Another conference, my third this fall. First MLA, Minnesota Library Association. Then MEMO, Minnesota Educational Media Organization. And today, I returned from CODI, Customers of Dynix. In all 3 cases, I was fortunate to find something very inspiring – and that’s good.
Conferences are for a wide slice of an interest population. Those who attend are a wide spectrum and everything in between: much experience vs little; geek vs non-geek; management vs rank-and-file; even the willing vs the unwilling. Good conference planning offers up a broad buffet of choices to provide something for everyone.
Help us out conference presenters. In your presentation, here’s what I’d like to see in the conference program:
Title — not something cutesey, but informative
Presenters — name and accurate description/credentials
Then, when I attend a presentation, here’s what I hope for from the presenter:
- A well-prepared presentation
- Visuals — yes, I like PowerPoint. I have a wandering mind, it keeps me (and you) on target. But don’t read your PowerPoint. (else just tell me you’re reading your PP and you can just E-mail it to me, and I can go to something else).
- Don’t insult me with a lot of trivial ice-breaking jokes. Do tell me a little bit about where you’re coming from.
- Keep control of your environment. Don’t let someone drag you astray. Most times, I appreciate presenters who ask to have questions held until the end.
- Go back to Speech 101 — (1) tell ’em what you’re gonna tell ’em (2) tell ’em (3)tell ’em what you told ’em