Presentation skills 
Your time to shine 
Hackathon 2014
CONNECT 
• No one likes to sit through a boring presentation 
where the speaker is either clueless or 
inattentive. 
• Audiences lose patience with the presenter who 
does not know them or where he is going, so 
• Deliver material that is of value to the audience 
• Know who the judges are, and what’s important 
to them. If one judge is a designer, emphasize 
your entry’s beautiful design. Certainly don’t 
disparage something which is important to a 
judge if you want to win them over
CONNECT 
1. Make sure judges can summarize your app in one sentence. 
When deliberating, judges will remind each other about 
each entry. Don’t make a judge search through notes to 
remember your entry. 
2. Clearly state who your intended user is. If the hackathon 
has an entrepreneurial feel to it, this will give judges an 
idea of your total addressable market. 
3. Don’t spend time explaining what you couldn’t accomplish. 
I’ve heard presenters list everything they attempted to do, 
but failed. Focus on what you built, not on what failed.
GET TO KNOW YOUR AUDIENCE 
• Do your homework and know how you are being 
judged 
• Understand the judging criteria. Devote attention 
to all judging criteria, not just one criterion in 
particular. 
• Know what they are looking for 
• Know what you are being judged on 
• Know what matters to them 
• Know what is of value to them
DEFINE NOW AND THE FUTURE 
• Don’t just throw around data and technical jargon w/o 
knowing what you want the judges to do with it. 
• Land your most important points early. Don’t wait until 
the end. You might forget, or run out of time. 
• Organize your data and talking points to direct 
attention to a specific point. 
• Never lose sight of your end point 
• Go back and forth btw now and the future 
• Alternate btw the present and what the future looks 
like. Heighten attention and shine a light
FIND THE COMMON GROUND 
• Answer why yours is the best 
• Show how you improve, eliminate or create a 
new solution or method 
• Provide evidence of why yours is the best 
• Give an example and eliminate any doubt 
• Use familiar setting or common ground 
• Use familiar teminology
ANTICIPATE RESISTANCE 
• Prepare for all the objections that might come 
up 
• Share your concepts with a few people 
outside of your group 
• Have them share with you their questions and 
concerns 
• Practice practice practice

hackathon presentation skills

  • 1.
    Presentation skills Yourtime to shine Hackathon 2014
  • 2.
    CONNECT • Noone likes to sit through a boring presentation where the speaker is either clueless or inattentive. • Audiences lose patience with the presenter who does not know them or where he is going, so • Deliver material that is of value to the audience • Know who the judges are, and what’s important to them. If one judge is a designer, emphasize your entry’s beautiful design. Certainly don’t disparage something which is important to a judge if you want to win them over
  • 3.
    CONNECT 1. Makesure judges can summarize your app in one sentence. When deliberating, judges will remind each other about each entry. Don’t make a judge search through notes to remember your entry. 2. Clearly state who your intended user is. If the hackathon has an entrepreneurial feel to it, this will give judges an idea of your total addressable market. 3. Don’t spend time explaining what you couldn’t accomplish. I’ve heard presenters list everything they attempted to do, but failed. Focus on what you built, not on what failed.
  • 4.
    GET TO KNOWYOUR AUDIENCE • Do your homework and know how you are being judged • Understand the judging criteria. Devote attention to all judging criteria, not just one criterion in particular. • Know what they are looking for • Know what you are being judged on • Know what matters to them • Know what is of value to them
  • 5.
    DEFINE NOW ANDTHE FUTURE • Don’t just throw around data and technical jargon w/o knowing what you want the judges to do with it. • Land your most important points early. Don’t wait until the end. You might forget, or run out of time. • Organize your data and talking points to direct attention to a specific point. • Never lose sight of your end point • Go back and forth btw now and the future • Alternate btw the present and what the future looks like. Heighten attention and shine a light
  • 6.
    FIND THE COMMONGROUND • Answer why yours is the best • Show how you improve, eliminate or create a new solution or method • Provide evidence of why yours is the best • Give an example and eliminate any doubt • Use familiar setting or common ground • Use familiar teminology
  • 7.
    ANTICIPATE RESISTANCE •Prepare for all the objections that might come up • Share your concepts with a few people outside of your group • Have them share with you their questions and concerns • Practice practice practice