The amount of introduction required for your field, each technique and each problem will depend on how much
the audience knows about your topic.
Not exact matches
You
know more
about the
topic than your
audience, so educate them, Lindner says.
I'm a big fan of letting the
audience tell you what they want to
know about a
topic you're pursuing.
No surprise, perhaps, as Denis's film is the sort of thing usually discussed as a «minor,» the appellation usually applied to movies
about love and intimacy,
topics of almost universal relevance, as opposed to «major» works that indulge in the overblown oversimplification of barely understood historical periods, interminable «sculpting with time,» or the espousal of revolutionary creeds to well - heeled film festival
audiences who
know in their secret hearts that they will never in their lives participate in a violent uprising of any kind.
While a major goal is providing the
audience with lots of compelling information
about the
topic of your book, another equally important goal should be letting them get to
know more
about you and your unique personality.
Think
about the
audience: what do your readers
know about the
topic?
In most CLEs, you will have
audience members who do not
know much
about your
topic.
It amazes me even more when they are given a glimpse into the nuances of resume writing how, all of a sudden, they think they
know everything there is to
know about the
topic and now, magically, they are capable of writing a superior resume that will resonate with their
audience.
So choose a
topic you
know a lot
about and find an
audience.