LOEX Annual Conference 2009

Blazing Trails: On the path to Information Literacy

2009 Conference Home

Call for Proposals

Registration

Important Dates

Program

sessions

speakers

Poster Sessions

Things to do in ABQ

Hotel and Travel

Minority Scholarship

Sponsors

Virtual Sessions

FAQ

Contact Us

Past & Future Conferences

LOEX Home

Best Practices for Delivering an Excellent Presentation
1. Clearly present what your abstract promised
Attendees select which sessions to attend by reading the abstract you provided, so be sure to present what is stated in your abstract!  If you try to cram too much material in, you may have to leave some key points/findings out.  Participants are looking for a clear, useful presentation in the time allotted. Practice your entire presentation, but also be ready to delete selected details if time runs short.


2. Practice, Practice, Practice
Practice your presentation in advance, and in front of an audience if possible. Know your material so well that you will not need to rely on a script. At the same time, do not try to memorize every word of your presentation.


3. PowerPoint

If you use PowerPoint, do not fill your slides with text. Instead, use visuals like graphs, photographs and other images, which can make your presentation eye-catching and interesting, to emphasize your most important points. Use text only when it provides real value to the attendee.


4. Interact with your audience

Pay attention to audience responses and adjust your presentation accordingly. Your audience may feel more engaged if you feel comfortable taking questions throughout your presentation. If you don't, however, explain that you will take all questions at the end.


5. Introductions by room monitors

A room monitor will be available to introduce you, call for technical assistance if needed, and collect the evaluation forms that LOEX will later mail to you. Prior to your session, please fill out the very short introduction form given to you at registration, so that your room monitor can properly introduce you.


6. Multiple presenters

If there are multiple presenters, consider how you will switch smoothly among yourselves and how much time it will take to shift from section to section of your presentation. 


7. Repeat questions

Before answering, always repeat the question posed to you as you understand it. This helps assure that you fully understand the question and assures that audience members have heard it also. And it gives you a chance to formulate a complete answer.

Questions? Please contact Chris Desai at: sessions2009@loexconference.org

Last modified 21-Apr-2009
 © 2009 LOEX Clearinghouse for Library Instruction
Contact LOEX Director