Okay, so we're making progress. You know your topic, you figured out what you want the audience to do. You brainstormed on messages, you've narrowed it down to your top five, you now have a story for each message point. Now you need to think about, do you have anything visual to help your audience whether it's one person 550 or 10 million, any visuals to help your audience understand and remember your messages more. Now visuals can come in all sizes and shapes. If your presentation is a marriage proposal, then your visual might be a diamond ring.
If you're giving a presentation on a new tennis racket design, then show the tennis racket. If you have a new Super Slim laptop, show how slim the laptop is pull it out of envelope if you need to. Now of course the easiest doesn't mean it's the best but the easiest visual these days. For most people to use is some type of PowerPoint or Keynote if it's on Apple, but a computerized program. I've got a whole section of the course with more than 50 lectures on how to make PowerPoint as effective as possible and how to use it effectively. But right now, I want you just to think in simple terms of what visuals Do you have, do you have a visual for each one of your message, but you don't have to.
But if there's some way of making your ideas more understandable, more memorable by showing people something, then let's come up with what that something is whether it's a tangible object, a picture, an image or a graph, come up with that right now.