How to deliver a great TED talk : presentation secrets of the world's best speakers

By Karia, Akash · Published by [San Bernandino, Calif.] : [CreateSpace?] · 2012-01-01T00:00:00Z · Language: eng · 206 views
Source: Internet Archive Format: PDF Undergraduate / College
Business presentations Public speaking Oral communication

"How to deliver a great TED talk : presentation secrets of the world's best speakers" is a PDF drawn from the Internet Archive and catalogued under Economics & Business for Undergraduate / College. From the source: vi, 198 pages ; 23 cm "How to Deliver a Great TED talk" is a complete public speaking system for delivering highly effective presentations and speeches. If you’ve watched TED talks before, you’ve no doubt… Slide Collection preserves the upstream link, the original creator credit and the licensing terms; download the file to use it in a classroom, study group or revision plan.

About this presentation

vi, 198 pages ; 23 cm "How to Deliver a Great TED talk" is a complete public speaking system for delivering highly effective presentations and speeches. If you’ve watched TED talks before, you’ve no doubt been inspired and electrified by speeches by figures such as Sir Ken Robinson, Jill Bolte Taylor, Simon Sinek and Dan Pink. What makes these TED talks so inspiring? What is the secret formula for creating a successful TED talk? And how can you use this formula to deliver your own powerful TED talk (or any other presentation or speech, for that matter)? If you follow the guidelines and tools How to Deliver a Great TED Talk (previously published as "How to Deliver the Perfect TED Talk"), I guarantee that your audience will have no choice but to be wrapped up in your speeches and presentations."--Publisher description "Also previously published as "How to deliver the perfect TED talk."

How to study this deck

Economics slides love graphs. Before accepting any conclusion, identify the axes, the model's assumptions, and the variables held constant. The conclusion follows from the model, not from the world.

Undergraduate viewers should treat this as a scaffolding for deeper reading — the slides outline the territory, but the textbook chapters and primary sources remain the actual content.

Five questions to test your understanding

  1. What is the single most important claim on the first three slides, and what evidence is offered for it?
  2. Which slide could you remove without losing the argument? Which slide is load-bearing?
  3. Where does the deck switch from definitions to applications? Mark that transition.
  4. What would a student who already disagreed with the conclusion need to see to be convinced?
  5. Which two slides, if combined, would give the clearest one-slide summary of the whole deck?

Where this deck fits in the wider catalogue

Slide Collection classifies this presentation under Economics & Business, alongside other openly-licensed material in the same subject. If you are preparing a unit at the Undergraduate / College level, the dedicated combined Economics & Business · Undergraduate / College page is the fastest way to find adjacent decks with the same audience in mind.

Citation & reuse

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