Many speakers have big problems with timing, especially in a conference
setting when you cannot go long. Though I have practiced talks against a clock,
this does not really help me when I'm in the session - if a question takes more
time than I should have allowed or I ramble, then the time I took in practice
means nothing. I'm sure other speakers have ways to deal with this, but I
inadvertently came up with something on my own that helped me enormously
last week and wanted to share it. It is probably not a new idea, but it worked
well for me since I thought of it rather than trying to follow someone else's
suggestion.
I had ended up with one of the one hour session slots at the end of
DevConnections for my WSE3.0 Overview talk and knew that posed a problem.
I looked at the powerpoint deck and divided the presentation up by
topic. Then, off the top of my head, wrote down how many minutes I thought each
topic (including demos) should take. Luckily, this added up to 55 minutes!
Then in a notebook (notebook is a tip I got from Ingo Rammer) I wrote down a
name for each section and then, based on how long I thought the previous section
should take, what time it should be when I started that section.
It looked like this:
| Start |
2:45 |
| Turnkey |
2:55 |
| Programming Model |
3:15 |
| TCPIP |
3:15 (the previous was only 1 minute, so it was easier to
just write down the same time) |
| MTOM |
3:25 |
| SecureConversation |
3:35 |
|
The session was supposed to end at 3:45. I knew I was cutting it very close
for Q&A, but since it was a short session, I told them at the beginning that
we would not have a lot of time for Q&A and could continue it in the hallway
or online afterward.
So this worked for me like a charm. I had my little travel clock right on top
of the notebook and it was easy enough for me to remember to take a very quick
look over there as I started each section to see how I was doing. In this way I
was able to determine if I needed to speed up or if I was okay.
I wish I had come up with this prior to TechEd South Africa where we had one
hour slots but were told to leave 15 minutes for Q&A, making the
presentations only 45 minutes long. But now I know I can do this from now on and
hopefully it will help someone else.
Don't Forget: www.acehaid.org