Metadata
Title
Developing oral presentations
Category
general
UUID
d2172f871964400dac5f06d834862ddf
Source URL
https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/presenting-your-work/developing-oral-p...
Parent URL
https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/learning-at-university/
Crawl Time
2026-03-16T03:23:59+00:00
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Developing oral presentations

Source: https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/presenting-your-work/developing-oral-presentations/ Parent: https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/learning-at-university/

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Developing oral presentations

Giving presentations can be challenging but with careful planning they can also be an enjoyable part of university life. Learn how to develop successful presentations.

How to get started

Before you start preparing your talk, it is important to determine what the main point of your presentation is. Do you want to inform, convince, guide or entertain?

It can be useful to think about what resources you can use to support your ideas and what examples you can use to illustrate the points you are making. Thinking about these aspects early on can help in planning your presentation.

Who is your audience?

Knowing the audience that will be listening to you will help you get your message across more effectively – you will need to tailor your content to your audience.

Example:

An audience with a limited understanding of your subject.

Example:\

An audience of your peers.

Example:\

Audience at a conference in your field.

How to structure your presentation

When thinking about what you need to convey in your presentation it is useful to start with a basic outline. This will ensure your presentation has a logical flow.

A useful starting point would be:

Beginning

Middle

End

How to design your slides

Great PowerPoint slides do not make a great oral presentation. Your slides should be based on your planned talk. Think about your slides last – they should assist you with the presentation, not be the presentation itself!

Text

Font: Arial or Verdana

Font size: 40 for titles, 32 for subtitles, content no smaller than 24

Background

Chunking information

Most people remember three to five things at a time. Chunking information can help you to recollect what to say and can help your audience to remember the main points. So, if possible:

  1. Chunk your whole presentation into three sections.
  2. Chunk each section into three chunks.
  3. Chunk your slides into a maximum of three points per slide.

Tips for slide content

Making your slides accessible

If you are sharing your slides and you want to follow best practice, make sure your presentation is accessible to people with disabilities (i.e. dyslexia, low vision).

These are some points to consider:

PowerPoint has many built-in features and an accessibility checker that can help you maximise the accessibility of your slides. Explore this website to learn how to make your PowerPoint presentations accessible.

Want to learn more?

Workshops

See all available workshops.

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