Sunday, March 22, 2009

Toastmaster Icebreaker: lessons learnt

Last week I had my first speech as a Toastmaster. I think it went OK considering it was the first time I was speaking in front a group of people that are relatively new to me. I thought I would summarize a few notes based on the feedback I have received from my peers and an analysis I did of my speech.

Reserve and use enough preparation time
Although the allotted time for your presentation will be something between 4 and 6 minutes, it will take a significantly larger amount of time to plan, draft, practice and finalize it. You should not wait for the last day but make sure you start as early as possible.

Pick the right combination of things to talk about
Although the icebreaker is typically about you, you will find out that having to present something about yourself in front of an audience is not that simple. You will need to consider what are the aspects of your life and your personality you will want to discuss about and how they make sense when you put them together into a speech. Make it interesting, funny and don't be too afraid of opening up beyond the typical lines about yourself you use when you meet someone.

Consider using visuals, like photos
I used a PC to project photos of my kids, wife, etc. as a support for my presentation. I felt that I would not have had enough time to tell enough about people who are important to me and that using photos I would have been able to bring the message to the audience. This worked out well based on the feedback but it complicated a bit the delivery as I had to control also the photo flow plus I had little time to set up the PC once my time started. I was also told that I was blocking part of the view for some of the audience. In summary, make sure you carefully check your setup before the start of the meeting.

Prioritize few topics to reserve enough time for them
Based on my speech but also on that of some of my peers, I can say that often it is better to select a few key topics to talk about and dive deep enough into them in your presentation. Having too many items will force you to rush through all of them and at the and you will leave your audience with basically nothing more than a list. Leave out less important topics and consider using them for your next speeches.

Create a script, but do not use it at the speech.
I did write a script for the things I wanted to talk about. It was a very useful exercise because it helped me with thinking more carefully of what to say, how to say it and what flow to use. I used it to practice the speech and it helped me realize that initially I had planned for too much to be said. However, I now realize I should have left it behind when keeping the speech. After all the icebreaker is about you so you should know what to say. At the beginning of the speech I found myself paying too much attention at saying the same words I had in the script instead of the overall aspects of the performance. I guess it would have been enough to have some key points written down just as a reminder of the flow. I will try that next time.

I will stop here. In the toastmasters kit you will find other type of hints that you should consider. Above all, try to be as relaxed as possible and do not take it too seriously. This is your first speech, you are there to learn and have fun.




Friday, January 23, 2009

Contacts on Ovi in Nokia Beta Labs

Nokia released today Contacts on Ovi. If you have read my previous post Real-time web to your mobile, you can now download Contacts on Ovi to enable the IM notifications from FriendFeed to your mobile. This application now supports also S60 3.2 devices.

Have fun!

Real-time web to your mobile

A few months ago I have linked up Nokia chat to my FriendFeed profile to experiment a bit with the idea of real-time web. After using it for all this time I can say that the experience is quite interesting as it enables instant notifications to your mobile of activities your friends are sharing on FriendFeed. If you like FriendFeed and want to try a new way of getting it to your mobile, this is something you might want to consider.

If you decide to try it out, just follow the instructions below:

1. Install Nokia Chat on your phone (e.g. E71). You can find Nokia Chat for Nokia S60 3.1 devices (update: now also for S60 3.2) on Nokia Betalabs (Make sure you follow the installation instructions).

2. Sign in with your Ovi account or create a new account following the wizard on the application.

3. Go to FriendFeed and add your Ovi ID as your IM service (use GTalk profile)+ enable the IM notifications.

4. Follow the instructions on FriendFeed to complete the activation.

Leave Nokia Chat client running in background. You will start getting mobile instant notifications to your mobile whenever your friends are sharing something on FriendFeed. You can also update your FriendFeed status and like/comment your friends’ posts. Here you can find more instructions on the commands to use.

I have my e71 connected via 3G/GPRS. With a flat fee data subscription I don't need to worry about the data costs and I can be always connected. The UI is not great as it gets delivered to you as an IM but the "command line" like interface is somehow pretty practical especially if you have a QWERTY keypad and does the job quickly.

I also recommend that you consider filtering the notifications using a FriendFeed list where you add some people you want to follow realtime (otherwise you might be overloaded with notifications).

Yes, there are big margin of improvement in terms of the UI on the mobile, but this gives you a pretty good idea of what real-time web could be in the future. Watch-out! It may be addictive!

I think this is real-time web for real. The first step of making it happen.

Update (28Jan2009): If you have problems with clicking on the verification URL from friendfeed on your Nokia Chat/Contacts on Ovi mobile client, consider performing this step via a PC IM client. Info on how to set up your favourite IM client for Contacts on Ovi can be found here (click on "learn more" button.