
Remember
- You will be on-line, with projection and sound
from the Web on a quality AV system - USE IT.
- You have a highly experienced and technically
adept audience USE THEIR TIME WISELY.
- The best presentations are those that show
one or two very new things and provide time for discussion.
Your spoken paper cannot be the same as your written
paper, both because time is too short and because written papers
are extremely boring to listen to. Remember, your audience will
have a copy of the Proceedings with your full article. Highlight
your best points, and your original contribution.
This is a very nice application, when used carefully.
But reading the text of your Powerpoint slides is as great
a mistake as reading a written paper. Slides can introduce the
speaker and paper title, present a high level outline, show the
audience the text of a quotation, illustrate with a diagram where
words fail, provide a conclusion, state provocative ideas, or
leave open questions that will be remembered after you sit down.
But slides that drill relentlessly down an outline only to arrive
at your text are just plain dull.Ñ
Check with the chair of your session about speaking
times. Typically you will have either 20 or 30 minutes in total,
and some of this should be reserved for questions and discussions.
If your portion of the shared time is 20 minutes, plan to speak
for no more than 12. If it is 30 minutes, plan to speak for no
more that 20. Youll have a bit of space to over-run, and
still leave time for questions. Having a limited amount of time
means that you should not try to say everything it is more
important to focus on the part of your thesis that is new or different
and deserves further explanation.
Your written paper probably has a section establishing
the background telling about your museum, about your funding,
about the team working on your project please DO NOT
use your time at the podium to tell the audience these things.
They are all fellow professionals who would like to spend their
time at the meeting learning what you have to say they
can read the background for themselves.
All ichim03 attendees have access to the
Web and can visit your Web site by themselves DO NOT
conduct a general tour. The purpose of the museum demonstration
programs is to demonstrate sites if that is what you want
to do, ask for time at the Demonstrations dont use
the sessions for this.
On the other hand, your colleagues DO want
to see the concrete implementation on-line that is the focus of
your paper. Showing them, rather than telling them, will be much
more interesting and will help them appreciate what you have done.
If in doubt NEVER tell something with a bullet if
you could be showing it in action. ichim03 is a conference about the
technology you will have fast connectivity, and if you want you
can cache your content to make it even faster. Especially when
describing interactives or processes, show how the Web actually
makes it work.
Your colleagues are fairly technical people, but
no one can easily listen to large amounts of technical detail
and absorb it this will be easier for them to get from
the published paper. What they do need to hear is often best presented
with diagrams. In spoken presentations, data in tables can be
understood more easily as charts architectural diagrams
and high-level flow charts are better than code. If the point
of your paper is itself highly technical, try to explain WHY
it is different from other approaches and WHAT RESULT to
expect. Leave the listener wanting to find out HOW to achieve
it by reading your paper later.
You want your audience to remember the central points of your
talk, and to leave wanting to read your paper. You want them to
contact you in the hall during the conference to get greater insight.
You want them to remember that what you said stimulated discussion,
and that you were open to other ideas.
If you dont speak in public often
and even if you do review your presentation with someone
else to see if youve met your goals.
Thank you for helping present a great conference
program!