Professionelle Selbstvorstellung Präsentationsfolien

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Professionelle Selbstvorstellung Präsentationsfolien. Sie können diese Präsentation einfach herunterladen und in Standard-(14:6) und Breitbild-(16:9) Formaten präsentieren. Der Schriftstil, die Schriftfarbe und andere Komponenten sind vollständig bearbeitbar. Diese ist vollständig mit Google Slides kompatibel, was sie sofort zugänglich macht. Wandeln Sie diese PPT in zahlreiche Dokument- oder Bildformate wie PDF oder JPEG um.

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Folie 1: Diese Folie führt in die professionelle Selbstvorstellung ein. Nennen Sie den Namen Ihres Unternehmens.
Folie 2: Dies ist die Tagesordnungsfolie. Nennen Sie hier Ihre Tagesordnungspunkte.
Folie 3: Dies ist die Folie "Über mich". Beschreiben Sie sich selbst.
Folie 4: Dies ist die Folie "Über mich". Besprechen Sie PERSÖNLICHES PROFIL, ERFOLGE, AUSBILDUNG, HOBBYS, KONTAKTINFORMATIONEN, Grafikdesign, Typografie, FÄHIGKEITEN & SPRACHEN, BERUFSERFAHRUNG usw.
Folie 5: Dies ist die Karriere-Folie.
Folie 6: Dies ist auch eine Karriere-Folie mit den Jahren 2007, 2012, 2010, 2017, 2014, 2020.
Folie 7: Auf dieser Folie wird der Karriereweg dargestellt.
Folie 8: Diese Folie zeigt die SWOT-Analyse. Zeigen Sie Bedrohungen, Stärken, Schwächen, Chancen.
Folie 9: Auf dieser Folie wird die SWOT-Analyse gezeigt, um die Stärken hervorzuheben.
Folie 10: Auf dieser Folie wird die SWOT-Analyse gezeigt, um die Schwächen hervorzuheben.
Folie 11: Auf dieser Folie wird die SWOT-Analyse gezeigt, um die Chancen hervorzuheben.
Folie 12: Diese Folie zeigt die SWOT-Analyse, um die Bedrohungen hervorzuheben.
Folie 13: Auf dieser Folie werden die beruflichen Qualifikationen beschrieben.
Folie 14: Dies ist die Folie "Erfolge".
Folie 15: Dies ist die Trainings-Folie. Zeigen Sie die Trainings, die Sie absolviert haben.
Folie 16: Auf dieser Folie werden die Erfahrungen - Projekte aufgeführt, um die abgeschlossenen Projekte zu erwähnen.
Folie 17: Dies ist die Fallstudie-Folie, um Herausforderung, Lösung und Ergebnisse darzustellen.
Folie 18: Auf dieser Folie werden die Fähigkeiten beschrieben, wie z.B. Bestimmt, Flexibel, Zielorientiert, Kreativ, Teamplayer usw.
Folie 19: Auf dieser Folie werden die Sprachkenntnisse dargestellt.
Folie 20: Auf dieser Folie werden die Hobbys dargestellt, wie z.B. Körperliche Aktivitäten und Sport, Interessen und Hobbys verfolgen, Sich selbstständig in der Welt bewegen, Kunst- und Kulturaktivitäten, Die wichtigsten Menschen in meinem Leben sehen.
Folie 21: Dies ist die Folie mit den Symbolen für die professionelle Selbstvorstellung.
Folie 22: Diese Folie trägt den Titel "Zusätzliche Folien für den Fortschritt".
Folie 23: Auf dieser Folie wird eine Kaffeepause angezeigt.
Folie 24: Dies ist die Zitate-Folie. Erwähnen Sie das motivierende Zitat.
Folie 25: Dies ist die Folie "Über uns", um die Spezifikationen des Unternehmens zu zeigen.
Folie 26: Dies ist die Venn-Folie.
Folie 27: Dies ist die Folie "Unser Team" mit Namen und Bezeichnungen.
Folie 28: Dies ist die Puzzle-Folie mit Textfeldern.
Folie 29: Dies ist die Ziel-Folie. Erwähnen Sie die erreichten Ziele.
Folie 30: Dies ist die Finanz-Folie.
Folie 31: Diese Folie trägt den Titel "Post It". Posten Sie hier Ihre wichtigen Notizen.
Folie 32: Dies ist die Folie mit der sechsjährigen Zeitleiste.
Folie 33: Auf dieser Folie wird die Mindmap beschrieben.
Folie 34: Dies ist die Dankeschön-Folie mit Adresse, E-Mail-Adresse und Kontaktnummer.

FAQs for Professional Self Introduction

Hey! So start with the basics - name, what you do for work, maybe a quick thing about your day-to-day stuff. Then throw in one or two wins or skills that actually matter for whatever you're doing. Honestly, nothing's worse than someone who sounds like they memorized their intro from a career website, so just be normal about it. If it fits the vibe, mention something random you're into - people remember that stuff. Wrap up with why you're even there or what you want to talk about. Keep it under a minute though. Oh and definitely practice saying it out loud because it'll sound way different in your head.

Honestly, just switch up your intro depending on who you're talking to. Networking events? Lead with your role and what problems you tackle. Interviews are different - focus on achievements that actually match what they're looking for. At conferences, I'd mention your expertise and maybe something you're working on that gets you excited. Industry mixers are way more chill, so throw in a hobby or something personal. Practice a couple different versions ahead of time - trust me, you don't want to be standing there like "uhh..." when someone asks what you do. Just read the vibe and match their energy.

Honestly, your body language matters way more than whatever you actually say - like 55% of how people read you comes from that stuff. A solid handshake and good eye contact hit different than any perfect pitch. I've watched people completely blow it just from slouching or giving dead fish handshakes (ugh, the worst). Stand up straight, smile like you mean it, keep your arms uncrossed. Don't fold in on yourself. Try practicing in a mirror first - sounds cheesy but you'll see how much your whole vibe changes the conversation before it even starts.

Oh dude, stories are SO much better than just listing your job stuff. Like instead of "I'm a data analyst with 5 years experience" - boring - try "I helped this restaurant figure out why their weekend sales sucked, turns out staff were overcharging people by accident." People actually remember stories. Plus it makes networking less weird when you have real examples instead of just job titles, you know? I'd pick maybe 2-3 short ones that show what you can do and practice telling them. Way more interesting than resume bullet points.

Oh man, the worst thing you can do is ramble about random stuff that doesn't matter to whoever you're talking to. Like, don't mention that summer job from 2019 unless it's actually relevant, you know? Also please avoid saying "I'm a people person" - literally everyone says that and it means nothing. Start with what you do now and why they'd care. I always practice mine out loud because otherwise I either sound like a robot or go on for like 5 minutes. Honestly though, if you can nail it in under a minute you're golden.

Don't just list your job title - that's what everyone does. You want to highlight what makes you different. Like instead of "I'm a marketing manager," say "I increased customer retention by 40% through data-driven storytelling." Way more memorable, right? Think about what your coworkers always bug you about for help with. That's usually your sweet spot. Lead with a real result or your weird little method that works, then connect it to whatever you're discussing. Oh, and practice it so you don't sound like you're reading a script - nothing kills credibility faster than that robotic vibe.

Okay so first thing - you need a hook that actually grabs attention. Ask something thought-provoking or drop a weird stat that makes them go "wait, what?" I always mention something random about myself (like being a data analyst who salsa dances competitively) because honestly, people zone out otherwise. Use their name or company name - makes it feel personal instead of some generic pitch. Practice your opening until it doesn't sound rehearsed, but don't over-rehearse or you'll sound robotic. Match their energy too. Oh and pause after your hook! Gives them a second to process before you dive into the boring stuff.

Figure out what you actually stand for first - your strengths, values, what makes you different. Your elevator pitch should basically be your LinkedIn but way more chill. I mean, you don't want to sound like a robot reading a resume, right? Keep the same vibe across all your stories and examples. Practice a couple versions depending on who you're talking to, but the core "you" stays the same. Oh, and definitely test it out on people. If it doesn't sound like something you'd naturally say, it's probably too formal or generic.

Keep it super short - like 30-60 seconds max, maybe 2-3 sentences. I've literally seen people's eyes glaze over when someone goes on too long at networking things, it's painful. Hit your name, what you do now, and one interesting thing about your work or goals. Don't dump your whole life story or mention random hobbies unless they actually matter. Practice it out loud so you're not stumbling through it. The whole point is getting them curious enough to keep talking, not hearing your entire resume right off the bat.

Honestly, keep it way shorter than you think - like 30-45 seconds tops because everyone's brain is fried on video calls. Just say your name, what you do now, and one concrete thing you're working on or want help with. Don't dive into your whole life story (seriously, no one can focus that long). Oh and make sure people can actually hear you clearly - bad audio is the worst. Look at the camera when you talk, not your screen, and get some decent lighting so you don't look all shadowy. Wrap up with a question to keep the conversation going naturally.

Okay so first thing - ditch the weak words. Don't say "I think" or "pretty good at" - just own what you do well. Use present tense too, like "I manage" instead of "I've worked on." Way more confident that way. Also throw in actual numbers when you can - makes everything sound more legit. Instead of "I have experience in," go with "I specialize in" or "I excel at." Oh and here's something people mess up all the time - they end by talking about what they want to learn. Wrong move! Finish strong by saying what you'll contribute instead. Trust me, it hits different.

Oh this is huge - flip your wins to show how they helped everyone else, not just you. So instead of "I boosted sales 30%," say something like "I helped our team crush quarterly goals by creating this client outreach thing that ended up increasing sales 30%." Honestly makes such a difference when you're not the star of every story. Also throw in real numbers but skip the fancy descriptors - they just sound fake anyway. Practice saying them out loud too, you'll totally hear which ones make you cringe versus the ones that actually sound like you talking.

Honestly, don't try to cram everything in - I made that mistake for years! Look for the thread that ties your experiences together and build around that. Maybe grab 2-3 things that actually matter for what you're going for right now. The rest can wait. Your weird mix of backgrounds? That's actually pretty cool. Say something like "I've done X and Y, so I see Z differently than most people." Then wrap up with what you're doing now and what's next. People remember stories way better than job lists anyway.

Start with a mirror - work on eye contact and how you're standing. Recording yourself feels super awkward but you'll hear all those "ums" and rushed parts. Keep it under a minute, maybe 30-45 seconds tops. Get your family or friends to listen and actually give you real feedback, not just "sounds good!" The goal isn't memorizing word-for-word, more like knowing it so well you can say it naturally. Oh, and practice sitting vs standing since you never know the setup. Once you stop thinking about what comes next, you're golden.

Honestly, tone and pace can totally make or break your intro. Match your vibe to the room - warm and confident at networking events, a bit more polished in interviews. But don't fake it, you know? Pace-wise, I see people rush through because they're nervous (guilty of this myself). Slow down! Conversational speed works best. Throw in some pauses after your main points. Oh, and definitely practice out loud - I know it feels weird, but recording yourself is actually super helpful. You'll catch things you didn't realize you were doing.

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