How often have you had to sit through a boring presentation at work, zoning out because the content laid out in front of you felt more like a punishment than a pitch? Sadly, this happens all the time in the business world. On the flip side, if you deliver a killer presentation—one that gets your boss, your co-workers and your clients genuinely excited about your content—you unlock something powerful. You become memorable and that can accelerate your career. But how do you get there?

Here are seven tips I have found that can transform the way you do a presentation at work.


1. Never start with ‘Hi, my name is…’
If you start your presentation like everyone else does, you’re already sending a signal that this is going to be just another dull script. You’ve practically given the audience permission to stop listening, gaze out the window and think about what they’re going to watch on Netflix that night. Your opening is one of the most important moments in a presentation. Think about movies—they start with a hook. Comedians use their second-best joke right up front. Why? Because they need to win the crowd over immediately. That’s your job, too. Open with a strong statement. Be dramatic. Be bold. Be unexpected. Make your audience look up and think, ‘Okay, this is different’.

2. Your slides shouldn’t suck.
It’s 2025. There is no excuse for boring accompanying slides. No more bullet-point explosions, no more small fonts, no more inconsistent layouts. The old philosophy of ‘only five to ten slides’ is outdated. It’s not about fewer slides. It’s about better slides. Use more, but make them flow. Let them breathe. Create momentum visually. If your slides don’t look spectacular, keep working on them until they do. Don’t be afraid to use AI tools or templates, or, better yet, hire someone to do it for you. Platforms like Upwork or Fiverr are full of affordable design freelancers who can elevate your presentation without risking any company data. Bottom line: if your slides are weak, your message gets lost.

3. Focus on the ‘Big Picture’ rather than drowning in data points.
One of the most common mistakes presenters make is cramming in everything they know—all the data, all the charts, all the things they personally find interesting. But here’s the brutal truth: most of it doesn’t matter. Ask yourself, is this relevant for my audience? Does this add value? If not, cut it. Work like a writer or an editor and embrace a ruthless mindset that says even the things you love might have to go. If it’s not helping the big picture, it’s hurting it.

4. Find the ‘Wow’ factor.
Every excellent presentation has one moment that sticks. It could be a number that shocks, a story that moves, or an image that wows. It could be something physical your audience takes with them. The wow factor doesn’t have to be over the top, it just needs to be unforgettable. It’s the emotional or intellectual anchor. It’s the part people remember days, even weeks later. Think Steve Jobs revealing the iPhone, that’s a wow moment. Your job is to find your version of it.

5. Tell stories or be forgotten
If you’re not using storytelling, you’re missing one of the most powerful tools in communication. Let’s be real, people don’t remember bullet points. They remember stories. Stories stick because they mirror real life, they spark emotion and create connection. So curate your stories, use dialogue, add a few details to bring it to life. Stories don’t just entertain, they educate and inspire, and they make your message unforgettable.

6. Be authentic
Authenticity builds trust so show something of yourself but don’t overshare and embarrass yourself. Being ‘too real’ without context is risky. You’re not just presenting to people—you’re presenting to their roles. The CFO, the project lead, the external partner. However, remember that behind those roles are human beings. Be bold enough to be seen, but stay smart. Actor Jim Carrey once said: “The effect you have on others is the most valuable currency there is.” Use that currency wisely.

7. Learn to use your voice
Your voice has more impact than your slides and content because your voice carries emotion. A monotonous delivery puts your audience to sleep. Play with your pitch, your pace, your volume. Know when to drop into silence or when to explode with energy. The right tone at the right moment is powerful. It communicates confidence, competence, and passion—three things every killer presentation must have.

Final thought: Deliver like you mean it
If you apply these seven techniques, you won’t just improve your presentations, you’ll change how people perceive you at work. You’ll be the one who brings the energy, the one who makes things clear, the one who moves the room and drives the message home. In the end, giving a killer presentation isn’t about being flashy—it’s about clarity, confidence and impact. If you do it right, people will not only listen, but they’ll remember.