By Resilience Speaker and Leadership Development Trainer, Jamie Mason Cohen
1.Create personalized, cinematic intros. Ask people on your team to submit a relevant question/goal/problem on their phone. Hire an editor on Upwork for 1-hour’s work to edit it into a pre-existing 30-second video that you’ve already done that fits the meeting theme.
2. Create a sense of travel or motion throughout the presentation.
It will feel bigger than all the gadgets that are currently unavailable anyways on Amazon.
Example: Use giant whiteboards to plot the goals, opportunities and problems solved and continually refer back to the board on camera.
Jerry Seinfeld said that he thought his new show, Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee has been a hit because of the cars added to the conversations.
3. Light using natural light from a window or sitting on your porch.
4. Bring on a guest speaker to infuse a diverse perspective on the topic. Be sure to let the group know where they are from as it adds a global scope to your meeting.
5. Show short video clips, play music, ask people to surround themselves with senses and objects that are connected and meaningful to them in context to the presentation.