Sunday, April 21, 2013

Reflection on Oral Presentation


Since we were the last group to present, the pressure was on us to deliver and live up to the high standards the other groups set for us. We met numerous times this week to prepare the slides and hone our presentation.

I was personally inspired seeing this great TED video by Simon Sinek on how great leaders inspire us-
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pI0cJdOzUcQ. He has repeatedly mentioned something which caught my attention- People don’t buy what you do, they buy why you do it. This was applicable for our presentation topic on Foreign Workers because I felt that we would be grabbing the audience attention more if we could make them realize why we are doing it. We tried to highlight the purpose of our proposal- the betterment of the image of Singapore as a safe workplace with world-class labour force and being compassionate to the foreign workers. To my delight, I found Joel, Xudong, Haoxuan and Evelyn sharing similar points of view.


I feel that one major advantage we had compared to the other teams was the fact that our report was ready before our presentation. Thus we could pattern our presentation using contents from the report. While preparing the presentation, our primary focus was to minimize the use of texts in every slide so that the attention stays on the speaker rather than on the slides.

Our videos were chosen to generate pathos from the audience since we believed that empathy building for the foreign workers should be the crux of our presentation. Not be left out on logos and ethos, we carried out surveys to come up with numbers for the workers’ salaries and their living conditions and took interviews of construction workers to gain knowledge on their plight. I particularly enjoyed working on the introduction and the conclusion of the presentation because these gave me an opportunity to talk freely without the bounds of following any particular slide.

We hoped that we would be able to ascertain a quantitative value for cost of plan rather than only outlining the stakeholders and their responsibilities. I believe that this was a weakness in our presentation since providing the stakeholders with a quantitative value would have made them visualize how the benefits would surely outweigh the costs involved. We hope that some other group with higher manpower could work on the quantitative cost of plan of the proposal.

At last I would like to add the fact that this oral presentation helped me to learn how to speak passionately in front of an audience. I was the one beginning the presentation, all the more reason for me to be nervous. Practicing really helped me in being a little less nervous because I knew what I was going to talk about. As Amy Cuddy said, “Fake it till you become it”. Here’s hoping nobody noticed my nervousness!

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