The Three Myths of
Technical Presentations
I provide presentation coaching for technical experts – anyone
who has in-depth knowledge that is specific to a specialized field. Over the
years I've become away of a number of their unspoken assumptions that limit
their effectiveness.
Those assumptions are what I call myths – erroneous
beliefs that are accepted without serious analysis.
These are the three myths most commonly held by technical
experts about their presentations
MYTH #1: Knowledge is power.
Technical
experts know something that the rest of us don't know. (That's what makes them
experts.) But simply knowing something is not what makes them valuable to their organization
or, as a presenter, to their audiences. What makes them
valuable is their ability to communicate what they know so that other people can
understand it and put it to use. Knowledge isn't power.
The ability to communicate knowledge is.
MYTH #2: The facts speak for themselves.
Scientists and researchers are the ones most like to say
this explicitly. But technical experts in other fields seem to think that facts
are facts and simply stating them is enough to win an argument or to prove a
point.
Facts don't say anything. Someone has to collect, analyze,
understand, and evaluate the facts. Someone has to draw conclusion from them and
make recommendations for future actions based on them. And someone has to
present the facts, explain what they mean, and make a compelling proposal about what
to do next. That's the role of the expert.
Facts don't speak for themselves. The presenter speaks
on their behalf.
MYTH #3: The best idea wins out
At staff meetings or review meetings or status update
meetings, technical experts often think that their ideas will win acceptance,
simply because they are the best – that is, the most logical – ideas. And
they are often sorely disappointed.
Good ideas that are poorly presented often lose out to
weaker ideas that are well presented. This is clearly true in politics, where
some of the dumbest ideas gain approval. But it's also true in corporations and
in other organizations.
If you've got a good idea, it deserves a good hearing. And
as a presenter you are the one responsible for making is case, for presenting it
as clearly and as persuasively as possible.
The best ideas don't necessarily win. Good ideas well
presented do.
It all comes down to this: As a technical expert it's your
job to know what you're talking about and to know how to talk about it in a way
that other people can understand, care about, and make use of.
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