How to Present and Stay on Point
How to Present and Stay on Point Linkedin Answers
By: Todd Dewett
Link Course: Visit here on Linkedin Learning
How to Present and Stay on Point Linkedin Answers Quiz 1
Question 1 of 3
What is the 10-second rule?
- The audience should be able to understand a slide in 10 seconds.
- You should not spend more than 10 seconds talking about a slide.
- The audience will only pay attention to you for 10 seconds per slide.
- You should spend less than 10 seconds explaining each item on a slide.
Question 2 of 3
You have already prepared and practiced your presentation. How should you get ready for the event?
- Reach out to all the audience members.
- Prepare a transcript and audio recording.
- Anticipate something going wrong.
- EXPLANATION: You should have redundancy in your presentation technology.
Question 3 of 3
How can you increase your emotional presence?
- Smile and make eye contact.
- Maintain a consistent pace but vary the volume.
- Speak clearly and loudly.
- Use gestures, pauses, and expressions.
- EXPLANATION: You can also vary speech volume to match the emotional content.
How to Present and Stay on Point Linkedin Answers Quiz 2
Question 1 of 3
What is the best way to avoid technical errors during your presentation?
- Have an A/V technician help.
- Do not use your own laptop.
- Implement a checklist.
- EXPLANATION: There are a lot of things that can go wrong, and working through a checklist beforehand is the best policy.
- Use cloud storage.
Question 2 of 3
Three times during your presentation, an audience member’s phone rings. How should you respond?
- Apologize and appeal for help.
- Pause the presentation.
- Ask the person to leave.
- Smile knowingly and carry on.
- EXPLANATION: Any other action or response would cause a diversion.
Question 3 of 3
What should you say if you receive an irrelevant question?
- “I’m really not interested in that issue.”
- “That’s interesting, but it might be too much off-topic. Can I discuss this with you later?”
- EXPLANATION: You can politely defer answering the question.
- “That’s really too much of a diversion. I think we should move on.”
- “You’ll have to take that up with someone else.”
How to Present and Stay on Point Linkedin Answers