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Guest Post

Three Stages of Presenting with Twitter

by Guest Post on November 22, 2009

This is a guest post from esteemed presentations and speaking expert Olivia Mitchell.

There’s a new story almost every week of a presenter getting roasted on Twitter. The possibility that this might happen to you could be scary. Presenting at conferences is hard enough without the added complication of Twitter.

But it’s not all bad. Conference organizers and presenters are experimenting with using the backchannel to proactively engage audiences using the backchannel. (The backchannel refers to an online conversation taking place at the same time as a live speaker or speakers).

I’ve written an eBook “How to present with Twitter (and other backchannels)” to help you thrive in this new presentation world. In the eBook I take you through the three stages of presenting with Twitter (or any other backchannel) from survival through to engagement. Here’s a summary of the stages:

1. Survive the experience

Preparation

If you prepare thoughtfully, respecting the needs of your audience and do your best, you will survive presenting to the backchannel. An audience will generally (notwithstanding a few rogue tweeters) be tolerant unless you present content that is out-of-date, wrong or insulting to their intelligence and experience. Audit your presentation for the hot buttons which will get even the kindliest audience member tapping out a tweet. For example, look for and remove:

Prepare yourself psychologically for what’s its going to be like presenting to a tweeting audience. Gather together a few colleagues and present to them while they keep busy on their laptops. If you can do that for 10 minutes you’ll be more at ease when you face your real audience.

During the presentation

Take control of the presentation environment. If there’s a big screen display of the backchannel ask for it to be turned off.

These are the essential things to do. The next stage is to use Twitter to react in real-time.

2. Respond to the audience’s needs

Twitter is a fantastic tool for finding out what people are thinking while you’re presenting. And if you find you’re not meeting their needs, you can respond and change tracks.

To do this you need to monitor the backchannel. Unless you’re a practiced multi-tasker or supremely-skilled presenter, get some help with this task. When you’re presenting you need to be 100% focused on living your words and connecting with your audience. I know that I can’t do that and scan the backchannel at the same time. There are two ways that you can monitor the backchannel during your presentation:

Twitter moderator

Ask a Twitter-savvy friend or colleague to be your Twitter moderator. If you don’t have anyone who can play this role, ask for a tweeting volunteer from the audience. Their role is to monitor the backchannel and alert you to tweets that you can or should respond to (see more on this below).

Twitter breaks

As well as having a Twitter moderator take Twitter breaks. After each part of your presentation, take a short break in your presentation so that you can have a look at the Twitterstream, check you’re on the right track and answer any tweeted questions. Combine the Twitter break with taking questions in the frontchannel.

Here are some of the types of tweets you might see and how to respond to them:

  1. Positive contributions. The backchannel can contain incredibly useful information. It will likely shatter the illusion that you’re the only expert on your topic. Highlight useful tweets and thank people for their contributions.
  2. Points of disagreement. These tweets may be a bit confronting, but here’s how to think of it — your audience is engaging and participating in your presentation. See them as an opportunity to engage deeper. Read out the tweets (or display them on the screen) and ask the tweeter to elaborate. This is important because it can be quite tricky to make a complex point in 140 characters. Then respond the same way that you would if this were a traditional Q&A session.
  3. Environmental issues. Sound issues and other distractions are all things that people may tweet about. Ask your moderator, conference host or a volunteer to get the issue fixed as soon as possible.
  4. Content disconnect. If your content is not meeting the needs of the audience you’ll get to hear about it. Here’s where you need to exercise some judgment. If there is only one tweet like this you can probably disregard it, but if it is retweeted or others reply in agreement, then you should take some action. This may be very disconcerting for you as a presenter, but better to know now and attempt to put things right, than to find out later that you bombed when you can no longer do anything about it.

3. Engage your audience

The third stage is not just to survive and respond, but to use Twitter proactively to engage your audience. There are now a number of Twitter tools which have been developed to make it easy to use Twitter in your presentation.

Tweet your key points

To ensure that your key points are tweeted, craft them into tweetbites — short sentences ready-made for tweeting. Both PowerPoint and Keynote have add-ins so that you can schedule your tweet to be posted at the same time as you click on a specific slide.

Use backchannel tools other than Twitter to create engagement

If you plan to use the backchannel proactively in your presentation, it may be better to use a backchannel tool other than Twitter. This is because:

  1. Twitter users won’t have to be concerned about overwhelming their followers with a series of presentation-specific tweets.
  2. Anybody can access and contribute to the backchannel without having to register.

That makes the backchannel more inclusive: no Twitter-divide — and it allows the backchannel to become more intimate amongst conference attendees.

Nina Simon of Museum 2.0 has written a great account of using both Twitter and a no-registration backchannel tool, TodaysMeet, at the WebWise 2009 conference:

“Whereas Twitter provided the conference highlights to a wider audience, TodaysMeet allowed attendees to delve deeper into individual moments and questions.”

If you’re presenting to a conference you need to be ready for the backchannel. Download my free eBook “How to present with Twitter and other backchannels” (no sign up required) for more help.

Olivia Mitchell blogs at Speaking about Presenting. Visit her blog for more tips on how to prepare and deliver engaging presentations.

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Kaizen and Microsharing

August 12, 2009

This is a guest post written by Valeria Maltoni.
Thursday at 12:00 pm ET/11:00 am CT/9:00 am PT is the new Twitter chat #kaizenblog. It was inspired by the idea that blogging for me has been a way to practice kaizen, the art of continuous improvement for writing, ideas, and community-building.
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June 15, 2009

This is a guest post written by Wilfried Schobeiri.
Anyone watching Twitter trends over the last few days would have noticed the hashtag #CNNFail up there toward the top. Why? Because CNN and other major news media failed to pick up and report on the severity of the turmoil surrounding the Iranian elections. In the mean [...]

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June 2, 2009

This is a guest post written by Olivia Mitchell and has been reprinted from Speaking About Presenting with permission.
Twitter is now a reality at many conferences. Now the question is: should you display a live Twitter stream on a large screen so that everyone (not just the tweeters) in the audience can see it?

Sir Ken [...]

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May 6, 2009

This is a guest post written by Andrew McAfee and was reprinted with permission from his blog.
Twitter grew by 131% in March alone, and Oprah started tweeting last week (and already has about 175,000 followers), so it seemed like the right time to discuss this technology/service/phenomenon/whatever-it-is in my MBA course. Laura Fitton came to class [...]

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Twitter Follow Etiquette for Councils

May 4, 2009

This is a guest post written by Simon Wakeman which was originally featured on his blog and has been reprinted with permission.
We’ve been running @medway_council on Twitter for a few weeks now.
One thing that I’m still unsure about is how councils should use Twitter’s concept of “following” others.
People are choosing to follow @medway_council for their [...]

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How to Write Twitter-Friendly Headlines

April 9, 2009

This post, by Marshall Thompson, was originally posted to Advent Creative but has been republished with permission.
Newspapers will have to adapt to social media to survive and thrive in the future. Luckily, it seems that some social media tools have adapted to newspapers as well. Twitter is the best example. It’s a rapidly growing microbloging [...]

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How to Use Microblogging for Education

April 7, 2009

This is a guest post by Martin Böhringer which was originally posted on his blog but has been reprinted with permission.
As I was strongly involved in the creation of Communote, I enjoy still being connected to the team. However, after finishing my studies as a PhD student and research assistant, I am now a lecturer [...]

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How Do You Determine Your Twitter Friends?

April 1, 2009

In this guest post by Connie Reece, we discuss an interesting question on the Twitter phenomenon. How do you pick and choose your friends? This post was reprinted from Connie’s blog post, Twitter and the Dunbar Number, with permission.
I’ve never been in the camp of those who follow back every one who adds [...]

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Why Executives Should Twitter: Let Us Count the Ways

March 30, 2009

This is a guest post from Edward Boches and has been reprinted from his blog with permission.
If you are a CEO, it’s time to get on Twitter. If you know a CEO, do him or her a favor and tell him to get on Twitter. If you are the PR counsel to a CEO, make [...]

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