p cubed framework

A presentation is made of three component parts; the story (p1), the supportive media (p2) and the delivery of these (p3). The value of a presentation is the product of these three factors, the p cubed value.

The three components are discussed in more depth in their individual sections. This section deals with the p cubed value, the product of preparation, design, and delivery.

Some key posts include:

Open house

If a blog post falls in the forest, does anyone hear? I don’t know. What do YOU think? Do you agree with what’s written here? How would you change presentation…

Hope springs eternal.

Your audience has high expectations of your presentation and it is good to know that they support you, truly, and want the best for you. Nervous or inexperienced presenters should…

My Boss won’t like it…

This isn’t another post persuading you to give up bulletpoints; if you’ve come this far and still cling to them, then you are deluded. This is a post about why…

The perfect handout

I was watching a colleague preparing a presentation the other day. (I know, it took all that was within in me but I did just sit and watch. Oh, okay,…

But…

It’s an important meeting I have lots of facts to deliver I didn’t have time People expect it It’s my script I need it for confidence I can print it…

  • facts are enough

    There is a belief among some presenters that…

  • marginal gains

    Marginal gains across all aspects of a presentation…

  • the night before

    The night before Christmas is an oft-quoted poem…

  • The Gettysburg Address

    The Gettysburg Address was delivered at the dedication…

  • great presentations

    Great presentations are in the eye of the…

  • A single message

    A great presentation has a single message; simple,…

  • Just talk.

    Just talk. When presenting one must have a…

  • presentation buddy- have you got one?

    Scuba divers have one, sky divers have one,…

  • On sharing slides

    The recent podcast started the discussion around sharing…

  • Version 1 is never the best

    Version 1 of your presentation is never the…