Learn to make catchy presentations that sticks in the minds of your audience

We are sure you recognize the situation. You are sitting at a conference or course. You have really been looking forward to the presentation and the topic, but the presenter talks with a monotone voice, shows a lot of text-heavy slides and the presentation is obviously one he has reused from a previous situation, and most of the content is not relevant to you and the other audience. Your eyelids get more and more heavy and your head begins to nod even if you do your very best to stay awake.
Maybe you even recognize it the other way around, and it is you that strive to maintain the attention of your audience? In that case we might have good news for you.
Our new course might be helpful
A new e-learning course from Danish Diabetes Academy (DDA) can help you structure your presentations and maintain the attention of your audience during the entire presentation. The course also helps you target the presentation to the target audience and provides tips and hints to the preparation of slides and manuscript.
The non-verbal communication is also important when you want to communicate a message and make the audience want to listen to you. In the e-learning course, a session focuses on how you use postures, body gestures, facial expression and your voice actively in order to support a message and engage your audience.
The last session focuses on how you can prepare for what can go wrong during a presentation.
How does it work?
The course is divided into smaller sessions to allow you to complete exactly the sessions you need knowledge about and to complete the sessions in the desired order. Each of the learning bites is followed by a few questions where you can test what is learned.
At DDA we strive to deliver tools, material and templates to help our presenters to do their very best. It is our hope that the course will improve the presentation skills of presenters at our educational activities and thereby increase the overall quality of all DDA events.
Check it out and get tips and hints for your next presentation here