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Index
Title Page Copyright Page Acknowledgments Dedication Contents How to Use Psychology to Be a Better Presenter How People Think and Learn
1. People process information better in bite-sized chunks 2. People need context 3. People filter information 4. The more uncertain people are, the more they defend their ideas 5. People have mental models 6. People process information best in story form 7. People learn best from examples 8. Short-term memory is limited 9. People remember only four items at once 10. People have to use information to make it stick 11. It’s easier to recognize information than recall it 12. Memory takes a lot of mental resources 13. People reconstruct memories each time they remember them 14. Forgetting is programmed in 15. people are driven to create categories 16. Time is relative 17. There are four ways to be creative 18. People can be in a flow state 19. Culture affects how people think 20. People learn best in 20-minute chunks 21. People have different learning styles 22. People learn from making mistakes
How to Grab and Hold People’s Attention
23. Sustained Attention Lasts About 10 Minutes 24. The Unconscious Directs Attention 25. Expectations of Frequency Affect Attention 26. People Can’t Actually Multitask 27. The Mind Wanders 30 Percent of the Time
How to Motivate People to Take Action
28. People are more motivated as they get closer to a goal 29. Variable rewards are powerful 30. People’s behavior can be shaped 31. Dopamine makes people addicted to seeking information 32. People respond to cues in the environment 33. People are more motivated by intrinsic rewards than by extrinsic rewards 34. People are motivated by progress, mastery, and control 35. People’s ability to delay gratification (or not) starts young 36. People are inherently lazy 37. Forming a habit takes a long time and requires small steps 38. People are more motivated to compete when there are fewer competitors 39. People are motivated by autonomy
How People Listen and see
40. Multiple Sensory Channels Compete 41. People Have to Hear Before They Can Listen 42. Vision Trumps All the Senses 43. People Read in a Certain Direction 44. It’s a myth that uppercase letters are inherently hard to read 45. Titles and Headlines Provide Critical Context 46. Hard to Read = Hard to Do 47. Font Size Matters 48. Peripheral Vision Is Used More Than Central Vision to Get the Gist of What Is Going On 49. There’s a Special Part of the Brain Just for Recognizing Faces 50. Red and Blue Together Are Hard on the Eyes 51. Nine Percent of Men and 0.5 Percent of Women Are Color Blind 52. The Meanings of Colors Vary by Group and Culture
How People React To The Environment
53. The more filled a room is, the more energy people have 54. Dark rooms put people to sleep 55. If you are out of sight, you might be out of mind 56. People are affected by the arrangement of furniture 57. It’s easy for people to lose interest online 58. People get tired and hungry 59. People are affected by temperature 60. When people are uncomfortable, they can’t pay attention 61. People expect connectivity
How People React Emotionally
62. People respond more to anecdotes than to data 63. Stories engage people emotionally 64. People are programmed to enjoy surprises 65. People feel safe when things are predictable 66. People need to feel safe in order to participate 67. People are happier when they’re busy 68. People react to beauty 69. Listening to music releases dopamine in the brain 70. People want what is familiar when they’re sad or scared 71. The more scarce something is, the more valuable people will feel it is
How People React to You
72. People obey authority figures 73. People “read” other people in an instant and unconsciously 74. Be Honest and Authentic 75. People assign meaning to your body positions and movement 76. People assign meaning to your hand gestures 77. People assign meaning to your tone of voice 78. People assign meaning to your face and eye movements 79. People imitate your emotions and feel your feelings 80. Clothes do make you 81. People Listen to and are Persuaded by Those Similar To/Attractive to them 82. Speakers’ brains and listeners’ brains sync up during communication 83. The brain responds uniquely to people you know personally 84. People want you to control the room
How People Decide To Take Action
85. People make most decisions unconsciously 86. Fear of loss trumps anticipation of gain 87. People want more choices and information than they can actually process 88. People think choice equals control 89. People might care about time more than they care about money 90. Mood influences the decision-making process 91. Group decision-making can be faulty 92. People are swayed by a dominant personality 93. When people are uncertain, they look to others to decide what to do 94. People think others are more easily influenced than they themselves are 95. People value a product more highly when it’s physically in front of them 96. People want to keep a consistent persona 97. Small steps can change personas 98. Writing by Hand can Increase Commitment 99. People will act in order to relieve a sense of obligation 100. When people say no the first time, they often say yes the next time
How to Craft Your Presentation
Step 1. Do your research Step 2. Craft your presentation Step 3. Create the content Step 4. Practice, practice, practice Step 5. Perform, refine, repeat
Your 90-day Improvement Plan References Index
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