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What To Do If The Worst Happens: (Why drawing a blank doesn’t have to upend your presentation)

You’ve prepared and are ready for that big briefing or presentation and
suddenly, the nightmare happens. You draw a blank. You look at your slide or your notes and can’t find your place or recall what you were supposed to say. How do you recover? Easily, if you bear in mind a few tips:

1. Prepare For The Unexpected
If you had to deliver your briefing or presentation in half the time you thought
you had, or without any notes or materials, could you? Next time you get ready
to take the stage, identify two or three key messages in your presentation, a
support point for each, and a conclusion. That’s the “elevator pitch” version of
your briefing. If you can deliver that one, your Plan B is ready.

2.  Don’t Ask For Sympathy
“Wow, I’m sorry, my mind just went blank.” That kind of admission may start your audience down a path of doubt about your competence that you don’t want to lead them to. Instead, try to turn the focus on exactly where every audience likes that focus: on them. Have a few questions ready. (“Before we continue, let me pause here and take a quick survey,” or try soliciting questions. The goal is to give you a moment to remember what’s next and shift the focus from you to your audience while you do it. Always prepare some questions to bring out at times like these when you need them (a lull before they think of their own questions, to buy you more time, or to simply help you engage them).

3. Pause and Review
Without speaking, look over your notes. There’s no need to continually fill the
silence. If you’ve lost your place, return to your notes silently, calmly, without explanation and look them over. Your audience knows what you’re
doing and doesn’t mind the break.  In fact, they may think you’ve deliberately timed it to let what you’ve said so far, sink in.

4. Stay Calm
Your audience isn’t looking for perfection.
Powerful presentations aren’t about showing your memorization skills. If
things go wrong (and eventually they will), use the opportunity to showcase
your ability to stay on track. Handling the unexpected with calm assurance
displays your leadership skills more than a flawless reading ever could.

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