| name | stakeholder-presentation |
| description | Present architecture to diverse audiences (executives, product, engineers). Tailor message, manage Q&A, handle skepticism. Use when communicating major decisions or visions. |
Stakeholder Presentation
Present architecture effectively to diverse audiences with tailored messaging and engagement.
Context
You are presenting architecture to stakeholders. Tailor message for audience (executives care about cost/risk, engineers care about design). Anticipate objections. Manage time and questions.
Domain Context
Based on presentation and communication best practices:
- Executive Audience: Lead with business impact (revenue, cost, risk). 20% architecture, 80% business. Numbers matter.
- Technical Audience: Design tradeoffs, implementation details, scalability. Respectful skepticism.
- Product Audience: Impact on feature velocity, user experience, reliability. Timeline and risk.
- Presentation Skills: Structure, pacing, visuals, energy. Engage audience, read room.
Instructions
-
Tailor to Audience:
- Executives: "This microservices architecture reduces deployment risk by 90% and lets us deploy 5x faster, reducing time-to-market by 4 weeks."
- Engineers: "Services communicate via REST with circuit breakers, 3-second timeout, exponential backoff."
- Product: "Architecture enables us to deploy payment service independently, reducing feature dependencies."
-
Structure:
- Hook (why this matters)
- Problem (what's broken)
- Solution (how we fix it)
- Impact (revenue, cost, speed, reliability)
- Questions & Discussion
-
Visuals: Use diagrams (C4), not bullet points. Show architecture, data flow, scaling. One idea per slide.
-
Manage Q&A:
- Tough question? "Great question, I'll come back to that." (Gives you time to think)
- Don't know? "I don't know, but I'll find out and follow up."
- Skepticism? Acknowledge, address directly. "You're right, that's a risk. Here's how we mitigate it."
-
Follow-Up: Send summary and decision. Record decisions, next steps, owners.
Anti-Patterns
- One-Size-Fits-All Presentation: Same talk for executives and engineers. Result: one group lost, other bored. Guard: Customize per audience; keep different versions.
- Death by Bullet Points: 40 slides of text. Result: audience reads slides instead of listening. Guard: Visuals, not words; one idea per slide; speak, don't read.
- Defensive on Questions: Get flustered by skepticism. Result: lose credibility. Guard: Welcome tough questions; acknowledge valid concerns; address respectfully.
- No Follow-Up: Presentation ends, decision unclear, no next steps. Result: confusion, inaction. Guard: Summary email, clear decisions, owners, timeline.
Further Reading
- Presentation Zen by Garr Reynolds — visual communication
- TED Talks: The Official TED Guide to Public Speaking — engaging audiences
- Made to Stick by Chip and Dan Heath — memorable messaging