate what questions come up frequently and have the appendix ready. The appendix can have more detailed information than what appears in the main preso.

 
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