A design presentation
Do the preparation task first. Then listen to the audio and do the exercises.
Preparation
Transcript
Hi, everyone. Thanks for coming to this short presentation on our new product design. As you know, we've already redeveloped our 'Adventure' shampoo to make it more modern and appealing. And we've renamed it 'Adventure Tech'. Our market research established the target market as men in the 18–40 age range who like to be outdoors and also like technical gadgets, such as smartwatches, drones and things like that. We needed to create a bottle which appeals to that market.
So, today, I'm happy to unveil our new bottle design. As you can see, it's designed to look like a black metal drinking flask, with some digital features printed on it.
I'd like to talk you through the following three points: the key features, sizing and our timeline for production.
Firstly, you'll notice it has an ergonomic design. That means it fits smoothly into your hand and can be easily opened and squeezed using one hand. And, it looks like a flask you might use when hiking outdoors. The imitation digital displays are designed to remind the user of other tech devices they may have, such as a smartwatch or smart displays in their home.
I'd now like to tell you about the sizes. It comes in two sizes: the regular size and a small travel size. The travel size is the same type of design – a flask, also with imitation digital displays on the bottle. We were thinking of starting with one and following with the travel-size in a few months, but we've worked hard and both are ready now.
Finally, I'm going to talk to you about our timeline for production. You've probably heard that we're launching in two months. In preparation for that, we're starting the marketing campaign next month. You can see the complete overview of all phases in this Gantt chart.
In summary, the bottle's been designed for men who like adventure and technology, and it comes in two sizes. The marketing campaign is starting next month and we're launching the product in two months.
OK. So, any questions? Feel free to also email me for further information in case we run out of time.
i've 8/8 in preparation but in task1 3/6
and task 5/8
not easy and not difficult
The last time I had to give a presentation was in the course of a seminar led by my research team. This happened eight months ago. I presented some mathematical tools to solve problems with too many state variables. I presented a related tutorial and the public was very exited of discovering the possibility of reducing the size of a problem.
I recently had the chance to present the results of our survey on pregnant women, and this experience felt very different from my previous talks. The preparation itself was intense — not only did I have to structure the data, but I also needed to make sure that the results were understandable and meaningful for a mixed audience of medical professionals and students.
Unlike my earlier presentations, this one was based almost entirely on numbers, patterns, and patient feedback. That made it both exciting and challenging: exciting, because the data revealed trends that could really impact practice; challenging, because presenting raw statistics in a clear and engaging way is never easy.
During the presentation, which lasted around 15 minutes, I noticed how much more confident I felt once I started walking the audience through the key findings. The constructive questions afterwards showed me that people were genuinely interested, and that gave me an extra boost.
Overall, it was a valuable experience. Stressful, yes, but also energizing — I could see that the effort put into the survey and the analysis truly paid off when the audience engaged with the results.
I gave a presentation about a new contract to our client in June 2023. I thought our client was happy. After this presentation, we signed the new contract.
Three years ago, while the last (RCDC) Regional Cardiovascular Diseases Conference had done, on the first day I had presented Cardiogenic Chock topic over 15 minutes. in that presentation there were a lot of new medical approaches and guidelines which had developed by AHA, a lot of discussion time spend between me and all audiences,, whatever, everything discussed was done from scientific and medical background.
It was during my time in college, and it was my graduation project. The topic was: How COVID-19 Affected Our Food Intake.
Well, my las presentation was about a year ago, i think i did a great job, I'm known as person who has a social anxiety when I speak in front of everyone. Which is mean every time I have a presentation i get so nervous and my heartbeats races even my breathing becomes slow and labored, but at my last time i wasn't like that, because i had practiced a lot for that, i felt confident and like i was really ready to talk , it wasn't perfect as i imagined of course, but it was awesome for me. The presentation was about a very rere topic "self-harm", at first i had no clue what i should to menciona in this topic, but i did some researchers, so i figure out it was really deserved to think about.
More mistakes than me, but the flow is so natural. I admire your comment.
The first time I had to give a presentation was when I graduated from university and I discussed my thesis. Now that I'm a school teacher, precisely a Math & Science teacher, I have to create new presentatios every day and they have to be always colorful and interesting and interactive in order to help my students to get concepts quickly and without getting bored.
The last time I gave a presentation was about 2 years ago, it was an awesome presentation, me and my partner worked really hard on it , but sadly I couldn't present it in the way I want Because the file was not opened in PowerPoint.