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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a corporate presentation" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when referring to a formal presentation made by a company, often for stakeholders, clients, or employees.
Example: "The CEO will deliver a corporate presentation outlining the company's future strategy during the annual meeting."
Alternatives: "a business presentation" or "a company presentation".
Exact(8)
And it is in Sony's DNA," he said at a corporate presentation.
"It's all about energy and creating solutions to uplift and energise people to communicate on a global scale," she replies as if beaming direct from a corporate presentation.
So we snatch an interview after a corporate presentation last week, and risk her wrath to take a sneaky peek at the phenomenon behind Burberry's Lazarus-like recovery.
In a corporate presentation my guides put on before the tour, Labour City was said to be born of "the wise vision of the state of Qatar".
She has also engaged the financial world before, once using the format of a corporate presentation to spin a tale of a stock broker trying to deal with his role in the system.
You would think a guy snapping photos during a corporate presentation would be willing to cough up a little more information!
Similar(52)
Last year, Billie Joe Armstrong of Green Day famously melted down onstage during his band's set, providing a jolt of excitement at what might have been a staid corporate presentation.
But more so, how others react and respond, plays an important role in marketing, a magic show, a family dinner or corporate presentation.
Jerry Weissman, a leading corporate presentations coach, is the founder of Power Presentations, Ltd., and the author of Presentations in Action: 80 Memorable Presentation Lessons from the Masters (FT Press: 2011).
"We will engage in thorough discussions at the board level to decide on Sony's response," Kazuo Hirai, the chief executive, said in response to questions at a corporate strategy presentation.
"It was probably the least impressive corporate presentation of bad news I've ever seen," said Paul Downs, a small-business owner in Bridgeport, Pa., and a contributor to The Times's small-business blog, You're the Boss.
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