It can be a long day for the reviewers, who are usually seeing many portfolios and can be pretty tired towards the end of the day. You should have a 30 second intro where you describe your work and your objectives. Then let your work speak for itself, and listen to the feedback. Expect to get a variety of responses, everything from praise, to zero interest, to suggestions for improvement. What can be difficult is deciding what to take to heart and what to ignore. You never know what a reviewer is tired of seeing or if they just had a fight with their spouse or had a bad trip to the review site.
You should definitely bring "leave behinds" so that if there is some interest the reviewer will have something to remember you by - a small sample of your work, like a postcard, is good. I have had cases where I didn't get great vibes during the time with a specific reviewer but then got contacted later by them. I would not expect a reviewer to read a summary during the actual review time.
It is possible to show 2 bodies of work, but that cuts the time for feedback in half for each portfolio. One strategy is to show samples of both quickly at the beginning and ask the reviewer if they prefer to focus on one or the other. Then you can focus the time spent with that reviewer with the portfolio that they connected with the most.



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