If you follow the lessons in this course, so far, you are ready to give not a good but a great technology presentation. It really all comes down to can you point to a video of yourself and say, Wow, that's a great technology presentation. If I could present half as well as that, I'm going to blow everyone off the stage at Macworld or this Tech Expo or wherever it is you are. You are going to be fantastic. That's where you need to be. And if you're not there yet, you can blame me if you want.
But the solution is in front of you. You have to keep practicing until you like what you see. I hope what you realize from this course is in some ways, a technology presentation is no different from any other presentation. And when we tell ourselves, it's different, it often pushes us into some artificial box that makes us worse. Technology presentation is either going to be interesting and memorable to people or boring and instantly forgotten. Most technology presentations are instantly forgotten.
Because the person just stands up and goes away too deep way too long, too many data points too much science, too many numbers, too many facts. There's no context and nobody remembers anything. You're not going to make that mistake. So no matter how wildly complicated, your technology is, no matter how sophisticated no matter their nuclear reactors inside, you're going to go about this with a discipline. You're going to brainstorm on your message points, narrowed it down to the top five, tell stories, give examples, case studies, visuals for each one of your points, to make it come alive to make it memorable for people. That way.
They can understand it and remember it and act on it. Do that and you are going to be wildly smart. accessible and all of your technology presentations are going to be hit. Good luck.