Dale Carnegie Training

The Presentations Japan Series

Business EN ↓ 503 episodes

Persuasion power is one of the kingpins of business success. We recognise immediately those who have the facility and those who don't. We certainly trust, gravitate toward and follow those with persuasion power. Those who don't have it lack presence and fundamentally disappear from view and become invisible. We have to face the reality, persuasion power is critical for building our careers and businesses. The good thing is we can all master this ability. We can learn how to become persuasive and all we need is the right information, insight and access to the rich experiences of others. If you...

Author

Dale Carnegie Training

Category

Business

Latest episode

Jul 6, 2026

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Episodes

Your Successful Business Story Structure 06.07.2026

Business storytelling is one of the great untapped advantages in professional presenting. Most executives compete in crowded markets, red oceans and data-heavy meetings, yet very few use stories well. That creates a blue ocean opportunity for leaders, salespeople and professionals who want to be remembered. Data, statistics and charts matter, but they rarely stay in the audience's mind by themselv...

Don't Let Fear Destroy Professional Presentations 29.06.2026

Fear can destroy a professional presentation faster than weak slides, poor grammar or a short speaking slot. A senior executive reading a one-minute company introduction from an A4 sheet does not look careful; they look unprepared, unsure and unprofessional. Today's business audiences compare speakers with the polished delivery they see on Netflix, Disney, Hulu, HBO, YouTube, TED Talks and high-pr...

Your Eyes, Hands, Face, Toes and Energy When Presenting 22.06.2026

Small presentation changes can create big gains in persuasion, authority and audience engagement. Most presenters do not fail because they lack intelligence, experience or good content. They fail because their delivery habits are invisible to them. When presenting in Japan, Asia-Pacific, the US or Europe, the audience judges far more than the slide deck. They read eye contact, gestures, facial exp...

Highly Pointless Presentations 15.06.2026

Highly pointless presentations are everywhere, and they damage trust faster than most speakers realise. Whether the presenter is a government official, company president, senior executive or subject matter expert, audiences can immediately tell when the meeting is designed to inform them, persuade them or simply run down the clock. In Japan, formal presentations often include navigators, administr...

The Presenter's Dilemma 08.06.2026

The Presenter's Dilemma The presenter's dilemma is simple: should we build the talk around slides, or build the slides around the message? Too many business presentations begin with recycled decks, clever visuals, and a desperate slide shuffle. The better path starts with one clear message, a specific audience, and stories that make the idea memorable. Should presenters start by building slides? N...

Imposter Syndrome When Presenting 01.06.2026

Imposter syndrome does not disappear just because someone becomes a business owner, Ph. D., author, trainer, executive, or recognised expert. The voice in the head still asks, "Who do you think you are?" The answer is not perfection. The answer is humility, preparation, integrity, and the courage to share what we do know. Why do presenters feel imposter syndrome? Presenters feel imposter syndrome...

The Power Of Enthusiasm, Structure And Vocal Variety When Presenting 25.05.2026

Great presentations do not depend on words alone. Even when the language is unfamiliar, audiences can still detect structure, energy, enthusiasm, pacing, vocal variety, and body language. That is the real lesson for leaders, trainers, salespeople, and executives who want their message to land. Why does presentation structure matter so much? Presentation structure matters because it helps the audie...

Communicating Your Point Of View 18.05.2026

In business presentations, having a point of view is not the problem. The problem is failing to decide where the line is before you open your mouth. Executives, entrepreneurs, salespeople, and company leaders need opinions that build credibility, not opinions that accidentally blow up trust. Should business presenters share their point of view? Yes, business presenters should share a clear point o...

I'm No Good In Front Of Big/Small Groups 11.05.2026

Presenting to a small executive team and speaking to a packed ballroom are not the same game. The fundamentals of public speaking stay constant, but the room size changes the pressure, the energy, the body language, the eye contact, and the way the audience experiences our authority. Why does audience size change public speaking impact? Audience size changes the speaker's psychology because proxim...

How to Make Your Audience The Heroes When Presenting 04.05.2026

Great presentations do not make the speaker the hero. They make the audience feel seen, understood, and capable of winning. That shift matters more than ever in business communication. In boardrooms, sales meetings, town halls, investor briefings, and leadership offsites, audiences are overloaded with data, cynical about empty claims, and quick to disengage. In Japan, the US, Europe, and across As...

Simon Kuper's Excellent Advice To Presenters 27.04.2026

Great presentations are rarely accidents. They work because the speaker respects one brutal truth: audiences are distracted, overloaded, and ready to tune out fast. That is why Simon Kuper's advice lands so well. It is not theory for academics or conference organisers. It is practical guidance for anyone who has to stand up in front of a room, win attention, and leave people remembering something...

Overly Glib Speakers Trigger Rejection 20.04.2026

Media interviews, podcasts, and executive conversations often go wrong for one simple reason: the speaker sounds polished but not real. When leaders become too glib, too rehearsed, or too obviously "media trained", audiences start to distrust them.  In boardrooms, on podcasts, in television interviews, and across LinkedIn clips, people are listening for credibility, not corporate spin. That is esp...

Leading Your Audience Up The Garden Path 13.04.2026

Presenters today are competing against smartphones, doom scrolling, shrinking attention spans, and audiences trained to spot familiar patterns instantly. In that environment, one of the most effective presentation strategies is the pattern interrupt: taking listeners down a familiar road, then surprising them with a sharper, more compelling truth. This is not about gimmicks for their own sake. It...

Don't Be Predictable And Boring When Presenting 06.04.2026

Good presentations are not built on politeness first. They are built on attention first. Whether it is a university graduation speech, a chamber of commerce address, a sales presentation in Tokyo, or a boardroom briefing in Otemachi, the opening has to grab people before they drift to their phones, their inbox, or their own internal monologue. Too many speakers confuse formal with effective. They...

What If I Am Not Fluent In English As A Presenter? 30.03.2026

Japan loves kata  (the right way) and  kanpekishugi  (perfectionism). It's why trains run on time, factories hit tolerance, and meeting etiquette is orderly. It's also why many Japanese professionals feel  shame  if their English isn't perfect — especially on stage, in a boardroom, or on a Zoom call with global HQ. I used to argue with my wife: "Why does it have to be done  this  way?" Her answer...

What If I Am A Low Energy Speaker 23.03.2026

Being persuasive is a commercial superpower. Whether you're pitching a proposal in a Toyota-style boardroom in Tokyo, selling a SaaS renewal in Silicon Valley, or leading a change programme in Sydney, you still need people to say "yes" to your idea. High-energy speakers often get impact "for free" because their natural pace and passion carries the room. Quiet, calm, low-energy presenters don't get...

Thanking The Speaker 16.03.2026

Presentations have a cadence: promotion, registration, MC opening, speaker delivery, and then the closing that shapes the final memory. In many well-run events (industry associations, chambers of commerce, corporate briefings, webinars on Zoom or Microsoft Teams), the MC and the person giving the vote of thanks are separate roles. If you're the one thanking the speaker, you're not doing "admin" —...

How to Introduce A Speaker 09.03.2026

A strong speaker introduction isn't "filler" before the real talk starts — it's the moment the MC borrows the room's attention and hands it to the presenter. When MCs mumble, freestyle the bio, or get dates wrong, they don't just annoy the speaker; they weaken the event's credibility and the audience's willingness to listen. A professional introduction quietly signals: this person is worth your ti...

Inspiring People To Embrace Change 02.03.2026

Change is easy to talk  about and hard to  embrace . Most people don't refuse change out of logic — they resist it out of instinct. Try the classic "fold your arms the other way" exercise: nothing meaningful is at stake, yet your body argues back. So if a tiny shift feels awkward, imagine what your team feels when you ask for a restructure, new CRM, new KPIs, or a new strategy. This transcript is...

Motivating Others To Action 23.02.2026

Most leaders want "alignment," but what they really need is movement —people actually doing the new thing. Motivating action is devilishly hard because humans cling to habits, defend their comfort, and only  rent  logic after emotion has already bought the decision.  Below is a practical, talk-design framework you can use in leadership meetings, sales kick-offs, internal change programs, and clien...

The Presenter's Time, Talent and Treasure 16.02.2026

New Year's resolutions are a lovely idea—until life body-checks you in week two. Changing habits takes extra energy: consistency, patience, perseverance, and actual application. The good news? If you're a presenter (or you want to be), you've already got the three levers that move the needle every year: time, talent, and treasure —used wisely, they turn "I should…" into "I did." Why do presenters...

Communicating With Greater Impact 09.02.2026

Most talks are totally forgettable because they never land emotionally and  logically. If you want real impact — the kind that people remember, repeat, and act on — you need to stop "delivering content" and start designing  attention  through voice, pacing, phrasing, and purposeful movement.  Why are most presentations forgettable, even when the content is "good"? Because information doesn't stick...

Handling The Q&A 02.02.2026

Q&A isn't the awkward add-on after your talk — it's where you cement  your message, clarify what didn't land, and build trust through real interaction. Why is the Q&A the most important part of your presentation? Because Q&A is your second chance to make your best points land — and to fix any confusion in real time.  It's also the moment the audience decides if you're credible, calm under pressure...

Presenting Complex Information 27.01.2026

Complex doesn't mean "technical". Complex means your audience can't quickly connect what you're saying to what they already know. In a post-pandemic, hybrid-meeting world (Zoom, Teams, half the room on mute), that gap gets bigger fast—especially when you pile on jargon, acronyms, and dense slides. This guide turns complex topics into clear, persuasive presentations without turning them into kinder...

Persuasion Power Eats Everything For Breakfast 19.01.2026

Most business careers don't stall because people lack IQ or work ethic — they stall because people can't move  other humans. If you can command a room, energise a team, excite customers, and secure decisions, you compound your influence fast — especially in the post-pandemic world of hybrid meetings, Zoom pitches, and global audiences.  Does persuasion power matter more than technical skill for pr...

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