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22 November 2013 / Dominic Regan
Issue: 7585 / Categories: Features
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Top tips for talks

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Experienced speaker Dominic Regan provides guidance on making a successful presentation

What follows are a few suggestions that might help if you are called upon to deliver a lecture to anyone, anywhere.

Practice makes perfect

“Failing to prepare is preparing to fail” sounds trite but is deadly accurate. You need to know your stuff and to display modest confidence. On no account start by saying “I haven’t a clue why they asked me to talk” or, even if true, “I was asked to do this only last night”. Do not dig a grave.

Always work from an identical set of notes to those handed out. The danger is that if you have updated your notes since they were first produced the pagination will be out and you will miss the new items added. Always read from the same hymn sheet.

Timing is crucial. If a new talk give it a run through, breaking it down and asking roughly how long each segment will take. Public speaking is at a slower pace than normal

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NEWS
Cheating in driving tests is surging—and courts are responding firmly. Writing in NLJ this week, Neil Parpworth of De Montfort Law School charts a rise in impersonation and tech-assisted fraud, with 2,844 attempts recorded in a year
As AI-generated ‘deepfake’ images proliferate, the law may already have the tools to respond. In NLJ this week, Jon Belcher of Excello Law argues that such images amount to personal data processing under UK GDPR
In a striking financial remedies ruling, the High Court cut a wife’s award by 40% for coercive and controlling behaviour. Writing in NLJ this week, Chris Bryden and Nicole Wallace of 4 King’s Bench Walk analyse LP v MP [2025] EWFC 473
A €60.9m award to Kylian Mbappé has refocused attention on football’s controversial ‘ethics bonus’ clauses. Writing in NLJ this week, Dr Estelle Ivanova of Valloni Attorneys at Law examines how such provisions sit within French labour law
A seemingly dry procedural update may prove potent. In his latest 'Civil way' column for NLJ this week, Stephen Gold explains that new CPR 31.12A—part of the 193rd update—fills a ‘lacuna’ exposed in McLaren Indy v Alpa Racing
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