Okay, here's one for you guys, next week I've been tasked with doing a presentation to my old school, well, part of it. The audience is a count of about 100 14/15 year olds on each of the two days, for as much time as I want up to about 50 minutes. All fine and dandy, except when the presentation I'll be doing to them is probably going to be quite uninteresting to them. Background info, they just did a 2 month project on Business Enterprise in their ICT lessons, they had to come up with a new product, research, develop, etc, and come up with something presentable, they even had to go into the business side of things and work out investments they want, turnover, costs, etc. I came back in to school to judge the finals of this project, and afterwards my old teacher, who is actually the head of ICT and Business Studies as well, tasked me with creating my own presentation if I wish to on my own, already running business, to as he put it "show them how it's done in the real world". Of course I took up this challenge since I'm usually quite a fan of public speaking on a topic I'm heavily interested in.
My business in question is Web Design and Systems Services (at least, that's what my business card says), which really isn't the most interesting topic for these guys. I've tried to keep it interesting, my intro is quite an interesting one, based on Johnny Long's intro but more personal to me. After that, I start going on to briefly run over what the business does, and our turnover, etc, and impress them with nice big numbers, then a bit on 'hacking' in a very broad sense of the term. Now I'm stuck for ideas, I mean, I could start going into a waffle about some great businessman who started from nothing and gained everything (e.g. Bill Gates) but I really can't see them enjoying that for long. If I had enough time I could have started going on about New User Interface and how the way we interact with things is changing, but until I actually have an iPhone 4 and I build my multi-touch table I can't really dabble with that (saving that presentation for next year, since I'll be bringing that table back to the school, I have this whole idea in the back of my head involving audience interaction and such). On a side note, gotta make sure I get iDemo on an iPhone for that, I hear it's pretty good over USB, so I could totally use it in that second presentation next year.
So, any pointers, suggestions, etc, about what I could do for these guys that may make my presentation a bit more interesting, coming from relatively normal teens? Like I said I have up to 50 minutes, so I can go for 5, 20, or even the full 50 minutes. Though God help me if I manage that. And yeah, I don't have to stay directly on the topic of my business, I can go into other areas such as the aforementioned stuff about NUI, constantly evolving technology, etc. Normally I'm great at presentations, but I aim them far too much at an older, or at least 'geekier' demographic, hence why I'm trying to get some ideas from teens who aren't as unusually minded as I am, at least as normal as this community can be...
And yes, I do have a video from Monty Python of a TrojanHorse Rabbit. And for kicks, let's make the title "Ben Woodford on 'Web 3.0 or: how I learned to stop worrying and took over the internet.'".
tl;dr: Doing a presentation on a real business, and some other neat techie things, to 14/15 year olds next week, need some ideas from 'normal' teenagers on how I could keep them interested.
My business in question is Web Design and Systems Services (at least, that's what my business card says), which really isn't the most interesting topic for these guys. I've tried to keep it interesting, my intro is quite an interesting one, based on Johnny Long's intro but more personal to me. After that, I start going on to briefly run over what the business does, and our turnover, etc, and impress them with nice big numbers, then a bit on 'hacking' in a very broad sense of the term. Now I'm stuck for ideas, I mean, I could start going into a waffle about some great businessman who started from nothing and gained everything (e.g. Bill Gates) but I really can't see them enjoying that for long. If I had enough time I could have started going on about New User Interface and how the way we interact with things is changing, but until I actually have an iPhone 4 and I build my multi-touch table I can't really dabble with that (saving that presentation for next year, since I'll be bringing that table back to the school, I have this whole idea in the back of my head involving audience interaction and such). On a side note, gotta make sure I get iDemo on an iPhone for that, I hear it's pretty good over USB, so I could totally use it in that second presentation next year.
So, any pointers, suggestions, etc, about what I could do for these guys that may make my presentation a bit more interesting, coming from relatively normal teens? Like I said I have up to 50 minutes, so I can go for 5, 20, or even the full 50 minutes. Though God help me if I manage that. And yeah, I don't have to stay directly on the topic of my business, I can go into other areas such as the aforementioned stuff about NUI, constantly evolving technology, etc. Normally I'm great at presentations, but I aim them far too much at an older, or at least 'geekier' demographic, hence why I'm trying to get some ideas from teens who aren't as unusually minded as I am, at least as normal as this community can be...
And yes, I do have a video from Monty Python of a Trojan
tl;dr: Doing a presentation on a real business, and some other neat techie things, to 14/15 year olds next week, need some ideas from 'normal' teenagers on how I could keep them interested.
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