Simply Brilliant…
Archive for the ‘Presenting’ Category
A Glass and a Half Full
August 22, 2008The Back of the Napkin
August 7, 2008Dan Roam
All the presentation really is, is the ability to have someone else grasp what we see in here, in our own minds, in there, in their minds. And to do that sometimes things like spreadsheets and powerpoints just get in the way and the back of a napkin really is all that we need.
Dan Roam presenting at Google
Comedian: The documentary
August 1, 2008Excerpt from a post by Garr Reynolds:
“This ends up being less a documentary about comedy and more a character study of a mature and an immature craftsman,” wrote William. “The craft here is comedy, but it really could be anything, especially any type of art. A friend and I watched this and afterwards talked about how well Jerry Seinfeld and Orny Adams illustrate the principles of leadership.” (more…)
Expense tracking the iPhone way
July 26, 2008TED | Talks | Yves Behar: Creating objects that tell stories
May 31, 2008
“We bring intellectually property…we bring a marketing approach…we bring all this stuff, but I think at the end of the day what we bring is these values, and these values create a soul for the companies we work with. And its especially rewarding when your design work becomes a creative endeavour – when others can be creative and do more with it”
TelePresence Holographic Video Conferencing
May 30, 2008
Guy Kawasaki…
Holy cow, am I the last person in the world to see this? Forget Cathay Pacific’s first class seat, this is the way to make a speech in a far away land: Cisco/Musion Systems TelePresence holographic video conference. John Chambers (left) is in Bangalore. The other two guys (Martin De Beer and Chuck Stucki) are in San Jose. Click here to watch how it works.
TED | Talks | Hector Ruiz: The power to connect the world (video)
May 29, 2008We would like to create an initiative… and a couple of years ago at AMD we came up with this idea – what if we create this initiative we called “50 by 15″ – where we are going to aim by the year 2015 that half the world will be connected to the internet so that people and ideas can get connected.
We knew we couldn’t do it by ourselves and by no means did we intend to imply that we at AMD could do it alone. We always felt this could be done through partnerships with government industry education institutions – a myriad of other organisations and frankly even competitors. So its really a rather lofty initiative if you want to think that way but we felt we had to put a real stake out ahead that was bold enough and courageous enough that would force us all to think of ways to do things differently.
MacFusion – secure ftp that Works
May 26, 2008
I’ve used Cyberduck (which is very cool) and before that sftp and at some stage I even worked out how to use scp.
Recently I took on putting up a web site and for that I ended up using MacFusion.
The short version is that the file system where my ISP allocated space for the website shows up as a mounted disk on my desktop – which makes managing site content a snap. (As a bonus, by installing ntfs-3g I also get to mount NTFS volumes for read/write access)
The long version is a great example of how technical content can be presented powerfully.
Tappers and Listeners
May 26, 2008Excerpt…
In 1990, Elizabeth Newton earned a Ph.D. in psychology at Stanford by studying a simple game in which she assigned people to one of two roles: “tappers” or “listeners.” Tappers received a list of twenty-five well-known songs, such as “Happy Birthday to You” and “The StarSpangled Banner.” Each tapper was asked to pick a song and tap out the rhythm to a listener (by knocking on a table). The listener’s job was to guess the song, based on the rhythm being tapped. (By the way, this experiment is fun to try at home if there’s a good “listener” candidate nearby.)

The listener’s job in this game is quite difficult. Over the course of Newton’s experiment, 120 songs were tapped out. Listeners guessed only 2.5 percent of the songs: 3 out of 120.
But here’s what made the result worthy of a dissertation in psychology. Before the listeners guessed the name of the song, Newton asked the tappers to predict the odds that the listeners would guess correctly. They predicted that the odds were 50 percent. The tappers got their message across 1 time in 40, but they thought they were getting their message across 1 time in 2. Why?
When a tapper taps, she is hearing the song in her head. Go ahead and try it for yourself — tap out “The Star-Spangled Banner.” It’s impossible to avoid hearing the tune in your head. Meanwhile, the listeners can’t hear that tune — all they can hear is a bunch of disconnected taps, like a kind of bizarre Morse Code.
In the experiment, tappers are flabbergasted at how hard the listeners seem to be working to pick up the tune. Isn’t the song obvious? The tappers’ expressions, when a listener guesses “Happy Birthday to You” for “The Star-Spangled Banner,” are priceless: How could you be so stupid?
It’s hard to be a tapper. The problem is that tappers have been given knowledge (the song title) that makes it impossible for them to imagine what it’s like to lack that knowledge. When they’re tapping, they can’t imagine what it’s like for the listeners to hear isolated taps rather than a song. This is the Curse of Knowledge. Once we know something, we find it hard to imagine what it was like not to know it. Our knowledge has “cursed” us. And it becomes difficult for us to share our knowledge with others, because we can’t readily re-create our listeners’ state of mind.
The tapper/listener experiment is reenacted every day across the world. The tappers and listeners are CEOs and frontline employees, teachers and students, politicians and voters, marketers and customers, writers and readers. All of these groups rely on ongoing communication, but, like the tappers and listeners, they suffer from enormous information imbalances. When a CEO discusses “unlocking shareholder value,” there is a tune playing in her head that the employees can’t hear.
It’s a hard problem to avoid — a CEO might have thirty years of daily immersion in the logic and conventions of business. Reversing the process is as impossible as un-ringing a bell. You can’t unlearn what you already know. There are, in fact, only two ways to beat the Curse of Knowledge reliably. The first is not to learn anything. The second is to take your ideas and transform them.
This book will teach you how to transform your ideas to beat the Curse of Knowledge. The six principles presented earlier are your best weapons. They can be used as a kind of checklist. Let’s take the CEO who announces to her staff that they must strive to “maximize shareholder value.”
Is this idea simple? Yes, in the sense that it’s short, but it lacks the useful simplicity of a proverb. Is it unexpected? No. Concrete? Not at all. Credible? Only in the sense that it’s coming from the mouth of the CEO. Emotional? Um, no. A story? No.
Contrast the “maximize shareholder value” idea with John F. Kennedy’s famous 1961 call to “put a man on the moon and return him safely by the end of the decade.” Simple? Yes. Unexpected? Yes. Concrete? Amazingly so. Credible? The goal seemed like science fiction, but the source was credible. Emotional? Yes. Story? In miniature.
Had John F. Kennedy been a CEO, he would have said, “Our mission is to become the international leader in the space industry through maximum team-centered innovation and strategically targeted aerospace initiatives.” Fortunately, JFK was more intuitive than a modern-day CEO; he knew that opaque, abstract missions don’t captivate and inspire people. The moon mission was a classic case of a communicator’s dodging the Curse of Knowledge. It was a brilliant and beautiful idea — a single idea that motivated the actions of millions of people for a decade.
The new standard for meetings and conferences
May 25, 2008
Seth Goddin…
Here’s what someone expects if they come to see you on an in-person sales call: that you’ll be prepared, focused, enthusiastic and willing to engage honestly about the next steps. If you can’t do that, don’t have the meeting.
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I’m on a roll here, so let me add one more new standard:
If you’re a knowledge worker, your boss shouldn’t make you come to the (expensive) office every day unless there’s something there that makes it worth your trip. She needs to provide you with resources or interactions or energy you can’t find at home or at Starbucks. And if she does invite you in, don’t bother showing up if you’re just going to sit quietly. (more…)




“We bring intellectually property…we bring a marketing approach…we bring all this stuff, but I think at the end of the day what we bring is these values, and these values create a soul for the companies we work with. And its especially rewarding when your design work becomes a creative endeavour – when others can be creative and do more with it”
