GESTURES AND MOVEMENTS Make your movements purposeful. Don’t wonder in translation - GESTURES AND MOVEMENTS Make your movements purposeful. Don’t wonder in Vietnamese how to say

GESTURES AND MOVEMENTS Make your mo

GESTURES AND MOVEMENTS
Make your movements purposeful. Don’t wonder instead you should try to make a point. Try to avoid rocking back and forth, which may make you look nervous. Keep your feet firmly planted. Don’t lean on podium or become frozen behind it. If you must choose ones. Make sure not to see the side which not make a grab . Stand up tall behind it or on a riser if necessary. Also remember not to turn your back to the audience. If you have to move backwards in oder to connect with your audience members on the side behind you, move backwards discreetly at a diagonal or by gradually stepping back as you emphasize key points. Now, our bodies……….(?) The way that we use our eyes and our face can make a tremendous impact on our presentation. When it comes to eye contact, you want to aim for not too long and not to short. Eye contact that is too short appears as thought wacth you.
And you feel that you’re about to get caught doing something?
Don’t get caught scanning the audience. Aim to have meaningful eye-to-eye connection with one person at a time. How long? Is long enough?
Practice make eye contact for 3-6 seconds. It may short but it’s just the right amount of time to convey one idea to one person and then move on. When it comes to making good eye contact, preparation helps. It feel looking down your notes or behind you at the proof speaker slide derk the audience entire time.
You miss a great opportunely to connect and buid propone with the audience.
Use your eye contact to give you feedback on what the audience is felling and doing. Are they following you? Are they bored? Are they confused?
Be confident enough in your presentation to be able to adjust to what your eyes are telling you. Body language isn’t just for delivering a presentation, it’s for reading the audience all along the way.
No matter how large the group is.
Make every effort to connect your eyes with people, not regions of the room.

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GESTURES AND MOVEMENTS
Make your movements purposeful. Don’t wonder instead you should try to make a point. Try to avoid rocking back and forth, which may make you look nervous. Keep your feet firmly planted. Don’t lean on podium or become frozen behind it. If you must choose ones. Make sure not to see the side which not make a grab . Stand up tall behind it or on a riser if necessary. Also remember not to turn your back to the audience. If you have to move backwards in oder to connect with your audience members on the side behind you, move backwards discreetly at a diagonal or by gradually stepping back as you emphasize key points. Now, our bodies……….(?) The way that we use our eyes and our face can make a tremendous impact on our presentation. When it comes to eye contact, you want to aim for not too long and not to short. Eye contact that is too short appears as thought wacth you.
And you feel that you’re about to get caught doing something?
Don’t get caught scanning the audience. Aim to have meaningful eye-to-eye connection with one person at a time. How long? Is long enough?
Practice make eye contact for 3-6 seconds. It may short but it’s just the right amount of time to convey one idea to one person and then move on. When it comes to making good eye contact, preparation helps. It feel looking down your notes or behind you at the proof speaker slide derk the audience entire time.
You miss a great opportunely to connect and buid propone with the audience.
Use your eye contact to give you feedback on what the audience is felling and doing. Are they following you? Are they bored? Are they confused?
Be confident enough in your presentation to be able to adjust to what your eyes are telling you. Body language isn’t just for delivering a presentation, it’s for reading the audience all along the way.
No matter how large the group is.
Make every effort to connect your eyes with people, not regions of the room.

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Results (Vietnamese) 2:[Copy]
Copied!
GESTURES AND MOVEMENTS
Make your movements purposeful. Don’t wonder instead you should try to make a point. Try to avoid rocking back and forth, which may make you look nervous. Keep your feet firmly planted. Don’t lean on podium or become frozen behind it. If you must choose ones. Make sure not to see the side which not make a grab . Stand up tall behind it or on a riser if necessary. Also remember not to turn your back to the audience. If you have to move backwards in oder to connect with your audience members on the side behind you, move backwards discreetly at a diagonal or by gradually stepping back as you emphasize key points. Now, our bodies……….(?) The way that we use our eyes and our face can make a tremendous impact on our presentation. When it comes to eye contact, you want to aim for not too long and not to short. Eye contact that is too short appears as thought wacth you.
And you feel that you’re about to get caught doing something?
Don’t get caught scanning the audience. Aim to have meaningful eye-to-eye connection with one person at a time. How long? Is long enough?
Practice make eye contact for 3-6 seconds. It may short but it’s just the right amount of time to convey one idea to one person and then move on. When it comes to making good eye contact, preparation helps. It feel looking down your notes or behind you at the proof speaker slide derk the audience entire time.
You miss a great opportunely to connect and buid propone with the audience.
Use your eye contact to give you feedback on what the audience is felling and doing. Are they following you? Are they bored? Are they confused?
Be confident enough in your presentation to be able to adjust to what your eyes are telling you. Body language isn’t just for delivering a presentation, it’s for reading the audience all along the way.
No matter how large the group is.
Make every effort to connect your eyes with people, not regions of the room.

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