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Making a Good First Impression: The Elevator Talk
Heather Macdonald and David McConnell Photo and some content from Carolyn Gale’s presentation to 2006 Preparing for an Academic Career in the Geosciences workshop
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Elevator Talk Imagine that you are in a elevator (or on an escalator)
Someone asks you, “What do you do?” You have seconds to tell them. Now what? Michael Tobias
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Consider these questions
What is the field I work in? What is the work I do? Why is it important? What makes it new/different/significant?
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Some Situations Audience Other scientists, other geoscientists
the Dean or Provost during an interview (this person may not be a scientist) Undergraduates during an interview Graduate students during an interview Program officers from funding agencies
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Clarity, content, delivery
Clarity appropriate to audience Watch out for technical terms Short sentences I rather than we (when possible) Making the content compelling What excites you most about your research? Start with what you do (not a history of the discipline). Why should we care? What is the significance of your research? Delivery Show passion/enthusiasm for your work (being true to your personality and style) Vary the tone of your voice Establish eye contact Concentrate on a "I'm glad you asked" expression and posture Watch the time and watch for eyes glazing over It’s a conversation
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Additional advice Audience should learn something new, but not learn EVERYTHING there is to know about your work. Goal: “That sounds really interesting. Tell me more (about your work).” If this is during the interview, consider yourself as a (faculty) colleague, not as a graduate student It’s a bridge for further discussion.
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