How much does the audience know about my topic?
What do I know about the audience's education, beliefs, culture, and attitudes?
How will the audience react to my message?
These are appropriate questions to ask when anticipating and profiling your audience.
Just as any business thrives or dies on how well it meets the demands of its customers, the success of any communication depends on how well the sender meets the needs and expectations of the audience. That audience can be people or groups you know.
Tailor the content and style of your questions to what you know or can guess, even if it's a person or group you don't know. Adjust content level of detail, tone of voice, word choice (phrasing), grammar, and overall style (formal or casual) based on how your audience is profiling. Audience profiling and analysis requires skill and thought.
Know more about audience profiling here
brainly.com/question/13180983
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It is part of the marginal benefit
hope this helps you
Answer:
Explanation:
The testimony by the bank employee that the photo accurately portrays the scene of the crime is only required because the photo is only being used as “demonstrative evidence,” and demonstrative evidence only needs to be authenticated to be admissible. Evidence is “authenticated” if there is testimony asserting that the evidence is what the proponent claims it to be.
Number 1 is not necessary because the photo is not being used as original evidence that played an actual role in the robbery itself; for example, a gun used by the robber, which would require a “chain of custody” type of authentication to be admissible.