Proposal-Based Presentation

Kindly Bid only if you are a Lady with an AMERICAN Voice.

I have attached my complete proposal. You work is only to create the PowerPoint presentation and do some recording.
Proposal-Based Presentation

Now that you’ve finished your written proposal, you are ready to create a PowerPoint presentation based on it. This should not be a reproduction of your proposal; rather it is to share information about your proposal with your classmates. In addition to the PowerPoint file being submitted to the drop box, you will use an online e-learning tool to record your presentation.

The purpose of this presentation is to familiarize you with giving an oral presentation. You will not be presenting in front of a live group.
Your PowerPoint presentation will be recorded and published using the online e-learning tool.
A link for the online e-learning tool was sent by email. If you do not have it please contact your instructor.
The login ID is your first name.last name. Use your Rasmussen password.
Once a recording is approved by the instructor, members of the class will be able to view it.
Contact the Personal Support Center if you have any questions or difficulties using the online e-learning tool to record and publish your presentation.

Presentation Guidelines

To create your Proposal Project Presentation, you should not copy and paste large sections of text from your written proposal. A PowerPoint presentation is not the same as a written report. Your slides should include only the main points from your proposal, and these main points should be condensed into short phrases and explanations. Your PowerPoint presentation should include the following elements:

Title Slide
Your title slide should include the following:

An appropriate title for your proposal presentation
The name of this course (in place of the name of the company preparing the proposal)
The author’s name
The date of the presentation
Problem Section (1-3 slides)
Just as you did in the written proposal, you must prove that a serious problem exists. You may want to answer these questions about your problem:

How long has the problem existed?
Is it worse now? Why?
What are some relevant statistics?
What are other people doing to solve similar problems?
However, please remember that PowerPoint slides should use short phrases and explanations, not complete paragraphs from your written proposal. You may want to include a visual, especially if your problem section discusses relevant statistics. Any visual included in your presentation should follow the guidelines from Week 06.

Audience (1-2 slides)
Your slides should explain who the audience of your proposal includes and what their needs are. Tell how you will overcome skepticism. What objections do you anticipate? How will you be sure your proposal is the “winning” proposal for this audience?

Solution Section (1-3 slides)
Your slides should briefly outline the change you propose and want approved. Your solution should be directly related to the problem you just documented and be appropriate to the audience you’ve described.

Again, please remember that PowerPoint slides should use short phrases and explanations, not complete paragraphs from your written proposal. You should consider using visuals in this section if you cite numerical data to support your plan.

In the overall format of your PowerPoint slides, please use the following guidelines:

Use an appropriate design template. Assume that your presentation will be given in a “bright” room (with the lights on).
When recording your presentation, please keep in mind that an online e-learning tool does not “record” slide animation.
The following resources may help you as you create your PowerPoint and cite your sources:

Creating a PowerPoint
Citing Sources in a PowerPoint
A Word on Visuals…
Make sure your visuals explain, support, or enhance your presentation. Do not use visuals simply as decoration.

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