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Proximity

Poor presentations break proximity with a message that simply lists data. Slides that are beautiful but unrelated separate understanding from meaning. A fluent spoken message from a speaker disconnected from the audience loses impact. Great presentations have proximity.

You’re a better presenter

a man sweeping the tide with a broom

You’re a better presenter right now, simply because you are considering presentations more consciously. You’re a better presenter because you want to stop the presentation paradox. You’re a better presenter because you have visited this site, even if that is just with questions. You’re a better presenter because you want to see change in presentations.