You've seen these people. You've probably been in their audiences. They have 495 slides which they read to you one by one in a monotone voice with no facial expression and expect you to follow along in a font that even your ophthalmologist couldn't translate.
For starters, most of us can read by ourselves, thank you very much. Secondly, assuming we can read, maybe the presenter should just send us the slides and spare us the presentation?
Am I being too sarcastic? Perhaps. But, I spend most of my time coaching people through presentations and critical meetings for which they've spent a lot of time designing and perfecting slides, but little if any time thinking through their message. Creating slides is not communicating. According to the English dictionary, communicate means to "converse", to "impart" or to "connect". The only thing connective about most slide shows is the plug that you stick into the socket to make the projector run.
So, what is a presenter to do?
No One Came to See a Slide Show. Before you create a single slide, think about what you want to say. What do you want people to think, do, know or feel when you're done speaking? If the slides crashed, could you still tell the story? If your answer is no, then your message is muddled and you don't truly own your material. Write your talk first and then create slides that reinforce what you're saying instead of using your slides as a script.
Talk, Don't Read. Reading is for the eye. Listening is for the ear. It's important to create slides that speak in phrases, not sentences so you talk instead of read. Eliminate words such as, if, the, in, on, and of. Instead, use 3 to 5 words per line to reinforce what you're saying so people listen to you instead of reading the slide. Look for opportunities to reveal the lines to prevent people from reading ahead so you focus their attention where you want it.
Don't put everything on the slide. What works in print doesn't always translate to slides. Your job is to help listeners make sense of information. If you cram too much on the slide, they'll be reading item Z while you're still talking about item A. Instead of cutting and pasting data from a study, create colorful charts, graphs and pictures that highlight data, evoke emotion and make the information more relevant. That's what listeners remember.
Think headline. Look at each slide and ask: "What's the headline and what does it mean to the people in the room?" Then think about how to walk them through the information. For example: "Look at the purple box on the left compared to the yellow box on the right. It's nearly double the size. That means we've doubled our profits." While every slide doesn't have to stand on its own, it must have a reason for being there such as setting up a point or driving home a message.
We don't do it that way here. Just because others drone on doesn't mean you have to be boring too. Think of every presentation as a huge opportunity to inform, persuade or sell your point of view. If a slide set has been designed for you, you should still look for ways to personalize the information and create moments that audiences remember. If you are required to present every single slide, that doesn't mean you have to read every point. Provide an overview and tell the audience that details will be available in written form later.
Hit them over the head. Your first few words determine whether your audience tunes in or out. So, why do people need a slide to tell the audience what they are going to talk about? Don't they know why they're here? When you open your mouth, hit them over the head with a story or example that engages and grabs attention so they understand why they should care? Ask what's in it for them?
Finally, create slides for people in the back of the room. Use color, big fonts and contrast. Remember, every time you speak, you're on! Look for ways to stand out and set the bar a bit higher so people look forward to hearing what you have to say.
Copyright (c) 2009 Karen Friedman
You easily part a nun from her vow of chastity.
No doubt- you're the greatest at influencing people one-on-one.
But can you conduct killer power point presentations?
If you're like 99% of all the presentors out there, I bet you ?re a veteran at observing the MEGO Syndrome in audiences.
MEGO?
?Mine Eyes Glaze Over?
That's right. Three minutes into the powerpoint presentation, the audience is restless. Some begin sneaking out the door. The more polite ones just pretend to listen behind dark spectacles. But you know where their minds went.
The MEGO Syndrome arises from five monumental presentation mistakes. Do the opposite and you'll deliver utterly drool worthy power point presentations- and influence the socks out of your crowd.
1. Keeping Them Guessing. Many speakers fail to give a roadmap of their speech. So throughout the presentation, the crowd is asking ?huh? What's his point? Where's this leading to?? Guide them by the hand. Before the actual presentation, outline exactly what you'll cover and let them know when you'll finish.
2. Failing to Connect At the Beginning. Audiences don't like to be preached to. They'd prefer to be talked with. Keep your style interactive. Open the talk by asking a rhetorical question, launching an anecdote, or saying a shocking statement- then invite a comment! You'll draw them in like Pirahnnas to a pork buffet.
3. Looking at the Floor and Closing Your Body. I've seen it so often. The speaker assumes a closed body language. Guilty of this? Hands in pocket. Arms crossed. Legs tight together. Look stiff, and you alienate the audience. To invite the audience to appreciate your power point presentation, move around. Gesture. Smile!
4. DataDumping. I've attended hundreds of business presentations where the speaker fills the slide with size 9 font text crammed to the margin. Then they read each line. Good lord! We're attending a presentation, not an online reading course! The best slides follow the 4 by 4 rule. Four words across, four bullets down.
5. Forgetting the Call of Action. At the end, the speaker jumps to ?any questions?? without giving the audience a specific command. Is it to buy? To invest? To visit a website? Without the call to action, the audience is left wondering what you yammered about for the last 20 minutes of their valuable time.
So here's my call to action for you: create drool worthy powerpoint presentations. Right now.
Both Karen Friedman & Joseph Plazo are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Karen Friedman has sinced written about articles on various topics from Writing, Leadership and Writing. Karen Friedman is an international communications coach and award winning television reporter who helps executives, spokespeople and celebrities shine in every interview, appearance and presentation. President, Karen Friedman Enterprises and co-author of. Karen Friedman's top article generates over 110000 views. to your Favourites.
Joseph Plazo has sinced written about articles on various topics from Forex Market, Adsense and Cars. More of Joseph Plazo's killer articles: Art of Unstoppable , Sneaky