Surviving Executive Presentations
by
Rick Gilbert
PowerSpeaking, Inc. Founder and Chairman
In Fortune 500 conference rooms around the world, management careers are careening off the tracks. Why? Poor delivery? No. Bad content? No. It's because people don't get to the point fast enough, and can't improvise when the agenda changes. The carnage of these presentation train wrecks can be so bad that presenting to top management has been dubbed "The New Blood Sport." To avoid spilling your blood on "Mahogany Row," embrace these six strategies.
1. Use Your Sponsor
Presenting to top level decision makers is "by invitation only." You'll have a sponsor who is higher up in your own functional area. That person has a lot riding on your success, and wants you to hit the ball out of the park. He or she can enlighten you about the political realities before the meeting, keep things on track during the meeting, and help with the follow up summaries after the meeting. Get him or her on board early in the process.
2. Prepare, Prepare, Prepare
"What happens before the meeting is more important than what happens at the meeting," says NetApp Chairman, Dan Warmenhoven. With your career hanging in the balance, plan carefully for that top level presentation. Analyze the audience. Find out who supports you, and who opposes you. Know the competing priorities and projects. Check and recheck your numbers. Don't step into an executive level meeting unprepared... if you do, you'll be sorry.
3. Get To The Point!
"You have 30 seconds to get to the point," says Steve Blank, co-founder and former CEO of Epiphany. "In the past five years, PDAs have gotten so good that I now have a telephone, a TV, the internet, a computer, and my email at my fingertips. If you don't get right to the point, I'm gone." Executives live with unrelenting time pressure. Get to the point immediately, and be prepared to sacrifice two thirds of your time for discussion.
4. Dump The Slides
"Senior executives are not a bunch of PowerPoint receptor machines," noted Felicia Marcus, Director, Western Regional Natural Defense Council. Dramatically slash the number of slides... but have back up slides in case they want to do a "deep dive." Executives want a discussion, not a slide-driven lecture.
5. Live By The "10 / 30 Rule"
The "10 / 30 Rule" says that if you are scheduled for 30 minutes on the agenda, prepare just 10 minutes of material. The executives will hijack the other 20 minutes for discussion. Dan Warmenhoven warned, "If you
have a half hour on the agenda, you're not going to get through a half hour presentation. We're not going to let you. Remember, it's our meeting."
6. Improvise
Successful C-level presenters perform like jazz musicians. When things go off the track, they improvise. In its May, 2009 issue, The Harvard Business Review observed, "The best team leaders are like jazz
players, improvising constantly as they go along." The downfall of the over-prepared, nervous, mid-level presenter is the dogged determination to stay on script. Guaranteed failure.
Finally, to have a successful meeting with top level executives, embrace the six strategies above. Get to the point and improvise... it will keep your career on track.