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Present Statistics In Context

 

I didnt have 3000 pairs of shoes. I had only 1600 pairs. Imelda Marcos

Everythings relative. A million dollars sounds like a lot of money to someone who makes an average salary, but its a drop in the bucket to a Warren Buffett or a Bill Gates. Running a hundred metres in a few seconds seems like a miracle to ordinary mortals, but a track and field athlete will work hard to shave even more off that time.

Yet presenters often quote statistics without benchmarks, so the audience doesnt know how to evaluate them. Is $10,000 a lot of money? Well it is for a bicycle. Its not much for a house, unless that house is in a small village in a third world country, where it might be exorbitant. If you quote numbers this way, you will lose the audience while they try to decide whether $125,000 is good, bad or indifferent in this context. Your statistics lose their power.

In a presentation skills workshop for a group of lawyers, one participant was practicing his delivery of an address to the jury in an upcoming trial. He was asking for damages in the amount of $750,000, and hoped the jury would consider it reasonable. Its quite a large sum, and most ordinary folks think of that kind of cash as a lottery win. He needed to put it in context for them.

He might, for example, ask the jury to suppose they were thirty-five years old and earning a salary of $40,000 a year. By the time they reached the age of sixty-five, allowing for reasonable increases, they could expect to have earned a certain amount. (He would do the arithmetic and insert the actual sum.) That amount would be what is called their expected lifetime income. However, if they were involved in an accident and suddenly unable to work any more, that amount now represents their forfeited lifetime income. That is what happened to this claimant, and the amount he would have lost was $750,000. So in fact, counsel was asking no more than the amount the man would have earned, had he not met with this unfortunate accident.

Dont you think the jury is more likely to agree when given this background explanation?

Here are three ways to put figures in context for your audience.

1. Compare them to something to which they can personally relate, as in the courtroom example.

2. Compare them to a similar situation. If a new manufacturing process takes fifteen minutes, mention that the old one took two hours, so we save 1-3/4 hours.

For even more effect, tell them how much time this will save in an average shift or on a certain number of product units. Go further and translate that time into money and the statistic will now be a strong argument for change.

3. Create vivid word pictures to illustrate size: Thats the equivalent of five football fields. Thats enough to fill ten Olympic-size swimming pools. If laid end-to-end they would stretch from New York to L.A. and back again.

Statistics can be great persuaders, but only when the audience has the means to evaluate them.

Author: Helen Wilkie
 
Author Bio:

Helen Wilkie

Helen Wilkie is a professional keynote speaker, workshop facilitator, author and coach, specializing in business communication and management skills. She worries about the high monetary cost of poor applied communication in today's workplace, and her programs all aim to correct the problem. Helen promises to help organizations save their money and people save their sanity by improving applied communication at work.

She offers a free monthly e-zine called "Communi-keys", and you can sign up for it at either of her websites.

This article can be searched using: business presentations, business power point presentations, business presentations analysis
 
 
 

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