- Published on
The Art of Presentation, Persuasion, and Humor -- Secrets of Great Communicators
- Authors

- Name
- Youngju Kim
- @fjvbn20031
Introduction
Have you ever felt your voice tremble and palms sweat the moment you start a presentation in a meeting room? Or been frustrated when you could not persuade someone of your clearly good idea? Or tried to lighten the mood only to have the humor fall flat?
People who speak well seem to have a natural talent. But in reality, outstanding communicators are people who have practiced systematic techniques.
This article covers three communication areas in depth: presentation, persuasion, and humor. We introduce the core principles of each area and practical techniques you can apply immediately.
Part 1: The Art of Presentation
1. Overcoming Presentation Anxiety -- Why Do We Tremble?
The rapid heartbeat, trembling hands, and dry mouth before a presentation are responses from the brain's amygdala. The amygdala activates the sympathetic nervous system when it detects threats, triggering a "fight-or-flight" response. When dozens of eyes focus on you, the brain perceives this as a form of social threat.
The important fact is that this response itself is normal. World-class speakers also feel nervous before going on stage. The difference is whether you know how to convert that tension into energy.
Breathing Technique: The 4-7-8 Method
Try this 5 minutes before a presentation.
- Inhale slowly through your nose for 4 seconds
- Hold your breath for 7 seconds
- Exhale slowly through your mouth for 8 seconds
- Repeat this 3 times
This breathing technique activates the parasympathetic nervous system, lowering heart rate and relieving tension.
Power Pose: The 2-Minute Magic
The Power Pose introduced by Harvard's Amy Cuddy is effective for boosting confidence before presentations.
- Expansive pose: Place both hands on your hips, straighten your shoulders, and stand for 2 minutes
- Victory pose: Raise both arms in a V shape and hold for 2 minutes
These poses raise testosterone levels and lower cortisol (stress hormone). Practice in the bathroom or an empty meeting room right before your presentation.
The Power of Rehearsal
- Rehearse the entire presentation at least 3 times
- Practice at the actual presentation venue if possible
- Record yourself with a smartphone and review objectively
- Practice in front of family or colleagues to get used to real-world nerves
2. Slide Design -- The 10-20-30 Rule
This is the famous presentation rule by Guy Kawasaki.
| Rule | Content | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| 10 slides | Maximum 10 slides | Number of key ideas an audience can focus on |
| 20 minutes | Presentation under 20 minutes | Limits of human attention span |
| 30pt | Minimum 30-point font size | Ensures readability, prevents text overload |
Visual Principles
1. One Slide, One Message
Each slide should convey exactly one key message. When multiple messages are mixed, the audience does not know where to focus.
2. Images Beat Text
The human brain processes images 60,000 times faster than text. Deliver key data as charts, concepts as diagrams, and emotions as photographs.
3. The Beauty of White Space
Do not fear empty space. White space provides visual rest and emphasizes key elements. Ideally, leave more than 40% of each slide empty.
4. Limit Colors to 3
Use only 3 colors: main color, secondary color, and accent color. Using company brand colors also maintains consistency.
3. Storytelling Structure
Presentations that merely list data are forgotten. Adding a story makes them memorable.
The Hero's Journey
Applying Joseph Campbell's Hero's Journey to presentations:
- The Ordinary World: Describe the current situation (our team's current problem)
- The Call to Adventure: Present the need for change (things cannot continue as they are)
- Trials and Challenges: Show the difficulties of the resolution process (various attempts and failures)
- Reward and Return: Present the solution and results (the answer we found)
Three-Act Structure
A simpler approach is the three-act structure:
- Act 1 (Setup): Define the problem -- "The problem we are facing is this"
- Act 2 (Confrontation): Show conflict and exploration -- "We tried this but hit this wall"
- Act 3 (Resolution): Present the solution -- "So the method we propose is this"
Opening Hook Techniques
The first 30 seconds determine the success of a presentation. Here are 5 effective openings:
- Shocking statistic: "87% of office workers experience presentation anxiety"
- Start with a question: "When was the last time you were moved by a presentation?"
- Personal anecdote: "Until 3 years ago, my voice would tremble even in front of 10 people"
- Future vision: "What if our team were industry leaders one year from now?"
- Counterintuitive claim: "A good presentation needs no slides"
4. Voice and Body Language
Using Your Voice
Tone variation: A monotone induces drowsiness. Lower or raise your tone at important points.
Speed control: Deliver key messages slowly, supplementary explanations slightly faster. An intentional pause is the most powerful tool. Adding 2-3 seconds of silence before and after important statements dramatically increases audience attention.
Volume: Whispering and then suddenly speaking loudly catches attention. But maintain a baseline volume that can be heard from the back row.
Body Language
Gestures: Keep both hands at navel height (the power zone) and use natural gestures. Putting hands in pockets or crossing arms creates a defensive impression.
Eye contact: Look at one person for 3-5 seconds before moving to the next. Cover the entire audience rather than only looking at one section.
Movement: Moving appropriately around the stage conveys energy. Move with intention, not pacing back and forth. Changing position when transitioning to a new topic is effective.
5. Q&A Handling
Strategies by Difficult Question Type
When receiving aggressive questions
- Do not react emotionally
- Start with "That is a good point" to acknowledge the other person's perspective
- Answer calmly based on facts
When asked something you do not know
Never pretend to know something you don't. You will lose trust instantly.
- "I will confirm the exact figures and share them with you"
- "That is a great question, but it is outside my area of expertise -- I will check with the relevant team and get back to you"
- "That part is still under review. I will update you as it progresses"
Off-topic questions
- "That is an interesting perspective, but it falls outside the scope of today's presentation"
- "Let us discuss that individually after the presentation"
Q&A Pro Tips
- When you receive a question, paraphrase it. This ensures the entire audience understands and gives you time to prepare your answer
- Direct your answer to the entire audience, not just the questioner
- Prepare 5 anticipated questions and practice your answers in advance
Part 2: The Art of Persuasion
6. Cialdini's Six Principles of Persuasion
The six core principles from Professor Robert Cialdini's Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion.
1) Reciprocity
People have an instinct to repay what they receive.
- If you support someone's opinion in a meeting first, the probability of them supporting yours later increases
- Small favors make bigger requests easier
- Starting with "Thank you for your help last time" increases the acceptance rate of current requests
2) Commitment and Consistency
People try to maintain consistency with their previous actions or statements.
- Start with small agreements: "You agree on this point, right?"
- Once someone publicly expresses support, it is hard to take back
- Recording agreed items in meeting minutes activates consistency pressure
3) Social Proof
People follow what others are doing.
- "Team A and Team B have already adopted this approach"
- "70% of top companies in the industry use this strategy"
- Specific numbers and examples multiply the effect
4) Liking
People are more easily persuaded by those they like.
- Find common ground (same school, same hobby, same concerns)
- Give sincere compliments (specific recognition, not flattery)
- Build rapport with smiles and warm attitude
5) Authority
People trust experts more.
- Cite relevant data and research
- Naturally mention your experience and track record in the field
- Specific problem-solving examples are more effective than credentials or achievements
6) Scarcity
People value things that are limited or may disappear.
- "If we don't decide this quarter, the budget moves to another project"
- "This opportunity is only available this year"
- However, false scarcity destroys trust, so it must be fact-based
7. Logical Persuasion -- The PREP Method
The most effective framework for systematically delivering an argument.
P - Point: State your conclusion first R - Reason: Present the rationale E - Example: Support with specific examples P - Point (restate): Emphasize the conclusion once more
Two-sided Argumentation
Presenting only one side can actually invite suspicion. Acknowledging and then refuting opposing views increases credibility.
- "Of course, it is true that there are initial costs. However, data shows ROI exceeding 200% within 6 months."
- "I will not say there are absolutely no risks. But the expected return is more than 3 times the risk."
This makes the audience feel: "This person has considered both sides."
8. Emotional Persuasion
Logic alone cannot move people. Some research shows that 90% of decisions are driven by emotion.
Empathy Connection
Before persuading, first show that you understand the other person's position.
- "I fully understand the concern you are expressing"
- "If I were in the same situation, I would have worried the same way"
- "I agree that is the most important point"
Launching into your argument without empathy puts the other person in defensive mode.
The Power of Story
Concrete stories move hearts more than abstract data. Three keys to using stories:
- A specific character must appear
- There must be an emotional turning point
- It must close with a lesson or message
Connecting to Values
Connect your proposal to the values the other person considers important.
- To a boss who values innovation: "This approach is innovative -- not yet tried in the industry"
- To a team that values stability: "This process minimizes risk while improving gradually"
- To an organization that values growth: "This investment lays the foundation for 25% average annual growth over the next 3 years"
The same proposal, when framed to match the other person's values, dramatically changes its acceptance rate.
9. The Art of Negotiation
BATNA (Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement)
The key to negotiation is whether you have an alternative.
BATNA is the best alternative you can choose if the current negotiation falls through. The stronger your BATNA, the more favorable your position.
- Before salary negotiation, secure offers from other companies
- Before vendor negotiation, identify alternative suppliers
- The mindset of "this deal or nothing" paradoxically leads to worse outcomes
Anchoring Effect
The first number presented becomes the reference point for subsequent negotiation.
- Make price proposals first if possible
- Setting a high (or low) anchor influences the counterparty's counter-offer
- However, unrealistic anchors damage trust, so set them within a reasonable range
Win-Win Framing
Approaching as a zero-sum game harms both sides.
- "What I want is X, and what you want is Y. Let us find a way to satisfy both"
- Identify the other party's hidden needs (delivery date might matter more than price)
- Present the perspective of "growing the pie together"
Good negotiation is an agreement where both sides are satisfied. Cornering the other party for short-term gains destroys the long-term relationship.
Part 3: The Art of Humor
10. The Structure of Humor
Humor is not talent -- it is structure. Understanding the basic principles allows anyone to become funny.
Setup and Punchline
The basic structure of all humor is creating an expectation + breaking it.
- Setup: Creates a specific directional expectation in the audience
- Punchline: Shifts in a completely different direction
Example: "I prepared really hard for this presentation... it took me 2 hours just to pick this tie."
The setup creates the expectation "they must have prepared the content well," and the punchline -- "they spent 2 hours picking a tie" -- creates the reversal that triggers laughter.
Self-deprecating Humor
The safest and most likable type of humor.
- Lightly mentioning your own mistakes or weaknesses creates approachability
- "I was invited as a presentation expert, but I actually got lost three times finding this meeting room"
However, excessive self-deprecation appears unconfident, so use it for trivial aspects, not core competencies.
11. Humor in Everyday Conversation
Timing Is Everything
The same words can be funny or awkward depending on timing.
- Use silence: Pausing briefly before the punchline increases impact
- Natural flow: Do not force it in; let it emerge naturally from the conversation
- Observe reactions: Judge whether to continue or stop based on the other person's response
Situational Humor (Observational Humor)
Humor about what is happening right now is the most natural.
- When the screen will not advance: "Technology is not always on the presenter's side"
- When a meeting drags on: "Our meeting productivity graph is trending downward"
- Post-lunch meeting: "Our biggest enemy right now is not the other team -- it is post-lunch drowsiness"
The advantage of situational humor is that no preparation is needed. Developing a habit of observing your surroundings makes it come naturally.
12. Cautions -- The Pitfalls of Humor
When Humor Does Not Land
Humor failing happens to everyone. The key is how you handle the failure.
- Acknowledge it: "Yes, that one was apparently only funny in my head" (this itself is funny)
- Move on: Do not panic; naturally proceed to the next content
- Never do this: Explain or repeat the same joke
Humor to Avoid
No matter how funny, never use these types of humor:
- Humor that disparages specific groups: Related to gender, race, religion, appearance, or disability
- Humor that makes others the target: Making colleagues or subordinates the butt of jokes
- Excessively aggressive humor: Sarcasm, cynicism, and mockery are not humor
- Inside jokes: Jokes only some understand alienate the rest
- Untimely humor: Light jokes during serious topics (restructuring, declining performance)
The golden rule of humor: Choose safe over funny. One inappropriate joke can destroy years of built trust.
Cultural Differences
In international settings, use humor even more carefully.
- Humor from one culture may not work in another
- Puns are untranslatable
- Universally effective humor: self-deprecation, situational humor, visual humor
Practical Checklists
Pre-Presentation Checklist
- Can you summarize the key message in one sentence?
- Have you completed at least 3 rehearsals?
- Is there unnecessary text on slides?
- Have you prepared an opening hook?
- Have you prepared answers for 5 anticipated questions?
- Have you pre-checked equipment (laptop connection, microphone, etc.)?
Pre-Persuasion Checklist
- Have you identified the other person's position and needs?
- Have you organized your argument using the PREP structure?
- Have you prepared two-sided argumentation for opposing views?
- Do you have specific data and examples?
- Have you framed to match the other person's values?
- Have you secured your BATNA?
Pre-Humor Checklist
- Is there any chance of offending someone?
- Is it appropriate for the situation and atmosphere?
- Does it flow naturally (not forced)?
- Is it okay if it fails?
Recommended Resources
Presentation
- TED Talks: The Official TED Guide to Public Speaking (Chris Anderson)
- Made to Stick (Chip Heath, Dan Heath) -- How to make messages memorable
Persuasion
- Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion (Robert Cialdini) -- The bible of persuasion principles
- Getting More (Stuart Diamond)
Humor
- The Comedy Bible (Judy Carter) -- Systematic analysis of humor structure
- Analyzing stand-up comedy videos for their structure is also an excellent learning method
Conclusion
Presentation, persuasion, and humor. These three ultimately converge on one essence:
Understanding the other person's mind and delivering the message accordingly.
Natural-born communicators are extremely rare. Most outstanding communicators are people who learned the principles, practiced, and learned from failure.
Choose just one technique introduced in this article and practice it this week. When small changes accumulate, you will suddenly hear people call you "a great communicator."
The most important thing is to start. In your next meeting, your next presentation, your next conversation -- change one thing.
That is the beginning of "the secrets of great communicators."