If you have to make a presentation for a decision maker, you have to
bring difficulty of the contents down to board level.
That serves two purposes:
1 the presentor didn't make the decision, so he he can't be blamed for
the wrong decision
2 the decision maker didn't make the presentation, so he
Then we can look at it another way, a person who makes a possibly life
threatening multi-million dollar decision from a twenty minute PowerPoint
presentation certainly fits my definition of a fool.
Of course, the adviser who presents it that way fits my definition of incompetent.
--
Chaso
Another problem is that some problems cannot be simplified beyond a
certain point. If the decision makers don't have enough technical
literacy to make the decision or the sense to give it to someone that
does then problesm will occur.
Steven Desjardins
Department of Chemistry
Washington and Lee
Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2003 14:43:41 -0500
From: graywolf [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Powerpoint
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Then we can look at it another way, a person who
makes
Don't hold back now...tell us what you really think! ;-)
-Original Message-
From: graywolf [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, December 17, 2003 11:44 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:Re: Powerpoint
Then we can look at it another way, a person who makes
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