►
Description
This speaker series is part 1 of a 4-month all-remote communication speaker series hosted by the Learning and Development team at GitLab.
A
Okay,
so
we
are
it's
just
11
30
for
me,
which
is
the
time
for
this
live
speaker
series
to
get
started,
so
I'm
gonna
kick
us
off
and
as
people
people
kind
of
filter
in
they'll
be
here
for
the
start
of
laureen's
presentation.
A
So
thanks
everyone
for
being
here
for
our
live
speaker
series
today
with
lorraine
lee
from
prezi
we're
talking
about
video
and
presentation
tips
for
an
all
remote
work
environment
and
I'm
really
excited
to
have
lorraine
here.
This
is.
I
was
just
chatting
with
her
about
how
this
is.
Our
first
live
speaker
series
with
the
lmd's
hosting
in
2022,
and
it's
part
of
a
four-part
series.
A
That's
going
to
be
focused
on
all
remote
communication,
so
we're
working
on
getting
one
speaker
per
month
for
the
next
four
months
and
each
speaker
will
kind
of
talk
about
a
different
aspect
of
remote
communication
and
tools
and
strategies.
You
can
use
to
improve
that
in
your
role
at
gitlab,
whatever
team
you're
on
and
like
I
said
today
we're
going
to
talk
about
video
and
presentation
skills.
A
I
think
we
all
play
a
role
in
recording
and
sharing
really
important
videos,
if
not
only
internally
but
also
externally,
and
so
I
think
that
this
presentation
is
going
to
be
really
helpful
for
everyone,
as
it
applies
to
strategies
that
you
can
use
when
you're
making
live
presentations
to
people
who
are
internal
or
external
to
the
company,
but
also
just
when
you're
recording
video
that
you
want
to
share
and
look
nice.
So
really.
A
Looking
forward
to
the
conversation,
I'm
just
going
to
go
over
the
structure
of
these
calls
really
quickly
and
then
pass
it
over
to
lorraine.
So
if
you
haven't
been
on
a
live
speaker
series
before
we're
going
to
spend
about
the
first
25
minutes
or
so
with
lorraine,
giving
our
presentation
and
then
at
that
for
the
rest
of
the
call
when
the
presentation
is
over
we'll
open
it
up
as
like
an
ama
q,
a
format.
A
B
B
B
Five
years
ago
I
had
flown
from
san
francisco
to
new
york
and
I
was
getting
ready
to
enter
the
empire
state
building.
I
was
so
so
incredibly
nervous.
My
palms
were
extremely
sweaty.
My
body
was
cold,
yet
somehow
hot.
At
the
same
time,
I
was
a
nervous
wreck,
but
I
somehow
gathered
my
cards
together
and
I
stepped
onto
the
elevator
to
head
to
the
video
studio.
On
the
25th
floor,
I
was
getting
ready
for
my
first
ever
on-camera
interview
as
an
editor
at
linkedin
now
being
on
video
doing
video
interviews.
B
B
My
first
interview
here
was
with
the
ceo
of
the
clinton
health
matters
initiative
and
when
it
was
done,
I
cannot
tell
you
how
relieved
I
felt
I
pushed
forward,
and
I
finished
the
other
three
interviews
still
completely
freaking
out
inside,
but
I
made
it
during
those
years
at
lincoln.
I
ended
up
gaining
enough
confidence
to
start
my
own
video
series
and
I
had
the
chance
to
interview
powerhouse
women
across
industries.
B
B
So
in
today's
session,
we'll
cover
how
you
can
come
across
more
confident
and
competent
on
video
and
keep
your
audience
engaged
and
then
I'll
share
some
best
practices
for
being
on
video,
as
I
mentioned
before,
my
name
is
lorraine
lee
and
I'm
the
head
of
editorial
at
prezi
before
prezi.
I
was
an
editor
at
linkedin
for
six
years,
where
I
created
and
hosted
its
female
founders,
video
series-
and
I
was
part
of
the
team
that
launched
linkedin's
first
ever
video
product
all
the
way
back
in
2016.
B
B
This
isn't
much
of
a
surprise
when
we
see
things
like
this
on
a
daily
basis.
Aka
the
before
your
audience's
world
is
noisy.
They
are
getting
constantly
bombarded
with
messages
and
content
and
screen
sharing
is
just
not
cutting
it
anymore
as
a
way
to
be
remembered
or
to
stand
out,
and
we
can't
really
blame
video
fatigue,
because
there
are
so
many
videos
and
other
types
of
video
content
holding
our
attention.
B
If
you
take
a
moment
to
reflect
on
how
much
video
content
you're
watching
on
a
daily
basis,
I
know
my
number
is
embarrassingly
high
up
there.
You
will
realize
that
video
fatigue
isn't
actually
the
issue.
We
are
just
bored
with
the
screen,
shares
and
bulleted,
slides
and
tired
of
seeing
the
same
types
of
presentations
over
and
over
and
over
again.
B
B
B
B
B
So
this
is
how
we
fix
that
you'll
want
to
make
sure
that
you
have
a
light
source
in
front
of
you
facing
your
face,
make
sure
that
it's
never
facing
your
back
coming
from
behind,
or
else
that's
going
to
cause
you
to
be
backlit
and
look
like
you're
in
a
true
crime
documentary.
I'm
sure
some
of
us,
or
many
of
us
have
experienced
that
on
calls
already
and
really
the
ideal
situation.
B
B
Now,
if
you've
ever
told
a
story
where
everyone
was
attentive
and
really
excited
about
what
you
had
to
say,
next
you'll
know
what
sort
of
confidence
boost
that
gives
you.
The
same
goes
with
your
presentation
if
you're
using
visuals
well,
your
viewers
are
going
to
be
more
tuned
in
and
actually
retain
what
you're
telling
them
which
is
going
to
make.
You
feel
more
confident
about
what
you're,
sharing
visuals
can
also
be
helpful
in
other
ways
when
it
comes
to
confidence
building.
B
So
I
don't
know
about
all
of
you,
but
for
me
one
of
the
scariest
things
about
presenting
is
feeling
like
everyone
is
staring
at
me.
Judging
my
every
word,
but
I
have
found
that
adding
visuals
helps
me
relax
more
as
a
presenter
because
they
help
balance
out
the
audience
and
attention
between
me
and
my
content.
B
B
Oops,
the
next
tip
I
have
for
you
is
to
curate
your
environment
having
a
well
thought
out.
Curated
environment
is
going
to
give
a
more
professional,
look
and
feel
to
your
presentation
and
similar
to
lighting.
If
you
look
more
professional
you're
just
going
to
feel
better
about
how
you're
coming
off
now
before
I
moved
into
this
apartment,
here
I
was
in
a
studio
apartment.
My
bed
was
literally
right
behind
my
desk
pushed
up
against
it.
I
always
felt
very
self-conscious
about
it.
Wondering
on
calls
were
people
paying
attention
to
me.
B
B
So
there
are
any
npr
fans
in
the
audience.
You
might
recognize
guy
razz
here
you
can
see
that
he
chose
an
outdoor
setting
for
his
background.
It
looks
really
cool
and
he's
also
getting
the
natural
light
that
I
mentioned
earlier,
or
I
love
this
example
by
ted.
She
only
had
two
plants
behind
her,
but
she
had
all
of
this
natural
light
and
the
colors
of
the
plants
really
popped
against
the
white.
So
I
thought
it
was
such
a
beautiful
setup
and
she
looks
so
professional,
but
also
really
approachable.
B
Creating
your
environment
is
a
more
accurate
description
of
what
someone
needs
to
do
to
really
stand
out
and
impress
and
you're
actually
the
first
audience
seeing
this
new
tip
so
at
fuzzy
we're
seeing
a
lot
of
companies
and
customers
creating
a
true
virtual
experience
on
their
video
that
contributes
to
their
overall
presence
and
professionalism.
B
So
here's
an
example
showing
how
you
can
have
both
a
great
background
and
your
video
becomes
even
more
impressive
once
you
add
a
simple
name
tag
and
visual
elements
to
the
foreground
of
the
screen
and
the
visuals
here
ties
into
what
I
mentioned
before
about
the
impact
of
visuals.
But
you
can
see
it's
really
not
just
about
the
background.
It's
not
the
background
and
the
foreground
and
the
entire
experience
and
environment
you're
creating
in
your
virtual
world.
B
So
those
are
our
three
tips
for
appearing
more
confident
and
competent
on
video.
Let's
go
into
our
first
recap:
to
gain
more
confidence.
You'll
want
to
adjust
your
lighting,
use,
visuals
and
curate
your
environment.
Next
up.
Let's
talk
about
three
ways
that
you
can
keep
your
audience
engaged
like.
I
showed
earlier.
Many
of
us
continue
to
see
presentations
where
the
presenters
screen
sharing
they're
sitting
on
a
slide
for
10
minutes,
and
your
response
is
either
this
or
this
when
it
should
really
look
more
like
this.
B
B
So
I
encourage
you
all
to
take
a
stab
at
filling
this
out
before
your
next
call.
This
is
what
mine
looked
like
for
this
particular
presentation,
so
this
matrix
is
going
to
definitely
help.
You
create
a
more
memorable
presentation
because
you're
going
to
have
a
better
understanding
of
who
your
audience
is
and
what
you
want
them
to
walk
away
with,
which
is
going
to
help
you
build
the
right
content
for
them
once
you're
done
filling
this
out.
B
So
if
you
could,
please
let
me
know
in
the
chat
for
the
last
15
seconds
or
so
were
you
primarily
watching
the
video
were
you
of
the
car
chase?
Were
you
looking
at
the
picture
of
the
car
chase
or
were
you
looking
at
me
no
wrong
answer?
I
won't
be
offended
if
you
weren't
looking
at
me,
but
let
me
go
over
to
the
chat
here.
B
Samantha
says
video
adrian
video,
a
lot
of
video
cartridges,
emails!
Okay.
I
appreciate
the
honesty
rebecca
photo.
Sophie
video,
okay,
wonderful
looks
like
most
of
you
are
saying.
Video
yeah
feel
free
to
keep
typing
I'll,
look
at
the
chat
afterwards,
but
yeah
so
you're
all
seeing
firsthand
just
how
powerful
movement
can
be
in
drawing
attention.
B
Now
I
like
to
recommend
at
least
two
slides
or
movements
per
minute
in
a
virtual
setting,
and
they
don't
have
to
be
big
movements
at
all.
So,
for
example,
you
can
do
fun
tricks
like
this
to
keep
your
audience
engaged
and
when
you
do
creative
movements
like
this,
you
also
have
that
added
benefit
of
creating
novelty,
something
our
brains
weren't,
expecting
so
that
you
know
brains,
love
that,
and
so
it
leads
us
to
pay
even
closer
attention
to
what
we're
watching.
B
B
What
are
power
words
power
words
are
words
that
triggle
and
trigger
an
emotional
or
psychological
reaction
when
you
hear
them
and
it
can
either
be
in
a
positive
way
or
a
negative
way.
So
this
is
an
example
of
what
we
hear
a
lot
in
presentations.
Something
like
this
new
data
shows
that
we're
on
track.
Okay,
great,
it
explains
what's
happening,
but
there
are
ways
that
we
can
improve
this.
B
B
So
this
is
a
list
of
a
few
just
a
few
power
words
or
hundreds
out
there
that
you
can
use
in
your
next
video
or
presentation
so
from
this
list
choose
the
one
that
you
like
the
most
and
one
that
you'll
try
to
incorporate
in
a
future
video
or
feel
free
to
come
up
with
a
new
one
entirely,
and
then
please
share
it
in
the
chat
with
us.
B
No
all
right
well
I'll,
give
you
some
time
to
think
about
it,
there's
a
lot
of
words
to
choose
from
collaborate.
Okay,
wonderful,
thank
you,
simon,
so
yeah
keep
typing
in
the
chat.
I
want
to
see
what
you
come
up
with
here,
so
we
have
our
three
tips
for
engagement.
Now,
let's
do
another
recap
to
keep
your
audience
engaged
with
your
videos.
You'll
want
to
use
the
think
to
feel
matrix,
add
movements
and
include
power
words
now
that
you
all
have
your
new
tips
for
gaining
confidence
and
engaging
your
audience.
B
So
in
this
section
I'm
going
to
share
three
tips
on
how
to
better
connect
with
the
person
on
the
other
side
of
the
video
and
then
three
tips
for
giving
your
presentation
additional
energy
and
samantha
mentioned
to
me
that
most
of
your
presentations
are
done
recorded.
That's
great.
These
tips
are
going
to
work
for
both
recorded
or
live
videos.
B
The
first
tip
to
help
you
connect
with
your
audience.
Over
video
is
to
focus
on
your
framing,
so
this
is
what
I
often
see
when
people
are
on
video.
With
this
angle,
I
get
to
see
up
your
nose
under
your
chin
and
it's
great
to
see
your
face
and
kudos
for
turning
on
your
camera,
but
this
is
a
bit
too
close
and,
frankly,
can
actually
be
uncomfortable
to
the
other
side
and
there's
a
scientific
reason
for
this.
B
So
let's
do
another
quick
group
activity
here
to
check
whether
we
have
the
right
distance
from
the
camera.
So
for
those
who
have
their
videos
on,
if
you
wouldn't
mind,
sticking
out
your
arm
and
you'll
want
about
an
arm's
length
of
distance
from
you
and
the
camera,
so
if
you
have
less
than
an
arm's
length
of
distance,
you're
likely
way
too
close
so
again
just
make
whatever
adjustments
you
need
so
that
you
have
enough
space.
So
you
can
see
this
part
of
your
body
and
then
also
you
want
it
at
the
right
height
as
well.
B
So
you
can
use
a
laptop
stand,
use
books,
leftover,
delivery
boxes
doesn't
need
to
be
anything
fancy
and
just
make
sure
that
you're
propping
up
your
camera.
The
right
way
looks
like
some
people
are
making
adjustments,
which
is
great.
Once
you
have
your
proper
framing
ready
to
go.
You
can
then
start
thinking
about
eye
contact.
B
So
really,
you
should
always
aim
to
be
looking
at
the
camera
or
right
below
it.
This
is
really
hard
to
do,
though,
because
it's
human
nature
to
want
to
look
at
ourselves
to
make
sure
that
we
look
okay
or
maybe
to
see
you
know
how
our
face
looks
responding
to
something,
but
as
best
as
you
can
fight
this
urge-
and
I
have
found
that
turning
off
self-view
helps
a
lot
with
this
a
little
disconcerting,
not
seeing
your
your
video
on
on
the
the
screen
at
first,
but
it
helps
me
focus
so
much
more.
B
When
you
get
ready
to
make
a
presentation
or
to
record
yourself
on
video,
you
may
experience
any
one
of
these
super
fun
emotions
as
nerves
and
anxiety
build
up
for
my
first
keynotes.
I
was
personally
these
two
here
now.
If
I
let
those
expressions
be
the
main
ones
that
came
across
in
my
presentation,
the
audience
probably
would
not
really
have
enjoyed
it
very
much.
B
B
A
smile
is
going
to
lift
your
mood
and
the
mood
of
those
around
you
now
remembering
to
smile,
took
me
a
bit
of
time
and
practice
just
because
I
was
so
nervous
to
start,
but
once
I
got
more
comfortable,
it
did
really
make
a
big
difference
in
how
my
audience
perceived
me,
and
I
still
remember
the
first
presentation
where
someone
even
commented
on
how
much
they
liked
that
I
was
smiling.
B
So
it
does
help
now
that
we
have
all
our
smiles
on.
Let's
bring
those
into
the
next
recap,
you're
going
to
want
to
make
sure
you
have
the
right
framing
that
you're
using
eye
contact
and
that
you
are
smiling
next.
Let's
talk
about
how
to
insert
some
energy
into
your
presentation,
which
is
especially
important
over
video,
as
we
have
this
additional
barrier
of
the
screen
that
we
have
to
break
through.
B
B
B
One
thing
to
watch
out
for
when
you
stand
is
to
make
sure
not
to
rock
back
and
forth.
That's
something
I've
definitely
done
before
when
I've
been
nervous.
So
if
you
need
to
record
yourself
practicing,
so
you
can
see
how
you
look
and
if
you
decide
to
sit
down
the
equivalent
of
this,
would
be
swiveling
in
your
chair
from
side
to
side.
B
The
next
tip
I
want
to
share
with
you
is
to
project
your
voice,
so
this
is
a
nice
trick
that
I
learned
from
my
colleague,
spencer,
who
I
mentioned
earlier.
Raising
your
voice
20
to
25
louder
than
you
might
normally
speak,
helps
you
eliminate
filler
words
that
might
otherwise
creep
in
and
make
you
seem
unsure
of
yourself
by
raising
your
voice.
You
get
rid
of
those
filler
words
by
becoming
a
lot
more
intentional
about
what
you
want
to
say.
B
So
here's
a
video
by
vanessa
van
edwards,
I
mentioned
earlier
when
I
mentioned
her
earlier
when
I
talked
about
the
amygdala.
She
does
a
really
great
job
using
hand,
gestures
and
she's
actually
talking
about
them
in
this
video
here.
So
her
team
did
a
really
interesting
analysis
of
popular
ted
talks
by
views
and
they
found
that
the
most
viral
videos
had
speakers
who
use
an
average
of
465
hand
gestures
while
the
least
popular
ted
talks
use
272.
B
So
I
think
this
data
clearly
shows
how
important
hand
gestures
are,
but
they
aren't
always
the
most
natural
thing
on
video
when
our
hands
are
maybe
resting
on
our
keyboards
or
our
mouse.
So
I
recommend
starting
off
with
simple
ones.
You
can
use
basic
gestures
like
counting
things
off
one
of
my
favorites.
B
So
we
talked
about
how
to
boost
confidence
and
the
need
to
focus
on
your
lighting,
your
visuals
and
your
environments,
as
well
as
how
to
stand
out
using
the
think
to
feel
matrix
movement
and
power
words.
And
then
we
talked
about
best
practices
for
video
meetings
and
async
video
and
how
to
connect
over
video
using
framing
eye
contact
and
smiling,
as
well
as
how
to
add
energy
into
your
presentations
by
standing
up,
projecting
your
voice
and
using
hand
gestures.
B
B
B
So
thank
you
all
for
attending.
I
have
two
gifts
for
you
today.
First
is
a
free
one
month
premium
upgrade
to
prezi
video
samantha,
and
I
were
talking
about
this
earlier-
there's
also
a
free
version
that
you
can
just
you
know,
start
using
right
away
if
you'd
like,
but
this
way
you
know
you.
If
you
fill
out
this
form,
you
can
take
advantage
of
all
of
the
features,
one
of
which
is
recording
in
hd.
B
B
And
lastly,
I
just
started
a
newsletter
where
I
share
actionable
tips
around
video
and
presentations,
virtual
and
hybrid
meetings,
as
well
as
linkedin,
to
create
engagement
in
virtual
and
hybrid
offices.
So
would
love
for
you
to
subscribe
if
it
sounds
like
something
interesting
to
you
and
lastly,
before
we
dive
into
the
q
a
sorry
I
know
a
little
bit
over
time
would
love
to
get
all
of
your
feedback.
A
Thank
you
so
much
lauren.
This
was
so
fun
and,
like
so
many
cool
ideas
and
it's
funny,
as
you
were
talking,
I
was
trying
to
look
up
some
of
them
in
our
handbook
to
like
add
links,
and
I
think,
there's
a
lot
of
really
great
strategies
that
you
shared
that
aren't
in
our
handbook,
and
so
I
have
some
work
to
do
after
this
call
to
add
it
because
I
think
yeah,
you
just
shared
a
lot
of
really
awesome
tips
that
I
know
I'm
going
to
use
and
hope
others
do
too
thanks
so
much
yeah.
A
So
we
have
a
little
over
10
minutes
or
so
for
a
q
a
so.
If
anyone
has
any
questions
for
laureen
feel
free
to
add
them
to
the
doc.
There's
two
in
there
we'll
get
started
and
just
keep
adding
them.
If
you
have
any
that,
you
want
to
talk
about
the
first
one
is
from
alex
and
it
said
async,
but
now
it
doesn't
so
maybe
alex
is
here
and
wants
to.
C
My
question
is,
I
missed
part
of
your
presentation,
but
I've
I've
seen
bits
of
it
before,
and
I
think
that
prezi
would
be
really
powerful
for
us
at
get
lab,
especially
in
in
sales.
Obviously,
that's
that's
my
bias,
but
I
was
wondering
how
you
have
helped
other
technology
companies
set
up
prezi
in
such
a
way
that
sales
teams
can
take
advantage
of
it
for
executive
calls
without
kind
of
making.
It
really
turn
into
a
large
time
suck
where
it
takes.
B
B
See,
I
think,
is
this
right.
Okay,
can
everyone
see
my
prezi
video
app
here?
Okay,
seeing
some
nods,
so
my
co-worker
edward
created
this
gitlab
template
actually.
So
this
is
what
we
call
the
quick
record
template.
So
I
think,
alex
to
your
point.
A
lot
of
people
have
it
in
their
heads
that
to
create
something
with
prezi.
It
takes
a
lot
of
time
and
you
know
we
don't
have
that
time.
Always
so
you
know
if
your
team
were
to
get
on
prezi.
We
have
these
templates.
B
You
can
type
in
real
time,
and
so
this
is
a
really
nice
way
to
again
have
those
added
visuals
on
the
call.
Without
taking
up
a
lot
of
time,
you
can
have
images
here.
You
can
oops
zoom
in
or
leave
it
here.
You
know
like
point
to
things
engage,
so
that's
one
way
that
you
can
do
this,
and
this
is
also
something
I
like
to
use
just
on
calls.
You
can
add
stickers
and
gifts
and
things
to
really
like.
Oh,
I,
like
your
idea,
I'll
put
a
thumbs
up
there.
B
Another
thing
that
you
can
do
is
that
you
can
import
powerpoints,
so
I'm
sure
all
of
you
probably
have
I
think
samantha
mentioned
google
slides.
So
when
you
import
a
powerpoint,
the
slide
sits
right
here
and
again
you
can
zoom
in
and
out.
So
that's
also
a
very
easy
way
to
get
started
quickly
and
then
one
of
our
sales
people
up
tracy
mentioned
that
what
she
sees
at
a
lot
of
companies
is
that
the
marketing
or
you
know
brand
team
will
create
a
prezi
presentation.
B
That's
about
80
to
90
complete
and
the
sales
team
will
just
go
in
afterwards
and
kind
of
update
what
they
need
to
for
that
added
layer
of
customization,
and
that's
also,
you
know,
really
helpful
to
just
keep
consistent
on
branding
with
any
of
the
content
that
people
are
using
so
yeah.
I
would
say
that
those
are
the
the
main
ways
to
kind
of
get
up
and
running
quickly
without
spending
too
much
time
to
build
something
new.
A
I
have
the
next
question
and
I
was
wondering
a
lot
of
the
video
that
I
record
is
usually
pretty
short
video
like.
Maybe
I
try
to
keep
it
short,
at
least
like
maybe
two
minutes,
and
I'm
wondering
like
what
of
the
tips
that
you
shared
are
the
most
important
to
include
on
a
really
short
recording
and
then
like?
B
I
don't
have
a
super.
You
know
specific
recommendation
on
length.
I
I
know
a
lot
of
people
want
to
know
what
the
the
magic
amount
of
time
is,
but
I
think
it
really
depends
on
your
audience
and
the
content,
and
I
think,
if
you're
able
to
incorporate
some
of
those
tips
that
I
shared
you
can
go
longer,
because
it's
just
going
to
be
more
interesting
to
watch.
I
think
for
a
shorter
video.
I
would
say.
A
E
Okay,
thanks
samantha
hi,
lorraine,
amazing
presentation.
Thank
you
so
much
so
my
question
is:
do
you
have
any
recommendations
on
when
to
make
and
put
effort
into
making
this
type
of
presentation
or
adding
these
types
of
visual
cues
versus
just
a
call,
I
would
say
specifically,
I
feel,
like
I
missed
a
moment
to
actually
present
a
bit
more
in
a
meeting
most
recently
when
it
was
just
a
call,
but
I
feel
like
my
my
ideas
would
have
been
better
communicated.
E
B
Yeah,
I
think
I
think
that
quick,
quick
record
option
that
I
showed
you
earlier
is
is
very
helpful.
Like
I've
been
in
a
similar
situation
and
you
have
something
you
want
to
say,
but
you
don't
have
a
full,
you
know
presentation
planned
out,
but
to
be
able
to
just
add
quick
notes
onto
the
screen
about
you
know
points
you
want
to
make
or
observations
you
made.
I
think
that's
that's
really
helpful
and
you
can
do
that
very
quickly
on
the
go.
F
It
looks
like
I
think,
I'm
next,
okay
cool
go
ahead.
I
want
to
ask
you
laura
infects
for
a
great
presentation
about
the
position
of
the
camera,
because
my
camera
is
like
a
little
bit
higher
than
my
head
and
I
wonder
if
it
makes
me
like
in
the
worst
position,
because
people
may
like
look
down
on
me.
I
was
like
thinking
about
it
before
and
now
all
your
remarks
about
framing,
let
me
think
about
it
again.
B
Yeah,
I
think
that's
like
that's
spot
on.
Ideally
you
wanted
to
be
just
face
on
like
that,
and
there
is
that
psychological
thing
where,
if,
if
the
camera
is
above
you
it
is
like
people
are
looking
down
on
you,
so
I
would
try
to
you,
can
just
adjust
it
a
little
bit.
It's
pretty
close.
I
can
see
you're
you're
almost
there
straight
on,
so
I
would
recommend
yeah
changing
that.
B
B
Good
question
a
few
things,
so
I
don't
do
this
as
often
anymore,
but
I
used
to
play
pump
up
music,
so
you
have
a
pump
up
song
that
does
help
kind
of
you
know
shake
out
that
loose
energy.
If
it's
a
call
first
thing
in
the
morning
like
this
one
was
for
me.
B
I
do
some
lip
trills
take
voice
lessons
so,
but
you
can
find
scales
online
and
just
to
warm
up
the
voice,
I
think
is
helpful
and
then
you
know
common
common
advice,
but
practice
a
lot
and
the
more
you
practice,
the
more
confident
you'll
be.
I
think
you
know
at
least
10
times
before
a
presentation,
if
you
can
I've
actually
heard
as
well.
You
know
practice
one
hour
for
every
one
minute
of
presentation
to
really
master
it.
So
20
minute
presentation,
20
hours
of
practice.
B
G
So
I'm
curious
about
how
you
handle
background
noise.
I
don't
know
if
people
can't
hear
it
it's
just
kind
of
dim,
but
I
have
someone
cutting
their
grass
next
door
right
now
and
when
you're
on
a
call
or
if
you're,
giving
a
presentation
that
starts
in
the
middle,
like
what
are
some
tips,
I'm
sure
going
to
a
quiet
space
is
part
of
it,
but
I
can't
like
really
move
so
I'm
just
curious
what
your
tips
might
be
about
how
to
handle
it.
Yeah.
B
Such
a
good
question,
so
I
I
use
a
software
called
crisp-
starts
with
a
k,
k,
r.
I
s
p
amazing
for
cutting
out
background
noise
similar
to
you.
I
would
have
my
air
purifier
get
very
aggressive.
Prank
calls
and
people
would
be
like
someone
vacuuming
there.
So
crisp
is
really
helpful
for
that
and
I'm
it
gets
rid
of
most
of
my
noise.
I
have
an
external
mic
so
putting
a
towel
underneath
to
absorb
some
of
that.
B
A
A
Yeah
cool
and
we
have
one
more
question
from
bowdy.
Are
you
on
the
call.
H
Yes,
I'm
here
microphone's
helpful,
but
so
mine
is
a
prezi
is
gonna,
be,
I
think,
new
to
a
lot
of
us
if
we,
if
we
start
leveraging,
but
it's
really
nice
to
see
the
ability
to
put
like
the
content.
Next
to
you,
because
it's
very
different
experience
than
our
our
you
know
normal
slides
switch
over
to
person,
whatever
else
it
is,
and
while
many
folks
do
a
lot
of
recording.
Most
of
my
calls
are
meetings
where
I'm
running.
H
I
do
work
on
our
channels
so
working
with
our
partners
to
show
them
something
which
might
still
be
a
slide.
So
the
question
is,
if
I'm
doing,
if
I'm
using
prezi,
which
looks
pretty
cool
for
that
perspective,
and
I
want
to
record
it
so
that
I
can
share
it
in
the
future
and
we
use
zoom
right
and
obviously
it
looks
like
it
embeds.
What's
the
best
practice
for
the
actual
recording
to
record
with
prezi
or
record
with
zoom.
B
So
if
it's
a
live
call
you
would
record
with
zoom,
but
you
can
also
record
in
the
prezi
app,
for
example,
if
you're
doing
an
async
video
and
you
want
to
send
it
to
someone
later.
I
think
that
would
work,
I
think
in
general,
for
recordings.
If
you
can
record
in
the
native
app
sorry
not
zoom,
because
zooms,
you
know
the
quality
kind
of
decreases
a
little
bit
as
much
as
you
can
record
in
prezi
video.
That
would
be
helpful.
H
H
A
This
is
awesome
I
feel
like
this
is
the
most
like
rapid
fire
q,
a
we've
ever
had
on
a
live
speaker
series
and
I'm
really
glad
that
we
got
to
all
of
them
yeah.
We
just
have
two
minutes
left.
So
is
there
anybody
else
who
has
a
quick
question
that
they
want
to
ask?
Usually
I
wouldn't
ask,
but
I
feel
like
we
can
actually
do
it
because
of
our
speed
right
now.
So.
B
I'll
just
add,
you
know
I'm
more
introverted,
so
sometimes
it
takes
me
a
while
to
you
know.
Think
of
what
questions
I
want
to
ask.
You
can
just
add
me
on
linkedin.
If
anything
comes
up
later
and
feel
free
to
ask
me
there
yeah.
A
A
fantastic
presentation
I
really
enjoyed
listening
to
you
and
learning
from
you
and
thank
you
so
much
for
taking
time
to
talk
with
our
team
today
and
thanks
to
everyone.