
Your technical talk with impact? 7 tips for no blah blah
Itâs one thing to know your subject. Itâs another thing entirely to make people care. Thatâs the challenge of presenting technical content, especially at a high-level conference like the Bits&Chips Event. In a room full of engineers, researchers and tech leaders, youâve got maybe 30 seconds to capture attention, just a few minutes more to keep it and one chance to share your message persuasively.
So how do you do that? If youâre like Carlijn Compen from Canon Production Printing, Sezen Acur from TNO-ESI or other breakout speakers, the answer is simple: you get coaching. They turned to the official Bits&Chips Event speaker coaching partner Noblahblah.
The result? Talks that donât just inform, they land. With clarity. With energy. With connection. If youâre a technical professional preparing to present your ideas, whether to peers, leadership or industry audiences, here are seven ways coaching can help you present with confidence, impact and fun.
1. From data to drama: a new way to present
Carlijn Compen gave a keynote at the 2023 Bits&Chips Event. As a leader at Canon, she had no shortage of insights. But turning all those insights into a clear, coherent and compelling story?
âI had so many bits and pieces,â Compen says. âInteresting ideas, but I didnât have a real story. Howard Lettinga, coach at Noblahblah, helped me bring it together into something strong and original.â Her presentation was the highest-rated keynote at the 2023 conference.
That transformation, from raw content to impactful narrative, is where it starts. The coaching process isnât about decorating your slides. Itâs about helping you define the message that matters most and building a delivery that connects.
âWe worked one-on-one,â Compen explains. âHoward helped me with everything: shaping the topic, choosing the angle, rehearsing in stages. It wasnât just about presenting. It was about building confidence, getting feedback and refining my story.â
2. Engagement: the key to connection
Sezen Acur, a systems engineer at TNO-ESI, took the stage as a breakout speaker at the 2024 Bits&Chips Event. For her, the coaching added a crucial human layer.
âMichiel Kwakkernaat, Noblahblah speaker coach, suggested I start with a brief personal story,â Acur says. âIt sounds simple, but it made the audience more engaged and responsive. That small human moment helped my message land.â
Audience connection is often overlooked in technical settings. Thereâs a myth that the data should âspeak for itself.â But in reality, people connect with people. Storytelling, humor, personal moments, rhetorical questions: these are the tools that create engagement.
Another breakout speaker, a research scientist from a multinational who prefers to remain anonymous for this article, echoes the same idea. âHoward gave me a range of tools: asking questions, raising ideas without waiting for answers, even including QR codes on slides to invite interaction. I could pick the ones that suited me. That flexibility made a big difference.â
3. Structure: the hidden secret of compelling talks
A good talk doesnât just have good content. It flows. It builds. It sticks in your memory. Thatâs where structure comes in, and again, the coaching delivered.
Compen describes how her various ideas turned into a clear arc. âHoward gave me a framework that made everything fit. It wasnât rigid. It was shaped around what I wanted to say. And suddenly it all clicked.â
The research scientist was also given a powerful principle: âTwo is too little, four is too many. Stick to three.â That simple idea helped organize everything from examples to takeaways. She also learned the value of the Funnel Technique, a template for organizing presentations, by starting wide to pull people in, then narrowing down with clarity and purpose.
These techniques arenât flashy, but they work. Again and again, they help audiences follow complex content and stay engaged.

4. Making the complex clear
One of the biggest challenges in technical communication is simplifying without oversimplifying. Compen puts it perfectly: âYou donât want to dumb things down. But you also canât assume people will follow if you just present it as-is. You have to make it land.â
The research scientist found a breakthrough in analogies. âHoward suggested one about droplets of ink, millions of them landing accurately. Like a waterfall. It was beautiful, and I used it in my talk.â
Other suggestions included football matches, skyscrapers, everyday visuals that helped translate technical magnitude into something the audience could see. The result? âI got feedback that people remembered the examples,â she says. âThey got the point. Thatâs what matters.â
5. Confidence is a process, not a personality trait
All three speakers say the same thing: the coaching didnât just change the presentation, it changed how they felt. âConfidence came from the process,â Compen notes. âWe rehearsed. We refined. We got feedback. So by the time I stepped on stage, I knew I was ready.â
Acur agrees. âThe audience stayed with me the whole way. I felt I had them. That gave me so much energy.â
And our research scientist? âI had fun. Thatâs not something I expected to say about preparing a high-stakes talk. But it was energizing. The process gave me insight, tools I still use and a real sense of ownership over the story.â
6. A ripple effect for teams and organizations
The benefits of coaching donât stop with one presentation. They ripple outwards. Compen points out: âThis experience showed me how important it is that more people in technical roles learn how to tell stories and communicate the value of what theyâre doing. Itâs not just about facts. Itâs about meaning.â
Once technical professionals see whatâs possible, they want to take it further with follow-up trainings. And organizations benefit from teams that donât just build great technology, but know how to share it powerfully.
7. If youâre speaking at the Bits&Chips Event (or anywhere), hereâs what to do next
You might already know your topic. You might already have your slides. But if you want your audience to listen, engage and remember, then coaching could be the smartest step you take.
It can help you shape your core message and find stories that fit your content and your voice. It can provide tools for clarity, structure and audience engagement. It can help you with real-world rehearsal strategies to find confidence you can feel.
Top image credit: Fotowerkt.nl
