Q.2
Public speaking is a soft skill that requires excellent communication skills, enthusiasm, and the ability to engage with an audience. Public speakers make presentations to a group. Presentations range from speaking to a small group of employees to presenting to a large audience at a national conference or event. The same skillset and ability to be comfortable speaking in public are required regardless of the size of the group. Most professional-level roles require some amount of public speaking to carry out functions like presenting findings, pitching proposals, training junior staff, and leading meetings.
Q.3
Presentations can be really good or really bad. Even the "okay" presentations-the ones that are well put-together but don't particularly stand out--end up being really bad, and usually it's for one reason: They're boring. Boring presentations are reputation killers, and they can turn a room full of attentive professionals into a room full of sleepy zombies, checking their phones and counting the slides. Best practices for presentations, including practicing and structuring your presentation effectively, are important to make a quality show. However, it's the little things, the speaking and body language tricks you use, that will keep your audience awake long enough to hear it.
Try using these 10 tricks to command your audience's attention:
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