The Evil presentation game.
Nov. 16th, 2005 05:12 pmA workmate has just reminded me of the 'evil presentation game'.
In the dim and distant past, a workmate an I had a ... shall we say rather uninspiring training course.
As is normal with these sorts of things, notes were distributed beforehand, to make notes on.
Now, the game. Flick ahead a page or two in the notes. Ask a question that's answered/covered on that page, with a straight face.
After page 5 or so 'of 'we'll get to that' the lecturer might twig, so you'll need to vary your approach a little.
And of course, it must be done with an absolutely straight face. If you're really feeling sneaky, tagteaming it, and asking one thing and getting someone else to pick up a followon is definitely in order.
Simple enough, I know, but it's guaranteed to make boring presentations far more interesting.
In the dim and distant past, a workmate an I had a ... shall we say rather uninspiring training course.
As is normal with these sorts of things, notes were distributed beforehand, to make notes on.
Now, the game. Flick ahead a page or two in the notes. Ask a question that's answered/covered on that page, with a straight face.
After page 5 or so 'of 'we'll get to that' the lecturer might twig, so you'll need to vary your approach a little.
And of course, it must be done with an absolutely straight face. If you're really feeling sneaky, tagteaming it, and asking one thing and getting someone else to pick up a followon is definitely in order.
Simple enough, I know, but it's guaranteed to make boring presentations far more interesting.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-17 11:42 am (UTC)If you're confident in your presentation skills, pepper your presentation with Dilbert strips about how bad presentations are. Takes cohones.
You can also fish for a question on one slide, and if some sucker asks it, you can show the next slide with the answer in font size 100...