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Presenting to Win
Book

Presenting to Win

The Art of Telling Your Story

FT Prentice Hall, 2003 more...


Editorial Rating

9

Qualities

  • Applicable

Recommendation

The lessons in this excellent book should be studied and applied by everyone who has to give presentations. In terms of audience connection and persuasive technique, Abe Lincoln must have known everything here (except, perhaps, the details of PowerPoint). And that’s good, because you don’t need anything new or fancy to give a great presentation, you just need a message and clear instructions on how to deliver it - so, here they are. The book is cleanly written with pop-out boxes, sample graphics and corporate examples. Anyone who ignores its powerful basic rules will fail at presenting. Failure means boring the audience and leaving them unconvinced and unwilling to hear more. This is your cure for those blues. The book’s flaw is the author’s tedious self-promotion, but he’s a former TV guy, so what the heck do you expect? The bottom line, getAbstract attests, is that what he says, you need to know.

Take-Aways

  • The goal of every business presentation is to persuade.
  • Know where you want to take the audience and tailor your presentation to them.
  • Tell them what you are going to tell them, say it and tell them what you told them.

About the Author

Jerry Weissman has coached the top brass at Yahoo!, Compaq, Intel, Intuit, Cisco Systems, Microsoft and almost 400 other client firms about how to do important business presentations and road shows that have raised billions in the stock market. He is a former news and public affairs producer for CBS Television.


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    M. K. 7 years ago
    The summary is spot on, it gets right to the point without any unnecessary information. Thanks.
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    E. R. getAbstract 1 decade ago
    Hi David - We will take another look at this abstract with your feedback in mind. Meanwhile, you might enjoy our other summary of a Jerry Weissman book, "The Power Presenter." Thanks for your note, E. Rauzin, Managing Editor, getAbstract
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    D. C. 1 decade ago
    The summary really overlooks the author's key point: that getting your STORY clear is about 80% of success. Without a story any presentation will fail. Jerry spends a good deal of time and effort to hammer home this point...but this review has somehow missed that.

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