Buy Leads , RDP , SMTP , Cpanel
Buy Leads , RDP , SMTP , Cpanel
Buy Leads , RDP , SMTP , Cpanel
Is Drawing On White Boards And Charts Too Old Fashion For Modern Audiences?

Is Drawing On White Boards And Charts Too Old Fashion For Modern Audiences?

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Consistently, the worst advice speakers and presenters get, comes from everyone who is NOT your audience. The following gives examples of some of the WORST advice people are often given. It is followed by the advice of your audience. Listen to them. They are your true judge and jury.

Is drawing on white boards and charts too old fashion for modern audiences?

Director of marketing: “Of course it’s too old fashion. You should always use video or slick PowerPoint graphics.”

Director of Public Affairs: “We want to project ourselves as modern members of the 21st century, so let’s not be caught using old technology.”

You: “I don’t want to draw or diagram in front of people. What if I make a mistake? All eyes will be on me. If I do the PowerPoint slides in advance I can spend hours on them and add many layers of useful date to each slide.”


Your Audience: “Actually, it’s quite refreshing to see someone draw or diagram for us live and in the moment. It’s, frankly, much easier to follow because a speaker cannot draw 8 different color-coded lines at once. As audience members we feel we can see and experience exactly what the speaker is talking about us. Also, it slows the speaker down and gets the speaker away from doing a huge data dump. By drawing items, it forces the speaker to get away from meaningless abstractions. We don’t care if the drawing or writing is less than great, as long as we can understand the concept and see the drawng, we are OK with it.”

TJ Walker, Media Training Worldwide

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