『Why I Don't Like Videos In Presentations』のカバーアート

Why I Don't Like Videos In Presentations

Why I Don't Like Videos In Presentations

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Videos can lift a business presentation, but they can also hijack it. In the Age of Distraction, leaders, executives and salespeople cannot afford to let a slick corporate video, slide deck or screen become the star of the show. The presenter must remain the dominant force in the room. Why can videos weaken a business presentation? Videos weaken presentations when they take control away from the speaker. The audience may enjoy the production quality, but that does not mean they remember the message. Business events, audiences in Tokyo, Sydney, Singapore, London and New York are already conditioned by TikTok, YouTube Shorts, Netflix, gaming, live sport, fireworks, music and fast-cut visual storytelling. Against that competition, a presenter standing with a slide advancer can look very small unless they bring energy, conviction and control. The problem is not video itself. The problem is using video as a substitute for presence, persuasion and leadership. Do now: Use video only when it strengthens your message. Never let it replace your role as the communicator. Should presenters use videos in speeches and corporate talks? Yes, presenters can use videos, but only when the video serves a clear business purpose. A video should support the speaker, not become the presentation. A product launch, recruitment event, sales meeting or company town hall may benefit from video if it shows proof, customer emotion, technical evidence or a hard-to-explain process. Toyota, Rakuten, Salesforce, Apple and other major brands understand the power of visuals, but strong presenters still frame what the audience should notice. SMEs and startups often make the mistake of thinking "slick" equals "persuasive". It does not. The video creates an impression; the speaker creates conviction. Do now: Before playing a video, ask: what exact point does this prove, and why is the speaker still necessary? How should you introduce a video during a presentation? A presenter should introduce a video by telling the audience exactly what to look for. This creates anticipation and turns passive watching into active listening. Instead of saying, "Let's watch this short video," give the audience a mission. For example: "In this clip, listen carefully to what our Chief Scientist says about the future of this technology. That one point may change how you see the whole issue." This works in boardrooms, sales pitches, leadership training and conference keynotes because it focuses attention. In Japan, where audiences may be polite but reserved, this framing is especially useful because it gives people permission to engage mentally before the clip begins. Do now: Always provide a verbal set-up before the video. Tell people what matters before they press play in their minds. What should a presenter do after showing a video? After the video, the presenter must connect the evidence back to the core message. Without that wrap-up, the video becomes entertainment rather than persuasion. A strong outro sounds like this: "What I like about that message is that it shows we can control our future if we choose to take that route." That sentence links the video to the speaker's argument. In B2B sales, leadership communication and investor presentations, this is where authority returns to the presenter. The video supplies colour, proof or emotion; the speaker supplies meaning. Without the follow-through, the audience forgets the clip within thirty seconds. Do now: After every video, summarise the lesson, connect it to your thesis and tell the audience what to think about next. Why is handing out slide decks before a presentation risky? Handing out the slide deck beforehand often destroys audience connection. When the speaker is on slide two and the audience is already reading slide eighteen, the presentation has split in two. Slides, videos and documents can all become competitors for attention. In an executive briefing, the audience may stop watching the presenter and start analysing the deck. In a sales meeting, procurement may jump straight to pricing. In a training room, participants may scan ahead and miss the emotional build-up. This is especially dangerous in the smartphone era, where one small moment of boredom sends people to email, chat apps or social media. Do now: Control the timing of visual information. Keep the audience with you, not ahead of you. What is the biggest mistake company presidents make with videos? The biggest mistake is hiding behind a corporate propaganda video instead of speaking as the chief evangelist. A president, CEO or country manager should not surrender the room to a screen. Senior leaders must win trust through voice, conviction, eye contact and message ownership. When a company president plays a long corporate video to avoid speaking, the audience notices. In Japan, the US, Europe and Asia-Pacific, employees and clients expect leaders to embody the enterprise, not outsource belief to a production agency. A ...
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