Ad verba per numeros
Breves
Tuesday, June 21, 2011, 10:18 PM
Tuesday, June 21, 2011, 10:18 PM
- Presentation software DOESN'T matter.
- Tell a story: your story.
- The main actor in your presentation is YOU, not your slides.
- Small bites are better (i.e. few text in each slide, enough to transmit a message).
- Corollary: the text in the slide should match your speech, if you provide more text they'll read and won't listen to you.
- Images are not a decoration, they should back up your message.
- Layout is key (or the Rule of thirds rules!)
- Be structured, both during your presentation and preparing it (do not start by opening your presentation software!)
- Don't stuff your audience but leave them a little hungry (e.g. don't tell everything, finish early).
- Do not use your last slide to say "thank you" but to show a remarkable conclusion of your presentation.
- Gadgets can be a presenter's best friend (e.g. a wireless presentation remote control).
- Practice, practice, practice (aka paying in sweat).
A student asked me about software for presentations because, apparently, he thought I was not using PowerPoint (indeed I use it). I told him a number of things (summarized above) and concluded telling him that PowerPoint is great provided you ignore 99% of the features.
Needless to say, I'm not inventing anything new here. Most of the points are extracted from the great books "Presentation Zen" or "Slide:ology" and the blogs from the corresponding authors. I learned the little trick in number 10 in "El Arte de Presentar" (in Spanish) and number 12 is, well, rather obvious but it's usually ignored by most of us.
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