COMM 212 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Ad Libitum, Voicemail, Plaintext
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An informative or persuasive speech delivered using only notes and visual aids to guise the speake(cid:396)(cid:859)s pe(cid:396)fo(cid:396)(cid:373)a(cid:374)(cid:272)e. Oral presentations are as important as written communication. They sell ideas, demonstrate competence, and show the value of the subject. Presentations should be simply structured, identify a specific purpose, and outline clearly. Like writing, organization (structure), audience, and purpose are important. identified ideas. Types of oral presentations: workshops, seminars and training sessions, staff meetings, talks to clubs, societies and organizations, sales presentations, speech (conference or gathering, oral reports or briefings (one-on-one) Time (how long and when during the day) Structure of a presentation: an oral presentation must be integrated and cohesive. It should include three to five key ideas. Logical: points must clearly relate to the purpose, signposts and transitions are necessary. Narrative: a story must be told clearly, data and statistics need to be interesting and relevant. Formal: tell the(cid:373) (cid:449)hat you(cid:859)(cid:396)e goi(cid:374)g to say, say it, tell them what you said.