7.
Summary and Concluding Remarks. This is idiosyncratic, but my
view is that conference presentations are short enough that this
section is not necessary, and that this is more true the shorter the
presentation. What I like to do is to prepare a proper two-slide
(i.e., one slide summarizing the research question and findings,
and one slide with implications for policy or business strategy and
directions for future research), but to say something like “In the
interest of time and of letting you ask your questions, I’ll just skip
this.” If you prefer to go through a proper conclusion, there is no
harm to doing so, but realize that it is directly taken out of your
allotted time.
8.
Appendix. If appendix slides are your secret weapon when
presenting at an invited seminar, they can be even more so when
presenting at a conference. All of the material that had to be taken
out of the long-form, invited-seminar version of your presentation
can (and should probably) be put in your appendix so that you
may refer to it when audience members ask you to go into more
depth about specific parts of your presentation.
There is one crucial distinction between an invited seminar presentation
and a conference presentation: whereas an invited seminar is a primarily an
occasion for you to engage in a dialogue with your audience and only
secondarily an occasion to add something to your CV, the short clock on a
conference presentation means that there is much less dialogue, and that
such talks are more of an occasion to market your work and add a line to
your CV, with the bulk of the dialogue taking place between sessions over
coffee and during meals than for an invited seminar. So while you may
expect your audience to make game-changing comments about your work
at a conference, if and when you get such comments, you are more likely to
get them after your session is over than during your allotted time. For early-
career researchers, knowing this can be quite liberating.
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