How to Present to Senior Management Without Being Terrified

Frippicism: The key to career success is to learn to sell yourself and your ideas to your senior management.

It’s no secret. The higher up the corporate ladder you go, the more important your public speaking skills become

If you have your sights set on increased responsibility with the position and the salary that goes with it, you will need to position yourself ahead of the crowd. At all stages of your career, it’s vital to sell yourself, your ideas, your value, and your ability. To position yourself for promotion, you need to learn what it takes to sell yourself and your ideas to senior management. That requires high-level public speaking skills. Learn from these presentation tips and techniques.

Perhaps you’re already speaking up in team meetings and getting your ideas across effectively. If so, how do you feel about facing a room full or even just five of senior management around a boardroom table, all staring at you? The same feelings apply to virtual meetings.

What is different? Simply, the stakes are higher.

All business communications are important; however, with senior management as your audience, you are in the hot seat. They are going to accept or reject the recommendations on which you, your department, or your team have worked so hard.

Weeks or months of your team’s or committee’s work depend on your few minutes. Who wouldn’t be nervous?

Don’t worry. You are human. That is a perfectly natural way to feel.

Remember, they can’t see how you feel, only how you look and act.

You want your senior leaders to focus on and consider your proposals, not your anxiety. You’ll look cool and collected when you follow these suggestions for dealing with senior management.

Seven Fripp Dos

    1. Open with your recommendation. Don’t make your senior-level audience wait to find out the purpose of your presentation.
    2. Describe the benefits of adopting your recommendation. Make these benefits seem vivid and obtainable.
    3. Describe the costs, and frame them in a positive manner. If possible, show how not following your recommendations will cost even more.
    4. List your specific recommendations, and keep them on target. Wandering generalities will lose their interest. You must focus on the bottom line. Report on the deals, not the details. Naturally, any questions they ask you will have the specifics they need.
    5. Deliver with piece-of-the-pie eye contact. You will be more persuasive and believable. It is fine to have notes. In-person or virtually, however, you cannot make good eye contact if you are reading your notes rather than just referring to them.
    6. Be brief. The fewer words you use to get your message across, the better. Jerry Seinfeld says, “I will invest an hour taking an eight-word sentence down to five.” That’s because he knows it would be funnier. In your case, shorter is more memorable and repeatable. You will always receive appreciation for being clear, concise, and finishing ahead of time.
    7. Practice. A report to senior managers is not a conversation; it must, however, sound conversational. Once you have your notes, practice with an associate or your team members. Especially if you are reporting on a team project. Rehearse by yourself when you are driving to work, taking a walk, or, at my favorite place to rehearse, on the treadmill. Make sure you are familiar with what you intend to say. You do not have to be perfect. Your goal is to be personable. Remember, they do not know what you intended to say, so if your remarks do not come out exactly as you rehearsed, do not worry.

     

Remember, as Oscar-winner Sir Michael Caine said, “Rehearsal is the work; performance is the relaxation.”

Four Fripp Don’ts

Report to Senior Management
Confidently Report to Senior Management

Four Fripp Don’ts

  1. Don’t begin your process with a PowerPoint®. If you use visual aids, create them after your presentation is created on a whiteboard or flip chart. Add your initial scripting, and talk through your presentation out loud.
  2. Don’t try to memorize the whole presentation. Memorize your opening, key points, and conclusion. Hold the overview in your mind. Practice enough so you “know it so well you can forget it.” This helps retain your spontaneity.
  3. Never, never read your presentation, not from a script and not from PowerPoint®. Your audience will get impatient. That will make you feel more nervous. With senior leaders, it is fine to have bullet points to keep you on track. When you invest more time on creating your content and delivery and less on working on the PowerPoint®, you will feel more comfortable and confident.
  4. Don’t wave or hop. For live presentations, don’t let nervousness or enthusiasm make you too animated. Don’t distract from your own message with unnecessary movement. In a virtual meeting, make sure your background is tidy and does not distract. If you are using a virtual background, make sure you have a green screen, or parts of your body will disappear when you move.

Where to Begin?

  1. What is the topic or subject of your report? Be clear about your premise, central theme, or biggest idea and recommendation. How can you introduce it in one sentence? Make sure all your talking points reinforce your premise. Be clear in your mind and with your audience about what action, approval, or budget you want from them.
  2. Why is your topic important enough to be on the busy agenda of senior-level managers? The clearer you are, the simpler you can explain your idea or recommendation, the more they will be clear. Remember, a confused mind says “No.”
  3. What questions will your executive audience need answers to? Can you anticipate your leaders’ probable questions? If so, build the answers to their questions into your presentation. Most executives will feel comfortable interrupting any time they want clarification. Don’t get flustered. Just smile and answer. Or say, “The answer will be clarified if you can give me five more minutes.”
  4. Present your recommendations. When addressing senior management, be aware they are charged with increasing sales, reducing costs, expanding markets, becoming more competitive, reinforcing core values, retaining top talent, and increasing shareholder value. Where will your recommendation fit?

Senior leaders do not know how you feel. They see how you act.

Frippicism: Act as if you are confident, and you will be confident.

To get ahead in your career FrippVT Powerful, Persuasive Presentations online learning is your best friend.

“Patricia Fripp is simply the best speaking coach in the world, I’ve sent people to her and I’ve learned from her. She has the unique capacity to adjust to each person’s particular talents to help them create powerful presentations, within a business or publicly. From the boardroom to the “backroom” of any organization, her advice can propel careers, build confidence, and create huge prestige. There is only one thing better than watching this Hall of Fame speaker, and that’s working with her.” Alan Weiss, Ph.D., CPAE, Author of 60 books including Million Dollar Speaking, Million Dollar Consulting, and Great Consulting Challenges.