Thank you for your attention in beige color. Thank you for your attention animation for presentation with motion


Thanking the person for their attention is a great idea after showing a presentation, film or text. Moreover, the more difficult the material was to understand, the more you need to thank. Our “Thank you for your attention” gifs- in a large selection of animations (gifs) you will find exactly the gratitude that suits your product. There are all types of thanks here - just text, graphic, cute and stern.

“Thank you for your attention” gifs. Huge selection!

A simple GIF without unnecessary drawings with the inscription “Thank you for your attention. »

GIF with a cute fairy who thanks you for your attention

Thank you very much - not a small one. Sincere thanks - not forced. We will also be grateful to you for your attention and comments.

Just a sparkling “Thank you for your attention” inscription on a white background. Click on the gif and the background will change to white

A cute flower emoji and a thank you for your attention are all you need to end your presentation. You can find more gifs for the presentation here.

GIF with gratitude for your attention, flowers and a beautiful crystal vase

A GIF thanks to which your work can thank you for your attention to it without your participation

The rabbit from Winnie the Pooh is ready to thank your audience for their attention.

Thank you is a stronger word than thank you due to its origin. Mom - good, dad - I give. Give good things to your audience, because you can’t put thanks in your pocket

"Thank you for your attention" lettering rotating around flowers. Quite a psychedelic sight. Such a picture can be posted independently; it seems to thank the user for the time he spent in this GIF.

A simple and concise “thank you for your attention.” Strict, slightly shiny GIF.

Cinderella writes “Thank you” to you in a cute girly font.

A “thank you for your attention” gif of small size, ideal for placing in a signature on forums.

GIF with the least amount of animation. Only an attentive viewer will notice the slight shine of the inscription and colors.

Multi-colored animated inscription “Thank you!” Suitable for a fun holiday and everything related to colors, colors, style and design.

A cute bunny in headphones on a background of flowers holds a heart. Isn't this the perfect GIF for a women's blog about music, flowers or love? :)

"Thank you" gif appearing from left to right. It is not suitable for those who are used to writing and reading from right to left.

GIF with pencils and light glitter on the inscription. We noticed one blinking pixel on the pencil. Can you find it? Or maybe you can find a second one? Write in the comments!

Donald Duck thanks for your attention, just like in the good old days when cartoons with his participation were shown on Sunday mornings.

GIF with a caustic acid color, too bold font, but a cute shimmer. Use at your own risk.

Once again, our many sincere thanks to you for your attention to our selection and your comments!

animation Thank you Thank you beautiful bouquets of roses flowers for guest forums3 - clipartis Jimdo-Page! Download free photos, pictures, wallpapers, drawings, icons, cliparts, templates, postcards, animations, frames, ornaments, backgrounds

Animated pictures Thank you Thank you for blogs and guest posts

Thank you for the excellent work.

Thank you so much for the beauty!http://4put.ru/pictures/max/198/609521.gif

Huge gratitude from me and my friends. everyone really likes it

I need thanks for your attention, I didn’t find it

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Slide "Thank you for your attention. Palms"

A beautiful slide to decorate the last slide of any presentation.

Slide "Thank you for your attention. Palms on a light background"

A beautiful slide to decorate the last slide of any presentation.

A beautiful slide to decorate the last slide of any presentation.

Slide "Thank you for your attention. Science"

A beautiful slide to decorate the last slide of any presentation.

Slide "Thank you for your attention. Butterfly"

“Thank you for your attention” slide for presentation

Many people like to put a big, beautiful period at the end of their speech and thank the audience with a special “Thank you for your attention” slide. This slide is not mandatory, and in some situations it is superfluous, but nevertheless, many are looking for ready-made pictures. On our website you can download ready-made slides and insert them into your presentation, or you can also make the last slide yourself.

We carefully select arguments, prepare slides, rehearse, rehearse, and then deliver the presentation. And the main thing is that people listen, and are interested, nod, agreeing with your words, but do not buy anything?

And we wonder why, what is the reason? Not enough arguments? Or are the arguments weak?

Why do our arguments make no sense?

Let's get creative a little! Imagine that you are going to ask your one and only beloved for your hand and heart.

You booked a table in the best restaurant, hired musicians, bought a luxurious ring, certainly with a diamond, and put on a new suit and clean socks.

And now you are having dinner in a luxurious restaurant, amazing music is playing, at some point you catch her eye, take her hand, the music becomes quieter, and on the contrary, your heart is pounding wildly in your ears.

You say that you have been together for just 6-7 years and still don’t know each other well, but that during this time you have managed to love your chosen one with all your heart, that you are ready to take care of her and love her for the rest of your life.

You get down on your knee, take out a ring with that very big diamond from a beautiful box and say: “Thank you for your attention!” Then leave the restaurant.

Do you think you have a chance of tying the knot with this girl?

How does a girl feel who, instead of “Marry me!” say “Thank you for your attention!”?

Your audience feels the same way, when instead of “Buy from us now!” you pronounce the same sacramental phrase.

But, on the other hand, you can’t just say outright: “Buy!”

How to make an offer to your audience?

There are six steps you can take to significantly increase sales through presentations.

They are known to everyone and have actually been used in sales for a long time, but for some reason they are rarely found in presentations.

Let's see what these steps are:

conclusions

As Stirlitz said: “The first and last phrases are remembered.” And if at the end of the presentation you simply tell the audience “Thank you for your attention,” then the only thing they will remember about you is that you are a polite speaker.

The only action she will take in response to your “Thank you for your attention!” is, at best, saying “Please!”

Don't forget that a presentation is not a performance, not a show, but a sale! Which means it should end with the conclusion of a deal! Well, or at least a call for it :)

So end every presentation with six steps that encourage your audience to become customers!

You see this often, don't you?


And here's my favorite:

I don't understand why people write this on their slides.
Although no. I guess I lied. I understand very well.

But first, let's figure it out.
Where did this inscription come from - “Thank you for your attention!”?
Most likely, it all comes down to the environment where the first visualized presentations originate, namely in the academic environment.
Even before the existence of special computer programs for creating slides, overhead projectors were used in many schools and universities (see picture below). They helped project onto the board or wall the text that the teacher wrote on special transparent films. A particularly polite teacher liked to write on such a tape at the end of the lesson something like “The lesson is over. Thank you!” The idea itself is an excellent one - to thank those who listened to you attentively (or inattentively; or did not listen), so I cannot afford to blame teachers for this phrase.

But what happens next?
Times change, and scientific progress does not wait for those who are late. PowerPoint appears.
Now the slides look more impressive, if only for the reason that they gain readability and color. But the same teachers do them as before. And they still thank us, diligent students, for the attention we gave them.

Then everything develops as simple as shelling pears: we grow up, begin to master the vast and unknown world of public speaking and presentations, try to make our own slides and... thank our listeners for the attention we have received from them.
It seems that everything sounds so harmonious and even a little cloying that the problem that is hidden behind the noble final slide is not immediately noticeable. But this problem exists... And it is growing exponentially, already resembling a small catastrophe in the world of communications.

And the name of this disaster is quite simple - Your entire presentation was in vain!

In order not to be verbose and not write out the memoirs of my observations of how one simple phrase “sank” hundreds of presentations, I will simply give an example that you have encountered more than once in your life.
Let's go back to our distant childhood, when our parents often reminded us about the rules of hygiene and how important it is to wash our hands thoroughly before eating. Sometimes we were lazy - we could either not wash at all or wash superficially and rush headlong to the table, where a delicious lunch was already waiting for us. Now imagine that your child does (or would do) the same, and a great responsibility falls on your shoulders - to convey how important it is to wash your hands, including before eating. And so you tell your child:

- “A huge number of microbes live on our hands. We don’t see them, but they are there. Their number is constantly growing, because we touch the objects on which they live - mobile phones, door handles, shoes and others. If not wash your hands before eating, they jump into the food, which means they enter our body. Because of this, we get sick and feel bad. Do you understand?"
- "Yes it is clear."
- "Good job."
(which is equivalent to the phrase “Thank you for your attention!”)

So, what is next? Will your child wash their hands before eating? At first, perhaps yes. And then he will simply forget how harmful these microbes on his hands are. All you had to do was end your dialogue with a call to action and the effect would exceed all expectations.

- "... Understood?"
- "Yes it is clear."
- "Then go ahead, wash your hands! :)"

That's all. One simple phrase can change a lot.
This also applies to presentations. If you need people to applaud at the end of your speech, don't worry - they will do it even if your presentation was terrible. But if you want them to take your business card, buy your product or service, support your idea, or, ultimately, just become better thanks to you - say so!
The ending of your speech should be the strongest part of it.
Never forget this!

Thank you for your attention!

Oh, more precisely...

Finish strong and the audience will follow you!
Good luck!

In order not to be verbose and not to write memoirs about how one simple phrase “sank” hundreds of presentations, I will simply give an example that you have encountered more than once in your life.
Let's go back to our distant childhood, when our parents often reminded us about the rules of hygiene and how important it is to wash our hands thoroughly before eating. Sometimes we were lazy: we might not wash them at all and rush headlong to the table, where a delicious lunch was already waiting for us. Now imagine that your child does or would do the same, and a big responsibility falls on your shoulders - to convey how important it is to wash your hands. And so you say to the child:

There are many germs living on our hands. We don't see them, but they are there. There are even more of them when we touch the objects on which they live - mobile phones, door handles, shoes. If you don't wash your hands, germs jump into the food, which means they end up in our tummy. Because of this, we get sick and feel bad. Understood?
- Yes, I understand.
- Thank you for your attention!

So, what is next? Will your child wash their hands before eating? At first, perhaps yes. And then he will simply forget how harmful these microbes on his hands are. All you had to do was end your dialogue with a call to action.

- … Understood?
- Yes, I understand.
- Then go ahead - wash your hands!

A similar incident can happen in a restaurant during a romantic dinner, when a guy proposes marriage to his girlfriend. He says that they have been together for 7 years and how important she is to him; how much they have experienced together and can still survive; then he takes out a wedding ring from his pocket and says: “Thank you for your attention!” Are there high chances of getting consent? Hardly.

I know what you're thinking: "This has nothing to do with the presentation and your examples are too exaggerated." This is wrong. Your presentation is also in some way an offer that you make to the audience. Whether she “will marry you” or not depends on what its content will be. And the likelihood of failure is very high if people feel that it is more important for you to get something from them than to give them something: knowledge or opportunities to solve their problems.

One simple phrase can change a lot. This also applies to presentations. People feel false and formal, and a careless phrase at the end of a presentation can blur the impression of even a good presentation and good slides.

The ending of your presentation is important because it greatly influences whether you achieve your goals with your presentation. Speaking of goals. “Earning attention from the audience” cannot be the goal. It may be more accurate, but this is close to narcissism. But “change people’s attitudes towards smoking”, “attract people to bank services”, “increase the number of regular visitors to the site” - quite well. This is where you need a strong presentation.

Today I am publishing an article that I wrote for the leading business magazine in Kazakhstan, Business Life. By agreement with the editors, it first had to appear in paper form and then it could be published on. The article has already been published in the August issue (with an announcement on the cover) and it’s time to bring it “home”. The fact that my readers in Kazakhstan have already read it does not make the information in it any less useful to the rest of the world. In addition, the article was published in the magazine in a modified form, because some of my statements were not censored. Below “10 mistakes in presentations” is as I wrote it.

In the process of working with the editors, I myself made some mistakes. One of them is that I sent them only a vertical photograph, but the web version of the magazine needed a horizontal one. As a result, the site designer inserted it because it did not fit the format. The error is not serious - the web version can always be corrected, but time for corrections will be lost. If your articles will be published in periodicals, do not make this mistake; send two types of photos at once: vertical and horizontal. To work on the mistakes, I am publishing my horizontal photo at the beginning of this article.

Overall, cooperation with Business Life was very pleasant and has already begun to bring results.

10 common mistakes in presentations

There are two types of presentations:

1. For email and self-study

2. To perform in front of live people

This article is about presenting in front of people.

Why am I qualified to write about presentations?

I have devoted the last 2 years to professional speaker training and conducted presentation training for corporate clients. My public speaking courses at the Speakers Club are among the top 3 most visited in Moscow and, according to expert reviews, are superior to others in quality.

In this article, I will share my practical experience and talk about 10 speaker mistakes that I observed most often in presentations.

10 mistakes

1. Performance without introduction.

Your performance begins with the host announcing your name before you even take the stage. Give the presenter a text on how to introduce you, otherwise he will only say your name or, even worse, you will have to introduce yourself.

Self-introduction puts the speaker in the role of someone who needs to speak up, rather than in the role of a leader who brings useful ideas to the audience. Introducing yourself, it will be difficult for you to announce your regalia. The mistake of going out without introducing yourself has serious consequences: if you introduce yourself too quickly, you will not be listened to with due attention, you are not an authority for the public; and if you exalt yourself too much in your opinion, you will be hated for your arrogance. Start your speech correctly, give the presenter the opportunity to introduce you correctly.

2. Inability to engage the audience during “technical breaks.”

Very often I come across a situation where a speaker comes on stage and gives me a flash drive with his presentation. Guess what he or she is doing while I'm loading the presentation? That's right - he stands there, guiltily waiting and squandering his authority. The first impression is not the best - a passive speaker is the same as a psychotherapist on a stool with a noose around his neck.

3. Wrong role chosen.

The most common role of a speaker that I have seen is that of a guilty student who really wants to please the examination committee. In such a role, no matter what you do or say, everything will sound wrong.

Back in the 90s, Channel One had a program with Leonid Yakubovich “Wheel of History”. In it, the participant stood in the center and chose one of the roads to three carriages standing around him. Answering the questions correctly, he moved closer and closer to the chosen carriage. Very often, having answered all the questions correctly, the participant reached the carriage, but there was no prize there - he initially chose the wrong carriage. Choose the right role - the role of a leader or the role of an expert, otherwise all your efforts will not bring results.

4. Apology at the beginning of the presentation.

I have heard thousands of them, ranging from “I ended up here completely by accident” to “look at my forehead, this is not a blot, it was me and my son who played president and he put a stamp on my forehead.” An apology does not show your politeness, all it says is that you are not worthy of speaking in front of an audience.

Don't think you'll get leniency by apologizing in advance. Instead of pitying you, people may agree that you have no experience and will not listen to you. Part of the audience may guess that you have no experience, but if you say it yourself, 100% of those sitting in the hall will know about it.

Don't apologize directly or indirectly; it diminishes the significance of your message. If you're scared, endure the fear, but don't turn into a wimp.

5. Voice behind the image.

Most people are afraid to speak in public. Therefore, they try to come up with any excuses to shift the audience’s attention away from themselves. There is nowhere to hide on stage, so inexperienced speakers try to hide behind pictures with their presentation. People become voice-overs, look at the screen themselves and voice everything that is written there. It is not right.

At least 80% of the audience's attention during a presentation should be on the speaker, and in cases of excellent presentations, this figure exceeds 90%. You are the one leading the presentation, not the screen. He only helps you. Don't make another confusion about roles.

6. Bullet points .

Dots placed before items are called bulleted lists. I'll list them below for demonstration.

  • Diapers
  • Milk
  • Sausage

I have a question for you: “Since when have we been able to read and listen at the same time?”

Leave a bulleted list for shopping trips. Use images instead of lists. Remember, the brain can only maintain one focus. Don’t split your listeners’ attention between your voiceover and the text on the screen.

7. Screen with the picture that has already been discussed.

The best way to explain is to show. Very often, after showing a visual image, the speaker begins to talk about a new topic, leaving the old image on the screen in front of the audience. This fragments the attention of listeners and destroys the laws of perception. To keep your audience's attention, you need to remove the picture as soon as you finish talking about it. If you don't have a replacement image for the new theme, just make a black screen between the images.

8. Looking at the floor, ceiling, screen, piece of paper...

Remember once and for all, the safest place you can look during your public speaking is in the eyes of your audience. Only a glance into the eyes builds trust. At the Speakers Club, I conducted such an experiment: I asked the audience about the degree of trust in the speaker and compared the answers with the areas where the speaker looked during the speech. The results surprised those present - those listeners with whom the speaker maintained eye contact expressed high confidence in the speaker, and those who “didn’t get the look” did not believe the speaker and said that “they didn’t like him.” At the same time, both of them could not specifically name the reason why they liked or did not like the speaker. It was all in the look. Look people in the eye. Always.

9. Coverage of a topic without expressing personal experience.

Many speakers take on the role of conveyer of information. They learn “how to scratch a piglet's belly” from the Internet or books and think that this is enough to give a successful presentation. No, it won't be enough. If you don't share your personal experience, one of two things will happen: either your presentation will be boring or they won't believe you.

When preparing your speech, you need to remember that information is now in abundance - there are already more megabytes on the Internet than there are dollars in the world.

The audience no longer trusts theorists. Bring out your personal experience extensively. Whatever the topic of your speech, enrich it with personal stories.

Be aware of the trick insurance salesmen use. They don't tell you how useful it is to have insurance. They tell how, before working at an insurance company, their house burned down and now, thanks to insurance, they live in a luxurious mansion and don’t give a damn. Insurers know that the one who does not talk about personal experience is the one who blows the whistle. There is no need to lie, but this example from the insurance industry gets the point across very well. Personal experience is not just more interesting to listen to, it is your stamp on the presentation and inspires public confidence.

10. “Thank you” at the end of the presentation.

This item is classified as advanced and is best trained under the guidance of a coach.

We all want to be polite and want to please the audience. But there is one problem with politeness - it should not develop into a French kiss with the listeners’ butt.

“Thank you” at the end of a speech, or even worse, “thank you for your attention,” means: “Thank you for listening to me. There was little benefit in what was said, so I thank you for your politeness, good people,” or something like that.

It is not the speaker who should be grateful to the audience for listening, but the audience who should be grateful to the speaker for delivering a useful speech. Do you believe that your speech is useful? And if not, then why did you perform?

American presidents usually end their speeches with the words “God bless America.”

Eastern cultures, including Russian, are still just learning to accept gratitude for the benefits they have brought. That’s why it’s harder for our listeners.

Sometimes when speaking in front of our public, I break my own rule and say words of gratitude, but only after I hear thunderous applause. I say thank you for the applause, not for listening to me.

How to end a speech without thank you? The point at the end of a speech is put by a powerful ending, tone of voice and body language. Thank you is an admission of your inability to finish your presentation professionally.

Finally

These are just a few of the mistakes that novice speakers make when they take the stage. But perhaps the most important mistake that is not included in this list is expecting a good presentation from yourself without having any practical experience. Public speaking is nothing more than a set of habits. They cannot be developed sitting at home. Public speaking is a barrel of practice and a spoonful of theory. I gave you a spoonful of theory in the best possible way, look for a good barrel...