Venue Logistics for Seminar Lectures

Keynote and other lectures are generally held in a large conference room with seating arranged in "classroom style" with a writing table shared by two or more attendees -- or -- in a "theatre style" with seating only. 

Please print 1 copy for each attendee of the Homework Assignment: Process & Technology Priorities.

Other specifics are:

For audience sizes up to ~25:

bullet Projection Screen (front or rear projection)
bullet PC Projector and small table large enough to also hold a laptop (Wayne will provide laptop and remote radio-signal mouse)
bullet Flip Chart and Markers (3 different colors preferred)
bullet Sound System
bullet powered PC speakers with subwoofer

For audience sizes greater than 25 but less than 50::

bullet Projection Screen (front or rear projection)
bullet PC Projector and small table large enough to also hold a laptop (Wayne will provide laptop and remote radio-signal mouse)
bullet Flip Chart and Markers (3 different colors preferred)
bullet Sound System
bullet room or standalone system preferred; backup = good powered PC speakers with subwoofer
bullet wireless microphone (headset mic preferred over lapel/lavaliere or collar)
bullet connection for PC audio

For audience sizes greater than 50:

bullet Projection Screen (front or rear projection; rear preferred)
bullet PC Projector and small table large enough to also hold a laptop (Wayne will provide laptop and remote radio-signal mouse)
bullet Flip Chart and Markers (3 different colors preferred)
bullet Sound System (room or standalone)
bullet wireless microphone (headset mic preferred over lapel/lavaliere or collar)
bullet connection for PC audio
bullet Raised Stage
bullet No podium needed
bullet Lighting
bullet moderate/high over stage
bullet moderate over audience
bullet no spotlight needed
 

Bio Summary for Wayne A. McClelland

A 35-year veteran of the computer-aided design, engineering and product lifecycle marketplace, Wayne McClelland is well-known as an energetic pioneer in the development and implementation of technologies for structural dynamics, finite element analysis, 3D solid modeling, and workgroup data management.

During his 25 years at SDRC, Wayne played key management and executive roles in growing a small 25-person engineering company into a market leading 2500-person software provider (SDRC was acquired by EDS in 2001).

Since founding his own consulting practice in 1996, Wayne has guided process improvement activities at such international companies as Sony, Siemens, Bose and Lucent.  He combines energy and in-depth knowledge to unify management and technologists toward the shared goal of re-engineering the product development process.  Wayne has delivered keynote lectures at over two hundred seminars and conferences in North America, Europe, and Asia.

 
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