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More sites ... The following sites can also be visited for further information related to Bihar.
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Chief Minister's Office
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Agriculture
Animal & Fish Resources
BC & EBC Welfare
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Building Construction
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Disaster Management
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Finance
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Health & Family Welfare
Home
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Information & Public Relations
Labour Resources
Law
Minority Welfare
Panchayati Raj
Public Health Engineering
Planning
Registration, Excise & Prohibition
Revenue & Land Reforms
Road Construction
Rural Development
Rural Works
Science & Technology
Social Welfare
Sugarcane
Transport
Tourism
Urban Development
Vigilance
Water Resources
Youth, Art & Culture
Bihar Police
Arwal Police Office
Araria Police Office
Bettiah Police Office
Gopalganj Police Office
Motihari Police Office
Purnea Police Office
Supaul Police Office
70th Indian Road Congress
Dr Rajendra Pd Smriti Sangrahalay
E-Counting - ECI, Bihar
E-Gazette, Bihar
Indian Red Cross Society, Bihar
International Buddhist Conclave - 2010
Khuda Baksh Oriental Public Library
Koshi Kshetriya Gramin Bank, Purnea
Kosi Aayog (Enquiry Commission)
Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Jamui
Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Vaishali
Sikariya Panchayat, Jehanabad
Singheshwar Temple, Madhepura
Patna Division, Patna
Tirhut Division, MuzaffarpurPatna High Court
Darbhanga District Court
Katihar District Court
Kaimur District Court
Samastipur District Court
Sitamarhi District Court
Siwan District Court
Accountant General, Bihar
Bihar Co-Operative Bank, Patna
Bihar Commission for Backward Classes
Bihar Electricity Regulatory Commission
Bihar Foundation
Bihar Industrial Area Development (BIADA)
Bihar Mahadalit Vikas Mission
Bihar Prashasnik Sudhar Mission
Bihar Public Service Commission
Bihar Rajya Pul Nirman Nigam
Bihar Rajya Beej Nigam Ltd
Bihar School Examination Board
Bihar State Aids Control Society
Bihar State Election Authority (BSEA)
Bihar State Electricity Board
Bihar State Housing Board
Bihar State Road Development Corp. Ltd.
Bihar Staff Selection Commission
Bihar State Tourism Development Corp.
Bihar State Women Development Corp.
Bihar Tuberculosis Association, Patna
Bharat Wagon & Engineering Co. Ltd.
BELTRON
Bihar Infrastructure Development Corp.
Central Excise, Bihar
Central Excise - e-Auction, Patna
Central Ground Water Board, Patna
Central Selection Board of Constables
Chief Electoral Officer, Bihar
Controller of Communication Accounts
COMPFED - Sudha, Pride of Bihar
District Health Society, Patna
Directorate of Employment & Training
Directorate of Rice Development
Economics & Statistics Directorate
Flood Management Information System
Food Corporation of India (Bihar)
Ganga Flood Control Commission
Indian Red Cross Society, Patna
Integrated Child Development Services
Land Development Bank
Patna Municipal Corporation
Patna Regional Development Authority
Railway Recruitment Board, Patna
Railway Recruitment Cell, Patna
Railway Recruitment Board, Muzaffarpur
Small Industries Services Institute
State Board of Technical Education
State Election Commission, Bihar
State Health Society, Bihar
State Horticulture Mission, Bihar
State Level Bankers Committee, Bihar
State Govt. Tenders
Uttar Bihar Gramin Bank, Muzaffarpur
Araria
Madhubani
Arwal
Madhepura
Aurangabad
Muzaffarpur
Banka
Munger
Begusarai
Nalanda
Bhagalpur
Nawada
Bhojpur
Patna
Buxar
Purnea
Darbhanga
Rohtas
East Champaran
Saharsa
Gaya
Saran
Gopalganj
Samastipur
Jamui
Sheohar
Jehanabad
Sheikhpura
Kaimur
Sitamarhi
Khagaria
Siwan
Katihar
Supaul
Kishanganj
Vaishali
Lakhisarai
West Champaran
Bihar State Information Commission
Lokayukta, Bihar
Bihar Human Rights Commission
Bihar Public Grievance Redressal System
Chief Secretary Public Grievance Cell
A.N.Sinha Institute of Social Studies
Bhagalpur College of Engineering
Bihar Agricultural Management & Extension Training Institute (BAMETI)
Bihar Institute of Public Administration
Bihar National College, Patna
B.R.Ambedkar Bihar University, Muzaffarpur
Chanakya National Law University, Patna
Chandragupta Institute of Mgmt, Patna
College of Arts & Crafts, Patna University
DNS Regional Institute of Co-op Mgmt
Jai Prakash Vishwavidyalaya, Chapra
K.S. Darbhanga Sanskrit Vishwavidyalaya
Lalit Narayan Mithila University, Darbhanga
L. N. Mishra Institute, Patna
Magadh University, Bodh Gaya
Muzaffarpur Institute of Technology
Nalanda Open University, Patna
National Institute of Technology, Patna
Patna Law College, Patna
Patna University, Patna
Rajendra Agriculture University, Pusa
Sainik School, Nalanda
Science College, Patna University
Veer Kunwar Singh University, Arrah
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Araria
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, 24 Pargana
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Banka
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Bhojpur
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Buxar
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Chatra
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Dumka
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, E Champaran
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Gaya
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Giridih
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Godda
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Gopalganj
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Gumla
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Hooghly
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Howrah
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Jamui
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Kaimur
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Katihar
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Khagaria
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Kishanganj
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Lakhisarai
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Madhepura
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Medinipur
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Munger
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Nalanda
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Nawada
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Palamau
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Purnea
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Saharsa
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Saharsa
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Sahebganj
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Samastipur
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Sheikhpura
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Sitamarhi
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Siwan
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Supaul
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, Vaishali
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalay, W Champaran
Navodaya Vidyalay Samiti, Patna
Kendriya Vidyalay, Gopalganj
The links given below will show you the documentation published by individual departments, boards, corporations, etc. with respect to Right to Information Act, 2005. If you interested in learning more about this act and wish to find out which form to use and to whom it should be submitted, please click on this link - General Information on RTI 2005.
Agriculture
Animal Husbandry & Fisheries
Animal Husbandry & Fisheries
Fisheries
Dairies
Building Construction
Cabinet Secretariat and Co-ordination
Disaster Management
Excise Department
Finance
Food, Supplies and Commerce
Forest
Govt. Women's Polytechnics, Patna
Industries Dept.
Handloom & Sericulture
Human Resources Development
Information & Public Relations
Labour, Employment and Training
Employment & Training
Training
Medical Services
Social Securities
Mines and Geology
Minor Irrigation
Minority Welfare
National Savings
Office of the Chief Election Officer
Panchayat Raj
Parliamentary Affairs
Planning
Public Health Engineering Dept.
Registration
Revenue and Land Reforms
Road Construction
Rural Development
Rural Engineering Organisation
Rural Works
State Board of Technical Education (SBTE)
Science and Technology
Social Welfare
Sugarcane
Tourism
Urban Development
Water Resources
Welfare
Backward and Very Backward Class
Schedule Caste & Schedule Tribe
Youth, Art & Culture
Directorate of Student and Youth Welfare
Directorate of Archaeology
Directorate of Museum
LIST OF ENGINEERING COLLEGE
SN Name of Engineering Colleges & Address Status Contact URL / Details Affiliation from
University / Board AICTE Approval Session 09-10
1 Indian Institute of Technology, Patna
New Govt. Polytechnic Campus,
Patliputra Colony, Patna – 800013 Govt www.iitp.ac.in
0612-2552067
0612-2277383 ( Fax ) Deemed University
2 National Institute of Technology, Patna
Ashok Rajpath, Patna Govt www.nitp.ac.in
0612-2371715, 2371929,
2371930, 2370419,2370843 Deemed University
3 Muzaffarpur Institute of Technolgy,
Muzaffarpur Govt www.mitmuzaffarpur.org
0621-2262148 BRA. Bihar University, Muzaffarpur 09-10
4 Bhagalpur College of Engineering, Bhagalpur P.O Sabour Bhagalpur- 813210 Govt www.becbhagalpur.ac.in
0641-2451063
0641-2451063 (Fax) T.M Bhagalpur University , Bhagalpur 09-10
5 Nalanda College of Engineering, Chandi
Nalanda Govt Magadh University, Gaya 09-10
6 Motihari College of Engineering, Motihari
East Champaran Govt 06252-290699 BRA. Bihar University, Muzaffarpur 09-10
7 Gaya Engg. College, Gaya
Sri Krishna Nagar
P.O Nagari Yana Via Buniyadganij
Gaya-823001 Govt Magadh University, Gaya 09-10
8 Darbhanga Engg. College,
Darbhanga Mabbi Darbhanga
P.O Lal Sahpur Via PTC-846005 Govt 06272-246827 LN Mithila University, Darbanga 09-10
9 Sanjay Gandhi Institution of Technology, Patna Govt Rajendra Agricultural University Pusa, Samstipur 09-10
Affiliated Institutes
SL Name of the Institute Code Address, Website, E-Mail Telephone Session
Permanent Affiliation (Govt. Institution)
1. Govt. Polytechnic,
Barauni 11 P.O.-ULAO, Dist-Begusarai, Pin-851134.
E-Mail: polytechnic_bgs@yahoo.co.in
0624-3242102 2010-11
2. Govt. Polytechnic,
Bhagalpur 12 Principal, P.O.-Barari, G.P. Bhagalpur, Bihar.
Pin - 812003. E-Mail: jawaharlal_principal@yahoo.co.in
0641-2400717 2010-11
3. Govt. Polytechnic,
Chapra. 13 AT+P.O.-Marhowrah, Pin-841418.
E-Mail: gpcha-bih@nic.in
0615-9231076 2010-11
4. Govt. Polytechnic,
Darbhanga 14 P.O.-Lal Bagh, Dist-Darbhanga, Pin-846004.
E-Mail: gpdar-bih@gmail.com
0627-2247331 2010-11
5. Govt. Polytechnic,
Gaya 15 AT+P.O.-Ghooghri Tand, Pin-823001.
E-Mail: brogaya_gpg@dataone.in
0631-2224093
0631-2224094 2010-11
6. Govt. Polytechnic,
Gopalganj 16 AT+P.O.-Gopalganj, Pin-841428.
E-Mail: 0615-6282505 2010-11
7. Govt. Polytechnic,
Muzaffarpur 17 AT-Mayatola, P.O.-HPO, Muzaffarpur, Pin-842002.
E-Mail: principal-gpm@yahoo.in
0621-2247675 2010-11
8. Govt. Polytechnic,
Patna-7 18 G.P. Gulzarbagh, Patna. AT+PO - Gulzarbagh.
Pin - 800007. E-Mail: gpp7-bih@nic.in
0612-2631279 2010-11
9. Govt. Polytechnic,
Purnea 19 AT+P.O.-Purnea, Pin-854303.
E-Mail: 0645-4242564 2010-11
10. Govt. Polytechnic,
Saharsa 20 P.O.+Dist-Saharsa, Pin-852201.
E-Mail: 0647-8223517 2010-11
11. New Govt. Polytechnic,
Patna-13
21 N.G.P., Patliputra, Patna. Pin - 800013.
Website: www.polypat.org
E-Mail: ngpp13_bih@nic.in
0612-2262866
0612-2262700 2010-11
12. Govt. Womens Polytechnic,
Muzaffarpur 22 AT-Gannipur, P.O.-HPO Muzaffarpur, Pin-842001.
E-Mail: principal_gwp_muz@yahoo.co.in
0621-2213009 2010-11
13. Govt. Womens Polytechnic,
Patna 23 G.W.P. Patna, Sahay Nagar, Phulwari Sharif,
Patna. Pin - 801506.
Website: www.gwp.bih.nic.in
0612-2225934 2010-11
Part-Time Diploma
1. Govt. Polytechnic,
Barauni 51 P.O.-ULAO, Dist-Begusarai, Pin-851134.
E-Mail: polytechnic_bgs@yahoo.co.in
- 2010-11
2. New Govt. Polytechnic,
Patna-13
61 N.G.P., Patliputra, Patna. Pin - 800013.
Website: www.polypat.org
E-Mail: ngpp13_bih@nic.in
0612-2262866
0612-2262700 2010-11
Provisional Affiliation (Pvt. Institution)
1. PIHMCT, Patna 71 Amit Hotel Campus, New Bypass Road,
Anisabad, Patna. Pin - 800002.
Website: www.pihmct.info
E-Mail: pihmct_patna@yahoo.co.in
0612-2252340
80849-04789 2009-10
2. Azmet College of Engineering
and Technology, Kishanganj. 72 AT-Salki, Tengarmari, PO-Gachhpara,
District-Kishanganj, Bihar.
Pin-855108.
Website: www.azmet.org.in
E-Mail: info.azmetcet@gmail.com
06456-247888
09431076873 2009-10
3. Millia Polytechnic, Purnea 73 Rambagh, Purnea.
Website: www.milliapolytechnic.org.in
06454-240433
06454-240434 2009-10
4. Buddha Institute of Technology,
Gaya. 74 Plot No. B3(P) Industrial Area, Gaya
(Gaya Dhobi Road, Behind Rituraj Cold Storage)
Website: www.bodhgayabit.org
0631-2431871
09708423890 2009-10
WIS Branches
SL Name of the Institute Affiliation Subjects
1. Government Women's School, Ara. 1961 1. Cutting and Tailoring
2. Machine Embroidery and Machine Knitting
3. Hand Embroidery and Hand Knitting
4. Hand Embroidery and Toys & Dolls
5. Hand Embroidery and Machine Knitting
6. Toys & Dolls and Machine Knitting
7. Machine Embroidery and Hand Knitting
2. Government Women's School, Bhagalpur. 1961 1. Cutting and Tailoring
2. Machine Embroidery and Hand Knitting
3. Machine Embroidery and Toys & Dolls
3. Government Women's School, Chapra. 1976 1. Cutting and Tailoring
2. Machine Embroidery and Hand Knitting
3. Machine Embroidery and Toys & Dolls
4. Hand Embroidery and Machine Knitting
5. Toys & Dolls and Machine Knitting
4. Government Women's School, Darbhanga. 1961 1. Cutting and Tailoring
2. Hand Embroidery and Toys & Dolls
3. Hand Embroidery and Machine Knitting
5. Government Women's School, Gaya. 1960 1. Cutting and Tailoring
2. Machine Embroidery and Toys & Dolls
3. Hand Embroidery and Hand Knitting
6. Government Women's School, Motihari. 1975 1. Cutting and Tailoring
2. Machine Embroidery and Hand Knitting
7. Government Women's School, Munger. 1960 1. Cutting and Tailoring
2. Machine Embroidery and Hand Knitting
3. Hand Embroidery and Hand Knitting
4. Toys & Dolls and Hand Knitting
5. Hand Embroidery and Toys & Dolls
6. Machine Embroidery and Toys & Dolls
8. Government Women's School, Muzaffarpur. 1960 1. Cutting and Tailoring
2. Machine Embroidery and Machine Knitting
9. Government Women's School, Paharpur, Gaya. 1980 1. Cutting and Tailoring
2. Toys & Dolls and Machine Knitting
3. Hand Embroidery and Machine Embroidery
10. Government Women's School, Purnea. 1960 1. Cutting and Tailoring
2. Machine Embroidery and Hand Knitting
3. Hand Embroidery and Machine Embroidery
4. Machine Embroidery and Toys & Dolls
5. Machine Embroidery and Machine Knitting
11. Government Women's School, Saharsa.
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Total Recall:
How to Remember Your Speech without Memorizing
We all fear that moment when we speak to audiences. You look out on a sea of faces and your mind goes blank.
You can't remember your next point and you wish you could disappear with your memory.
You can avoid blanking out when you know how to maximize your mind.
These tips will help you achieve total recall of your talk:
Rehearse out loud.
You'll remember more when you hear your own voice.
Tape it and play it back.
Listen to it in the car or as you fall asleep.
2. Practice the 3x5, 3x5 Rules.
Avoid one lengthy rehearsal.
Instead, take short chunks and practice them 3 to 5 times a day for 3 to 5 days.
Frequency of repetition aids memory.
3. Create key words and phrases.
The idea is to memorize concepts-not words.
The more verbiage, the more difficult to remember.
Bullet points allow you to talk about your points and not read your slides.
4. Exaggerate the visual.
For each concept or bullet, take the key word and turn it upside down, enlarge it, color code it, change the font.
Exaggeration makes the concept more memorable and aids retention.
(Of course, this is done during rehearsal and not for the eyes of the audience.)
5. Use pictures. The mind thinks in pictures-not in words.
Use icons, graphics, and symbols as prompts and you'll be amazed at how easily you remember your content.
6. Tell your story.
People learn better and retain more when you tell stories.
A situation that you experienced has a natural sequence to help you recall events.
Stories don't have to be touchy feely.
Reveal an interesting experience as a case study or tell a before and after success scenario.
7. Engage other senses. This is called synesthesia.
Your recall increases as you intensity your experience.
For example, if you're talking about a financial downturn in the market, imagine hearing a warning siren or feel what it's like to be in a torrential downpour.
8. Associate. Take your concepts and create an acronym.
To recall the process of managing question and answer periods I use the word CRAM-concentrate, repeat, answer, move on. Comedians use this technique.
They assign each story or "bit" with a key word.
They take the first letter of the key word from each story and form an acronym.
This keeps them on track and they can easily access the segments in correct sequence for a one hour monologue without notes!
9. Make complex data concrete.
Use analogies and demonstrations to make the data come alive.
The audience will understand it better and you will recall it more easily.
10. Get physical.
By acting out parts of the presentation you maximize your memory.
Walk to one side of the room , When you are talking about past history.
Then move the opposite side when you're making future projections.
You'll trigger your memory when you physically change your position.
And the audience will be anchored to hear your message.
11. Recover with grace.
If you do forget, pause and give yourself time to remember.
Or use humor. But have a fall back exercise.
Ask the audience to repeat your last three points.
Put them in pairs and have them talk to their partner for one minute about an important point.
This give you time to recall and recover.
When it comes to remembering your speech, you can blank out.
But, you can achieve Total Recall with above practices regularly.
Presentation skills and tactics
The Secret Language of Money
At a number of business seminars and presentations, I passed out an index card and asked each person in the audience to write anonymously a single answer to each of three questions.
The three questions are:
Just Say No to PowerPoint: Enough is enough!
Have you ever been slide swiped?
You walk into a meeting and once everyone has arrived, the lights are often dimmed and the show begins.
The presenter clicks the mouse again and again, showing you slide after slide until you can take no more.
Exasperated, you shut your eyes and doze off.
You have just been slide swiped!
After the Speech
Usually the emphasis on making an effective speech is what you do in preparation before the presentation begins.
But if you speak very much, what you do after the speech can help you become a more effective speaker.
As soon as possible after the speech, write down impressions of how you felt the speech went.
Answer at least two questions about the speech: What was the best part of the speech? What part of the speech can be improved the next time?
Some of your best ideas will come to you as you are speaking.
Write them down as soon as the speech is over so you can be prepared to use those lines or ideas the next time you speak.
Think about the peaks and valleys in the speech.
Consider when the audience seemed to listen best and when the audience seemed restless and disinterested.
Write down your reactions while they are fresh on your mind.
Talk to someone about the speech within the first day after your presentation.
You'll remember best what you talked about and you might discover a better way of telling a story or making a point as you summarize your speech to a friend or colleague.
Keep track of stories you tell and case studies you include so you'll not repeat yourself if you speak to that audience again.
In addition, keep records of how long you spoke, what you wore, key people you met, and anything unusual about the speaking context.
Occasionally look back over your records of individual speeches and look for trends in your speaking that you are unaware of.
When you speak to this group again, this information will be the basis for your audience analysis.
This is especially important if you speak frequently within your company and your audience will be made up of listeners who have heard you before.
You don't want to develop a reputation for telling the same stories over and over.
If the group has speaker evaluations, ask that a copy of the summary be sent to you.
Look for any pattern in the comments as you analyze the summary.
If one person said you talked too slowly, it may be a personal preference and you don't need to give much consideration to the critique.
If four or five people make that comment, however, then you might want to consider changing the pace of your speaking for the next speech.
Certainly your main concern should be with your preparation before the speech.
However, don't underestimate the effort of what you do in analyzing the speech after the audience has left the room.
Incorporate Humor in Your Next Speech
Some speakers say I could never use humor in my speech; I just don’t feel comfortable with it.?
I believe that anyone can use humor and that it is a valuable tool in speaking.
Appropriate humor relaxes an audience and makes it feel more comfortable with you as the speaker; humor can bring attention to the point you are making; and humor will help the audience better remember your point.
It can break down barriers so that the audience is more receptive to your ideas.
First, let me make it easy for you to use humor.
The best and most comfortable place to find humor for a speech is from your own personal experience.
Think back on an embarrassing moment that you might have thought not funny at the time.
Now that you can laugh at the experience, you understand the old adage "Humor is simply tragedy separated by time and space."
Or think of a conversation that was funny.
Remember the punch line and use it in your speech.
Probably the least risky use of humor is a cartoon.
The cartoon is separate from you and if people don't laugh, you don't feel responsible.
(Be sure to secure permission to use it.)
You're not trying to be a comedian; you just want to make it easy for people to pay attention and to help them remember your point.
Here are some suggestions on using humor to make your next speech have more impact.
Make sure the humor is funny to you.
If you don’t laugh or smile at the cartoon, joke, pun, one-liner, story, or other forms of humor, then you certainly cannot expect an audience to do so.
A key to using humor is only using humor that makes you laugh or smile.
1. Before using humor in your speech, try it out with small groups of people. Do they seem to enjoy it? Even if your experimental group does not laugh or smile initially, don’t give up on the humor, because the problem might be in the way you are delivering the joke or quip. I often use this line in talking about the importance of listening. We are geared to a talk society. Someone said, the only reason we listen is so we can talk next!'? When I first tried that line, people did not smile; but I worked on the timing so that I paused and smiled after listen and that seemed to work. I was rushing through the punch line and did not give people time to be prepared for the humorous part. It took practice to get comfortable with the piece of humor. Only use humor in a speech after you are comfortable telling it from memory and have tested it.
2. Make sure the humor relates to the point you are making. Do not use humor that is simply there to make the audience laugh. The humor should tie in with some aspect of your speech. For example, I tell about my experience of getting braces at age 46 and how difficult it was for me to get used to the wires and rubber bands in my mouth. After I tell the story I make the point that you may have not had the braces problem I had, but we all have challenges in communicating well, and what we want to look at today are ways of making it easier for us to be more effective in speaking. The audience enjoys the story but also remembers the point that I'm making. If you don’t tie your humor to your presentation, the audience may like the humor, but will wonder what point you are attempting to make.
3. Begin with something short. A starting point might be to summarize a cartoon and give the caption as your humor. A thought-provoking yet clever line about a point you are making is another way to get started. For example, when I talk about creativity and getting out of your comfort zone, a line I found that worked well was, ?Orville Wright did not have a pilots license.? In your reading, look for lines that make you smile; consider how they might be used in your next speech. Be careful about launching into a long humorous story--audiences are quick to forgive a single line that may not be funny, but they do not have much patience with a long anecdote that isn’t worth the time. So start out with brief bits of humor.
4. When possible, choose humor that comes from people you interact with. You do not have to worry about people having heard it before, and you will feel more comfortable with what has happened to you. Find such experiences by looking for a humorous line or situation. For example, I was making a bank deposit recently at a drive-in window. When I asked to make a second deposit, the teller said solemnly, I am sorry, sir, but you’ll have to go around the bank a second time to make a second deposit? We both laughed and I may have a line to work into a speech. If you have small children, listen for something they say that might be funny to an audience as well. Art Link letter made a great living on the notion that Kids say the darndest things?
5. Don’t preview by saying, Let me tell you a funny story. Let the audience decide for themselves. Look pleasant and smile as you launch into your funny line, but if no one smiles or laughs then just move on as though you meant for it to be serious. This approach takes the pressure off as you relate the humor. Remember you are not a comedian entertaining the audience; you are a serious speaker seeking to help the audience remember and pay attention by using humor as a tool.
6. Humor is simply another way of making a point with your audience, and it can help you be a more effective speaker. Look at humor as a tool in improving your speech in the manner of attention devices, smooth transitions, and solid structure. Remember, a smile is a curve that straightens out a lot of things.
Super Preparation- Keys to Getting a Great Start to Every Presentation
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Shamus Browns Top 5 Sales Presentation Tips
When its time to give your next sales presentation, here are my favorite tips for delivering powerful, charismatic, and engaging sales presentations. #1 - PLANT YOUR FEET SQUARELY ON THE FLOOR
How to Attract New Business like George W. Bush Wins Elections
THE LITTLE-KNOWN SPEECHWRITING SECRETS THAT WON GEORGE W. BUSH THE US ELECTION
Being Real From the Platform
Let it be known, no person, thing, or situation can validate you. You validate yourself by realizing who you are.? Mark Tosoni
Creating a Powerful Sales Presentation
The quality of your sales presentation will often determine whether a prospect buys from you or one of your competitors. However, experience has taught me that most presentations lack pizzazz and are seldom compelling enough to motivate the other person to make a buying decision. Here are seven strategies that will help you create a presentation that will differentiate you from your competition.
PowerPoint Sales Presentations Are Boring - Stop It!
As the meeting began, the project manager of the buying committee told me that the key decision-maker would miss the first 20 minutes or so of my presentation.
This was a very competitive sale that I was working on at the time.
There were about a dozen or so business-people from the prospect company that I was selling to in this meeting.
The presentation was scheduled to last about 90 minutes.
During the first 20 minutes I had planned to cover my "persuasive arguments" (that is my company and product benefits).
Fading into Sameness: How Too Many Slides Can Ruin Your Presentation
I have a love/hate relationship with PowerPoint. In the right hands, it's a great presentation tool.
In the wrong hands (and unfortunately, most usage falls into this category) we are cloning generations of boring slide shows narrated by speakers we barely notice." - Debbie Bailey
Trade Show Victory!
So you're going to have a booth at a trade show. How exciting - or how terrifying - depending on your state of mind!
Wow! Is That ME? - Creating a Powerful One-Page Bio
First of all, what is a bio sheet and why do you need one?
A bio sheet is a one page description of who you are--your background and achievements.
Your bio is an important part of how you present yourself to potential clients.
You may include it in your media kit, in proposals to clients, and anywhere you want to establish your credibility and expert reputation.
How Storytelling Can Grow Your Business
People love stories. We love to hear about other people, and stories help us to learn, remember and put to use new concepts.
Aesop knew this. His fables help us to learn life lessons through tales about others, without having to learn them the hard way.
Rise Above Cattiness
Cattiness is something no one ever wants to be accused of doing.
But the reality is, at one time or another you've probably engaged in it, and most likely, you'll do it again.
This trait can include any number of unfortunate behaviors from not saying what we really intend to say, to saying things in a harsh tone of voice. It also includes gossiping, cynical remarks, and on a grander scale, outright rudeness.
Cattiness can stand in the way of marketing your business since what you say and how you say it is critical in building rapport with potential clients and customers.
Think about how you come across to the people you interact with on a daily basis.
Check in with your attitude and behavior to make sure you are coming from your best place at all times.
Tips to Temper Speaking Anxiety
People take it for granted that leaders have achieved some skill in public speaking.
Yet anxiety persists because leaders face very challenging situations and have a great risk of embarrassment.
Here are some tips for tempering those anxieties.
Keep Knockout Presentations: How to Deliver Your Message with Power, Punch, and Pizzazz.
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