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113 hilary mason data-2013-11-22-Speaking: Two Questions to Ask Before You Give a Talk


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Introduction: Speaking: Two Questions to Ask Before You Give a Talk Posted: November 22, 2013 | Author: Hilary Mason | Filed under: speaking | Tags: questions , speaking | 6 Comments » If you’ve had a talk proposal accepted or been invited to speak at an event, you’ll usually get a chance to chat with the organizers before you show up to give your talk. While you probably have a good idea of the topic of your talk (if you don’t, that’s a post for another day!), event organizers can be invaluable in helping you frame a talk that will succeed with their audience. They are on your side and they want you to do great, or they wouldn’t be hosting you at their event. These are two questions that I always ask the organizers before I speak. Question 1: Who will be in the audience? Knowing the basic demographics of the audience is necessary to make sure you’re speaking at the right level and tuning the cultural references and humor for the room. I often speak to audiences o


Summary: the most important sentenses genereted by tfidf model

sentIndex sentText sentNum sentScore

1 While you probably have a good idea of the topic of your talk (if you don’t, that’s a post for another day! [sent-2, score-0.265]

2 ), event organizers can be invaluable in helping you frame a talk that will succeed with their audience. [sent-3, score-1.314]

3 They are on your side and they want you to do great, or they wouldn’t be hosting you at their event. [sent-4, score-0.211]

4 These are two questions that I always ask the organizers before I speak. [sent-5, score-0.758]

5 Knowing the basic demographics of the audience is necessary to make sure you’re speaking at the right level and tuning the cultural references and humor for the room. [sent-7, score-0.405]

6 I often speak to audiences of highly technical engineers and to audiences of business folks about the same topics. [sent-8, score-0.691]

7 You may already have a good sense of who will be at the event, but getting the organizer to tell you explicitly also tells you which population they are crafting the event to serve. [sent-10, score-1.055]

8 It’s helpful to know who they consider to be the most important people in the room. [sent-11, score-0.161]

9 Question 2: What does a win for my talk look like to you? [sent-12, score-0.264]

10 This question prompts the organizers to tell you what they are hoping people in the audience will take away from your talk. [sent-13, score-0.954]

11 Their response gives you more information about how you can successfully fit your talk into the overall event and specific goals. [sent-14, score-0.837]

12 The event organizers know their event better than you do, so anything you can learn from them ahead of time will be useful. [sent-16, score-1.346]


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Introduction: Speaking: Two Questions to Ask Before You Give a Talk Posted: November 22, 2013 | Author: Hilary Mason | Filed under: speaking | Tags: questions , speaking | 6 Comments » If you’ve had a talk proposal accepted or been invited to speak at an event, you’ll usually get a chance to chat with the organizers before you show up to give your talk. While you probably have a good idea of the topic of your talk (if you don’t, that’s a post for another day!), event organizers can be invaluable in helping you frame a talk that will succeed with their audience. They are on your side and they want you to do great, or they wouldn’t be hosting you at their event. These are two questions that I always ask the organizers before I speak. Question 1: Who will be in the audience? Knowing the basic demographics of the audience is necessary to make sure you’re speaking at the right level and tuning the cultural references and humor for the room. I often speak to audiences o

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