How to Develop a Good Purpose Statement for Your Presentation
Posted on 11 April, 2022 by Micheal Alexander
The purpose statement, or „goal“ of a good presentation, needs to be clearly articulated at the beginning so that the audience knows exactly where you want to take them. A common problem in many presentations, however, is that most purpose statements are simply too general or vague. For example, “The purpose of my presentation is to give you an overview of our product line” or “…my presentation today will give you an overview…”. How many times have we heard openings like these?
When the purpose statement is vague, quite often, the whole presentation lacks focus as well. And this leads to the audience themselves losing focus in your presentation. And quite honestly, why shouldn’t they? If you can put yourself in the shoes of the audience, would you feel compelled to concentrate if a presentation speaker was unclear about the purpose of why he was speaking to you? Probably not. After a few minutes, the typical audience member is daydreaming about something else.
The listener needs to hear what specifically will be and, very importantly, what they will specifically learn, gain or how they’ll be enriched way from listening to the speaker. Using catchphrases such as, “advantages or benefits” aren’t enough. Rather, you need to unpack words like “benefits” and give the audience something more concrete to hold on to. See example below
The formula:
A purpose statement can be divided into two parts. Each part should be one sentence long (or one breath long). Why? Because the audience won’t be able to keep anything longer than a few lines in their head. Part one articulates specifically what you want. Part two tells them why this is important FOR THEM.
Example:
In one breath – tell the audience what you want – SPECIFICALLY
- “I would like to explain in my presentation why we should put speed limits on German Autobahns”.
In the second breath – tell the audience what they get, why it’s meaningful for them to listen, what’s in it for them.
- “…and how that can help you to get to your destination more quickly and safely, while saving money”.
5 examples of improved purpose statements in different industries
- Product presentation to the sales team (Industry: automobile manufacturing)
Inadequate…so the purpose of my talk today is to give you an overview of some new products in our drive train portfolio
Better: …so the purpose of my talk today is to go over 3 new components for the drive train that will help reduce emissions below EU norms and at the same time be easy for your customers to integrate into their current development process.
2. IT (software) presentation to clients (industry: energy transport)
Inadequate…I’d like to talk to you about our new energy-related software solutions.
Better…I’d like to talk to you about how to significantly simplify your logistics’ costs in energy transport while increasing safety.
3. Internal presentation to department heads (industry: non-specific)
Inadequate…I would like to talk to you about our change management meeting last
week
Better…What I would like to present this afternoon are the 5 final proposals for change that the board would like to see up and running within the next 3 months. This is important because you will be responsible for implementing these changes in your departments.
4. Internal presentation to board members (industry: advertising, marketing, and design)
Inadequate…and so this morning I would like to look at some new trends in our
industry.
Better…and so this morning I’d like to look at the increasing trend toward social-network advertising and marketing and how it will impact our existing strategy and core competencies.
5. Medical conference presentation (industry: health, pharmaceutical, medical research)
Inadequate…my talk will cover some new treatment strategies for cancer.
Better…my talk will look at Angiogenesis: a revolutionary new way to look at and treat many deadly diseases, including cancer, through starving their source of growth.
Remember, the purpose statement tells the audience exactly where you want to take them. If you can’t tell where specifically, you’ lose your listeners right at the start.
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