The 15-Point Industry-Ready Presentation Checklist for Researchers
Researchers spend years mastering their field. But when it comes time to share that work with industry, funders, or potential partners, the presentation is often the weakest link in the chain. Slides are rushed together. Data is left raw instead of translated into insights. The storyline meanders, leaving the audience unsure of what the research really means for them.
I’ve seen this problem from every angle.
Before launching Commercialization Catalyst, I spent over 20 years in industry, including serving as Chief Innovation Officer at a global metals company. There, I managed hundreds of millions of dollars in innovation portfolios that required me to earn investment from the board, division leaders, and operations managers. I not only created persuasive presentations to win that support, but also trained my teams of researchers to do the same—building industry-focused messages that secured both internal funding and customer sales.
I also led tech scouting efforts, often on the receiving end of pitches from researchers and startups, evaluating which technologies were worth pursuing.
Today, through my work as a coach for the Mid-South Hub’s I-Corps program and with accelerators like the University of Tennessee’s Spark Cleantech Accelerator and Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Innovation Crossroads, I help entrepreneurs refine their pitches from the other side of the table.
I’ve spent more than two decades helping technical experts transform deep science into market-ready opportunities—and I know exactly what industry decision-makers are looking for in a presentation.
Industry leaders are busy. They don’t have the time—or the patience—to decode complex technical talks. They want clarity, not complexity.
That’s why I developed The 15-Point Industry-Ready Presentation Checklist for Researchers. It distills the lessons I’ve learned working with researchers who successfully won licensing deals, funding, and partnerships. It’s the same framework we use inside the Commercialization Catalyst program, where researchers practice, refine, and showcase their presentations in front of real tech scouts and industry leaders.
Why Researcher Presentations Often Fall Flat with Industry
Most researchers are trained to present for academic conferences, thesis defenses, or technical audiences. In those settings:
- Detail is rewarded. The more data points, the better.
- Methods matter. How you arrived at a result is as important as the result itself.
- Peers understand jargon. Acronyms and technical shorthand save time and signal expertise.
But in my experience leading corporate innovation reviews, sitting in technology transfer sessions, and advising commercialization teams, I’ve seen firsthand how industry plays by another set of rules:
- Clarity is king. If the audience doesn’t understand your bottom line in the first few minutes, you’ve lost them.
- Impact matters most. They want to know why it’s relevant, what it changes, and what the next step looks like.
- Time is short. You might have six minutes—or even sixty seconds—to make an impression.
This disconnect is where opportunities are lost. Brilliant science never gets beyond the first meeting because it wasn’t packaged in a way industry could understand or act upon.
This is a skill that can be taught and practiced.
The 15-Point Industry-Ready Presentation Checklist for Researchers
The checklist is structured around five key categories: Audience Fit, Core Storyline, Slide Design, Delivery & Presence, and Q&A Readiness. Each category contains practical, concrete checkpoints that I’ve refined through years of working with researchers in high-stakes environments.

Download the Checklist
The 15-Point Industry-Ready Presentation Checklist for Researchers is available as a free PDF download (no opt-in required).
Use it to critique your next presentation, rehearse with a peer, or reflect on your last industry meeting.
Here’s how each category sets you up for success:
Audience Fit
Your message must be designed with the audience in mind.
- Audience composition is known (industry, funder, peer, or mixed).
- Instructions are followed (time, format, emphasis).
- The level of expertise is matched (expert / non-expert / mixed).
When your audience feels the presentation is tailored for them, you earn their attention and respect.
Core Storyline
Your presentation has a clear beginning, middle, and end.
- Structure is coherent and easy to follow.
- Closed with a specific next step and instructions.
One of the most common mistakes I see is ending with a simple “Thank you” instead of guiding the audience toward what comes next. Industry wants direction. A clear call to action keeps the momentum alive.
Sample Story Line Structure:
Problem → Why it matters → Current solutions → Why they fall short → Your solution → Why it’s better → Status → Next steps → Call to action.
Slide Design
Your visuals should work for you, not against you.
- Titles are takeaway messages, not labels.
- Font size is large and readable.
- No jargon or acronyms without explanation.
- Images are purposeful and high-quality.
- All sources are cited.
- Data is translated into insights (percent change, comparison, simplified visuals).
I teach researchers to distinguish between data and insights. Data is raw; insights are what the data means in context. Industry cares about the latter. One of my clients transformed a crowded graph into a single insight—“30% reduction in noise”—and immediately grabbed the attention of a potential partner.
Delivery & Presence
Your delivery shows confidence.
- Voice is clear and pacing is steady.
- Body language reinforces the message (eye contact, posture, gestures).
Industry wants to invest in people as much as in ideas. Having coached dozens of scientists through their first business-facing talks, I’ve seen the transformation when delivery shifts from tentative to confident. Suddenly, the research feels less risky and more investable.
“The coaching program gave researchers a lot of practice and the professional feedback needed to gain confidence in presenting to business leaders.”
— Jennifer Caldwell, Director of Technology Transfer, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Q&A Effectiveness
Your answers convey awareness, trust, and authority.
- Deliver concise, audience-appropriate answers that you’ve researched in advance.
- Articulate a redirect plan to other parts of the organization when necessary (“Our tech transfer team can help you explore that. I’ll put you in contact with Jane Doe.”).
In every commercialization program I’ve led, the Q&A session is where the real test happens. A well-prepared answer builds trust instantly. I’ve watched skeptical industry partners lean forward when a researcher handled a tough question with calm authority.
That said, sometimes the most powerful answer is “I don’t know, but I know who does. I’ll have the right person from our team reach out right away,”–and then immediately following through with making that connection.
How to Use the Checklist
The checklist isn’t just for last-minute polish. It’s a tool for preparation, practice, and reflection:
- To Prepare: Before you build slides, identify your audience and draft your storyline. Be sure you can explain your research in plain language first. Then use the checklist as a quality-control tool as you develop your deck.
- To Practice: Rehearse with a peer or non-expert listener. Ask them to score you on each category. If they can’t repeat your key takeaway in one sentence, refine it.
- To Reflect: After your presentation, use the checklist as a reflection tool. Circle the areas where you struggled. That becomes your roadmap for continuous improvement.
This is the same process I use when coaching researchers one-on-one or guiding teams inside the Commercialization Catalyst program.

Download the Checklist
The 15-Point Industry-Ready Presentation Checklist for Researchers is available as a free PDF download (no opt-in required).
Use it to critique your next presentation, rehearse with a peer, or reflect on your last industry meeting.
Why This Matters
In my 20+ years leading innovation, strategy, and commercialization efforts, I’ve seen the same pattern:
- Raw data doesn’t land. Industry doesn’t want to decode graphs; they want actionable insights.
- Jargon erodes trust. If they can’t follow you, they won’t invest in you.
- Unclear endings waste opportunities. Without a call to action, even interested audiences don’t know how to proceed.
By addressing these systematically, researchers transform from “presenters of science” to ambassadors of innovation.
That shift accelerates licensing, partnerships, and funding opportunities for organizations and increases credibility, leadership, and recognition opportunities for the researchers.
Beyond the Checklist
The 15-Point Checklist is a powerful tool, but it’s only one piece of the larger Commercialization Catalyst program. Inside the program, researchers go deeper:
- Crafting both 1-minute “sparks” for hallway conversations and networking events, as well as 6-minute pitches with high-impact visuals.
- Practicing Q&A with real business-focused scenarios.
- Receiving structured feedback from commercialization managers and peers.
- Building confidence through repeated practice and coaching.
That’s how I’ve helped national labs and universities create stronger research-to-impact pipelines and win recognition, including a Federal Laboratory Consortium Technology Transfer Innovation Award in 2025.
The checklist gives you a starting point. The full program builds the muscle.
How Commercialization Catalyst Is Different
Many excellent programs support researchers, but they serve different goals.
I-Corps gives a deep dive into one technology and one industry through customer discovery and the Business Model Canvas—ideal for those exploring entrepreneurship.
Traditional science communication programs sharpen delivery through slide design workshops or frameworks like the Evidence-Based Assertion Model, but they stop short of preparing researchers for the business-focused conversations that drive commercialization.
Commercialization Catalyst is different. It equips researchers with a broad, repeatable toolkit to align any project with industry audiences, spark interest, and redirect attention back to commercialization teams.
Built on my experience managing $500M+ in innovation portfolios, leading tech scouting, and coaching with I-Corps and hard-tech accelerators, it’s uniquely practical and industry-relevant.
Take the Next Step
Explore how Commercialization Catalyst can equip your team with repeatable, industry-ready communication tools.
Because Great Research Deserves Greater Impact.

Download the Checklist
The 15-Point Industry-Ready Presentation Checklist for Researchers is available as a free PDF download (no opt-in required).
Use it to critique your next presentation, rehearse with a peer, or reflect on your last industry meeting.
