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.
See also  How to Speak So People Want to Listen

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


How to Present and Stay on Point Linkedin Answers
How to Present and Stay on Point Linkedin Answers