Tired of boring PowerPoint presentations? Me too. Here are 17 tips to help you create a presentation that not only engages the audience, but forces them to remember what you want them to remember.
Tired of losing sales pitches? Look no further, get some timeless advice from high-stakes presentation consultant: Cliff Atkinson on how to throw out your old sales pitch and make your next one count.
Download here: http://www.paywithapost.de/pay?id=80eb8437-7393-4e61-b8a6-175d76d9eb5b
5 tools for an awesome presentation-By Samid RazzakMd. Samid Razzak
Forget what you learned in Business schools. Here are 5 tips for an outstanding presentation from a TEDx Speaker. Make sure you remember each points and use it in your next presentation!
Sources: Flickr, Google, Presentation Panda
10 Ways to Keep Your Audience's AttentionBrightCarbon
These days there are so many people vying for our attention that it's difficult to stand out in the crowd. Here are ten ways to keep your audience engaged in everything from presentations, speeches, to online training, and remote learning.
We held the largest ever Virtual SlideShare Summit a week back, if you missed it here's your chance to hear from the experts once more on some of the takeaways on presentation design and SlideShare Marketing
10 Things your Audience Hates About your PresentationStinson
See it with animations! https://vimeo.com/179236019
It’s impossible to win over an audience with a bad presentation. You might have the next big thing, but if your presentation falls flat, then so will your idea. While every audience is different, there are some universal cringe-worthy presentation mistakes that are all too common. Whether you’re an amateur or a seasoned presenter, you should always avoid this list of top 10 things your audience hates. Are you committing any of these 10 fatal presentation sins?
For more presentation help, visit stinsondesign.com/blog
This short PowerPoint presentation shows five great ways to get the attention of your audience during your speech or sales pitch.
Try them out in your next speech and you will see how you can engage your audience with these simple tips.
This presentation was created 100% in PowerPoint by my presentation design agency Slides. We are based in Spain (Europe) but have clients worldwide.
Drop me an email and we will discuss your project.
This is a minimal concept you should consider for your PowerPoint slides in order to make them more engaging and exciting.
I work as a presentation designer and help speakers and marketers with their pitches. If you need help with any of these concepts, drop me an email and I will be happy to help.
This document contains slides from a presentation by Andre Woolery on designing effective presentations by making slides visually appealing. The presentation covers various design elements like fonts, color, composition, shapes, and images that can be manipulated to grab audiences' attention and keep them engaged. It provides examples and tips for using these elements like using bold text or different font sizes to create emphasis, leveraging color to attract the eye or accentuate points, and guiding the viewer's eye through slide composition and alignment.
Three business basics to always remember! People don't care about your brand. They care about what you can do for them. Back to basics... Give people what they want, do it consistently and do it better than your competition.
This presentation includes science-based principles on how to attract an audience's attention, sustain it, and convert a presentation into memorable content.
Pitching Ideas: How to sell your ideas to othersJeroen van Geel
Learn how to convince others of your UX ideas by understanding them.
We are good in designing usable and engaging products and services. We understand the user's needs and have a toolkit with dozens of deliverables. But for some reason it remains difficult to sell an idea or concept to team members, managers or clients. After this session that problem will be solved!
Selling your ideas and convincing others is one of the most undervalued assets in our field. This ranges from convincing a colleague to use a certain design pattern to selling research to your boss and convincing a client to go for your concept. You can come up with the best ideas in the world, but if it is presented in the wrong way these ideas will die a lonely dead. This is sad, because everybody can learn how to bring a message across. The main thing is that you know what to pay attention to.
In this session I will take you on a journey through the world of presenting ideas. We will move through the heads of clients and your colleagues, learn what their thoughts and needs are. We will move to the core of your idea and into the world of psychology.
Things That Don't Matter in Your Presentation!Ayman Sadiq
We often spend hours together on stuffs that don’t really matter in your next presentation. You need to unclutter, focus, provide insight and yes, tell a story to convey the big idea. When you stop wasting time on the things that don’t really add any value to you presentation, we finally start adding proper value to the message and objective of your presentation. So here goes a list of things on which you should not even spend a minute. Cheers!
10 Killer Tips for an Amazing Presentation - Way Before You Actually Give OneSlide Studio
This document provides 10 tips for preparing an effective presentation before actually giving it. The tips include knowing your audience and purpose, outlining your content, avoiding templates, reducing text, using simple fonts and layouts, limiting content to 1 point per slide, keeping it simple, and being aware of any presentation guidelines. It emphasizes starting preparation offline without technology, letting visuals support the presenter rather than replace them, and always having a backup plan in case of technical issues. The overall message is to focus on clearly communicating the most important messages to the audience above all other presentation elements.
10 Engagement Lessons Learned From 1 Million Survey AnswersD B
Officevibe released a research report called The State of Employee Engagement based on 1,200,000 survey answers from employees in 157 countries. After analyzing the data, we discovered some truly shocking statistics about the state of engagement across the world.
This actionable webinar will show you how you can keep your employees happy and productive.
See the recording of the webinar:
http://bit.ly/2gjJg3o
Get all the free bonuses and extra tips:
http://bit.ly/2g7Q3xM
Content by Officevibe, the simplest tool for a greater workplace.
How I got 2.5 Million views on Slideshare (by @nickdemey - Board of Innovation)Board of Innovation
This document provides tips for creating engaging slide decks on SlideShare that garner many views. It recommends focusing on quality over quantity when creating each slide, using compelling images and headlines, and including calls to action throughout. It also suggests experimenting with sharing techniques and doing so in waves to build momentum. The goal is to create decks that are optimized for sharing and spread across multiple channels over time.
10 Ways Your Boss Kills Employee MotivationOfficevibe
This document outlines 10 ways that bosses can kill employee motivation, including micromanaging employees, focusing only on mistakes, dismissing new ideas, holding useless meetings, making empty promises, telling inappropriate jokes, not keeping their word, measuring employee success in the wrong way, setting unrealistic deadlines, and playing favorites. The document encourages bosses to listen to employee concerns to better motivate them.
15 Quotes To Nurture Your Creative Soul!DesignMantic
Every now and then, we all crave inspiration to get started. but often times, inspiration is hardest is to find when it is needed the most. but powerful words almost always do the trick. They have power that is undeniable. So for all the creative souls out there, here we share some remarkable sayings from legends to feed your mind and strengthen your design game ...
Remember, sharing is caring! :)
How To Get Clients & Sell Without Selling (Social Selling)Jane Frankland
http://jane-frankland.com Let's look at how to sell! If you're interested in how to get more clients, sell without selling and social media marketing, then this is for you.
If you want to change the feast and famine lifecycle you regularly experience; modernize the way you sell and create just ONE system for client generation that you can use over and over again, instead of having to 'reinvent the wheel' each time you go to market then watch the presentation.
In it I'll be sharing how you can:
1. CREATE: How to create a personalized Client and Lead Generation Plan that focuses on attracting your ideal clients, growing your email list and gearing you up to sell more. This will revolutionize your lead generation process and enable you to obtain security with your income.
2. ATTRACT: I'll share with you how you can free yourself from cold calling and endless networking events, and enable sales with speed, plus I'll give you a brand new "Social Media Quick Tip" that I've never shared on a free webinar yet. This one tip recently landed me a 7-figure client and is guaranteed to help you attract your ideal clients on any social media platform.
3. PROMOTE: Learn how to create a quick and easy "Social Media List Building Funnel" to grow your email list and in turn your sales.
4. SELL: Find out how to create posts, status updates and tweets to sell your programs, products and services via all the social channels. These are what I call your social media daily wins and you can be certain that you'll not feel in the slightest bit salezey whenever you use them.
Thanks for watching!
Want to feel more self-assured and motivated in your job or career? Have you had difficulty speaking up for yourself or saying what you feel? Ready to feel good about who you are, how you look, and your ability to make things happen? Big Hacks + Small Actions = A More Confident New You
Este documento lista opções de hospedagem em hotéis e pousadas em Campos do Jordão para o período de 23 a 25 de setembro, com preços variando de R$376 a R$900. Além disso, sugere alugar uma casa através do Airbnb para reunir colegas e conversar sobre inovação durante o final de semana no local.
The document discusses the rise of smart cities and the Internet of Things. It provides examples of smart city initiatives in Portland, Guangzhou, and Amsterdam that focus on areas like transportation, sustainability, energy efficiency, and green technology. The document also outlines some technical and computing challenges of large-scale IoT systems as well as examples of how IoT can improve areas like smart buildings, energy, lighting, and water systems. EU research programs have funded work related to future internet technologies, applications, and smart cities.
This document lists the headline sponsors, media partners, and other partners and sponsors of an event. It also notes that the event is part of a larger organization and identifies who organized the specific event.
O documento descreve a evolução do capitalismo no final do século XIX e início do século XX, começando com o surgimento dos trustes, que eram grupos de empresas fundidas para dominar setores da economia. Isso levou ao surgimento de cartéis, que eram acordos entre trustes para estabelecer preços e dividir mercados. Finalmente, os trustes evoluíram para conglomerados (corporações), que visavam dominar a oferta de produtos e serviços através da alta concentração e diversificação de capital.
This document contains an agenda for a social media event featuring several speakers who will discuss topics like using Facebook ads, the rise of social search on Bing, using Twitter and microblogging for business, leveraging LinkedIn for PR, setting up a YouTube channel, blogging strategies, and measuring social media analytics. Case studies from brands like Converse and Anne Summers will also be presented. The event will conclude with an overall summary and thanks.
This document lists the headline sponsors, media partners, and other partners and sponsors of an event. It also notes that the event is part of a larger organization and identifies who organized the specific event.
As designers we’re searching for the best – the best method, the best look, the best font. We have a continuous battle to create brands that are unique but that have a longstanding presence. We make tough decisions constantly, question our instincts, and settle. We fight and we strive to make long lasting beautiful, smart and informed design. How do we get there?
In this talk, seasoned Creative Director Sara Cannon is going to dive deep into the designers struggle. She’s going to share different processes that can make our work better. We’re going to discuss philosophy, methodology, and execution from the creative mind stand point. Hopefully by the end of the talk, you will be inspired to push your own creative limits and learned some tips on how to get there.
Computer network is a distributed system consisting of loosely coupled computers and other
devices. Any two of these devices, which we will from now on refer to as network elements or
transmitting elements, can communicate with each other through a communication medium. In
order for these connected devices to be considered a communicating network, there must be a set
of communicating rules or protocols each device in the network must follow to communicate wit
another device in the network. The resulting combination consisting of hardware and software is a computer communication network or computer network in short. Figure 1.1 shows a computer
network
How Snacking Fits Into Consumers' Daily LivesSHS FoodThink
Snacking is on the rise in America. FoodThink looks at what's driving the snacking trend.
Consumers' evolving definition of what constitutes a snack is one of the many driving factors in our country's snacking surge. FoodThink explores the state of the rising snack culture in America, including the five snacking segments in America.
To download the full white paper, visit http://www.shsfoodthink.com
18 Signs You Are Killing Your CreativityAbhishek Shah
You can make a significant impact in the world in your own small way if you expand your horizon and start asking: why?
You are supposed to explore and make yourself better, smarter and stay remarkable. Some people are killing their creative instincts without knowing it. Your daily actions either enhance your ability to make a positive impact in your immediate environment or kill your creative habits.
11 Facts You Probably Didn't Know About PastaJodie Harper
Pasta has been a staple in the Canadian diet for generations, and you probably think you know all there is to know about pasta, right? Wrong! Here are 11 fun facts you probably didn't know about these delicious Italian noodles — including *spoiler alert* the fact that Italy wasn't even the first country where pasta was enjoyed. Shared by: http://rasacatering.sg/
This short document promotes the creation of presentations using Haiku Deck on SlideShare. It features photos from various photographers and encourages the viewer to get started making their own Haiku Deck presentation.
The document discusses cooling towers, including:
1. Types of cooling towers like natural draft, mechanical draft, forced draft, induced draft, cross flow and counter flow towers.
2. Parameters for assessing cooling tower performance including range, approach, effectiveness and cooling capacity.
3. Energy efficiency opportunities like selecting an appropriately sized tower, using efficient fill media to reduce pumping needs, and optimizing fans and motors.
This document provides tips for creating effective presentations using slideware. It begins with an introduction of the author and his experience creating popular presentations. The bulk of the document then outlines 10 tips for crafting presentations with stories that engage audiences, such as using visually appealing first slides, building credibility within slides, changing topics every 8-10 minutes, and ending with a clear call to action. The goal is to share stories and insights that resonate with audiences and encourage them to share content.
MacLeod, an advertising executive and popular blogger with a flair for the creative, gives his 26 tried-and-true tips for being truly creative. Each point illustrated by a cartoon drawn by the author himself.
If you've ever felt the draw to do something creative but just haven't been able to pull it together, you'll love this manifesto.
found: eagereyes.org
PDF, audio, and voiceover are now available on designintechreport.wordpress.com
Today’s most beloved technology products and services balance design and engineering in a way that perfectly blends form and function. Businesses started by designers have created billions of dollars of value, are raising billions in capital, and VC firms increasingly see the importance of design. The third annual Design in Tech Report examines how design trends are revolutionizing the entrepreneurial and corporate ecosystems in tech. This report covers related M&A activity, new patterns in creativity × business, and the rise of computational design.
This document provides a summary of a longer document that criticizes the typical ineffective use of PowerPoint presentations and provides suggestions to create more impactful presentations. The summary is:
1) PowerPoint is often used as a teleprompter, written record, or memory aid rather than for true communication, which requires transferring emotion.
2) Microsoft templates and tools encourage overuse of bullet points and poor design that hinders communication.
3) Effective presentations combine logical facts with emotional engagement of the audience and are used to persuade rather than just inform.
4) The document provides tips to improve presentations, such as limiting words on slides, using evocative images, and creating an emotional experience for the audience.
This document provides advice on how to create effective PowerPoint presentations that communicate ideas through emotion rather than just presenting facts and bullet points. It argues that PowerPoint presentations often fail because they are used as teleprompters, written records of what was said, or verbatim transcripts for audiences rather than to transfer emotion. The document provides tips for creating engaging presentations with fewer words per slide, images to reinforce ideas, handing out details separately, and getting feedback. It emphasizes using slides to trigger emotional reactions and support the presenter's storytelling rather than just repeating what is said.
This document provides guidelines for creating effective presentations with slideshows. It presents "commandments" or rules to follow, including knowing your topic well, addressing the audience directly, keeping content simple, choosing an appropriate design template, limiting use of bright colors, using clear fonts, depicting information wisely with images and graphs, organizing content appropriately across slides, limiting animated effects, and checking equipment before presenting. The overall message is that an effective presentation focuses on engaging the audience through the presenter's delivery rather than relying solely on the slide content.
This document provides an overview of creating slide presentations. It discusses how people are inherently visual communicators and how effective communication is important for careers. While schools often don't teach visual design skills, presentations have become a common way to communicate. The document recommends treating slides as a way to enhance communication, not be the sole communication. It provides tips for sketching ideas, creating diagrams, displaying data simply, and thinking like a designer when creating slides. A case study highlights how Al Gore transformed his public image and communication through an engaging slide presentation about climate change. In the end, the document stresses the importance of unity in slide design through using a consistent grid structure.
The document provides tips for creating effective PowerPoint presentations and reading decks. It distinguishes between presentation decks, which are used to complement an oral presentation, and reading decks, which are sent for others to read on their own. Key recommendations include keeping presentation decks concise with 4-5 key points, engaging graphics, and interactivity; and using consistent formatting and voice in all decks. The document emphasizes that decks should support clear communication goals rather than just organizing information.
Conference presentations are the moment to share your results, and to connect with researchers about future directions. However, presentations are often created as an afterthought and as a result they are often not as exciting as they could be.
In this slidedeck Felienne Hermans shares hands-on techniques to engage an audience.
The talk covers the entire spectrum of presenting: we start with advice on how to structure a talk and how to incorporate a core message into it. Once we have addressed the right structure for a talk, we will work on adding stories and arcs of tension to your presentation. Finally, to really perform as a presenter, we will talk about how slide design and body language can support your presentation.
A good presentation has interesting, audience-focused content organized simply with few bullet points. Visuals should be relevant to the content and animations should enhance the message. An effective presentation involves practicing to deliver the content clearly and engagingly with humor when appropriate. Key principles for design include contrast, repetition, alignment, and proximity to create a cohesive visual experience for the audience.
This document provides tips for making presentations more powerful. It emphasizes the importance of preparation such as brainstorming ideas offline before creating slides. The main message of the presentation should be distilled into a single sentence. Storytelling is recommended to engage audiences. Simplicity is key - slides should have minimal text and empty space. Overcrowding slides and reading slides verbatim should be avoided. Using colorful pictures and focusing on the presenter rather than the slides can make presentations more memorable and impactful.
The document provides 15 creative presentation ideas to inspire audiences, including telling a story to organize facts and keep audiences engaged, asking questions at crucial moments to involve audiences, and organizing the presentation into 3 clear points to help audiences remember the key takeaways. It also recommends using humor to make presentations more lighthearted, designing PowerPoint slides to enhance rather than distract from the presentation, using visuals like graphs and images to explain abstract concepts, and personalizing examples to show how the content directly benefits the audience.
May's pdxMindShare Presentation on Increasing Your PowerPoint & Presentation ...pdx MindShare
Our May 2016 workshop featured Jim Edgerton who presented on making beautiful PowerPoint slides and presenting them in an engageing and memorable way. Networking followed the conclusion of the workshop where dozens of Portland professionals connected with new and old contacts and exchanged information.
The document provides tips for designing effective presentations without spending much time or effort. It recommends stealing the color scheme and theme from existing presentations on Slideshare. Readers are instructed to locate a presentation they like on Slideshare, take a screenshot to capture the exact color codes, and apply those colors to their own presentation for a professionally designed look with little work. Specific steps are outlined, including finding presentations, taking screenshots to identify font colors and backgrounds, and applying the stolen themes to quickly create an appealing presentation.
The document provides tips for using visual aids like overhead transparencies and slides when giving presentations. It recommends including an agenda, stating key points, using simple visuals rather than complicated diagrams, speaking as visuals are displayed, making eye contact with the audience, asking questions to engage listeners, and referring to the visuals during the presentation. The tips are intended to help presenters effectively incorporate visual elements into their speaking.
This document provides guidance on preparing and delivering an effective oral presentation. It discusses analyzing the audience, determining the purpose, gathering material, selecting main ideas, and organizing the presentation. The presentation should have a strong introduction that grabs attention, a body that develops the main points, and a conclusion that summarizes key ideas. Visual aids are recommended to clarify information, and rehearsal is important for delivering the presentation confidently. The overall goal is to inform or persuade the audience in an engaging manner.
The document provides tips for creating effective presentations without overusing PowerPoint. It recommends writing a script before creating slides, planning to reveal one point at a time, and considering alternatives to PowerPoint for short talks. Tips include establishing a clear purpose and understanding the audience, developing a structured presentation with a beginning, middle, and end, and using design elements like images and formatting to enhance readability without unnecessary animations or effects. The document stresses using PowerPoint as a visual aid rather than the main presentation content.
This slide show takes the user on a quest to create better presentations. It is inspired by the era of classic rpgs and 8-bit gaming. All art work was designed (yes, even the pixel art) and arranged in Keynote 09.
This document provides 15.5 techniques to make presentations more engaging. It suggests tailoring presentations to the audience by understanding their interests. Presenters should engage the audience early by soliciting questions before the event. Visuals should complement the presentation and not be overcrowded with text. Stories are an effective way to connect with audiences by sharing personal anecdotes. Presenters should embrace technology tools but use them in a way that enhances rather than distracts from the presentation. The overall message is that engaging and interactive presentations will inspire audiences more than passive, lecture-style formats.
This document provides tips for giving a good presentation. It recommends planning with the audience in mind, sticking to topics you are experienced in, making each point instructional, structuring the presentation like a story with an introduction, climax and resolution, including a memorable "star moment", practicing well, timing the talk, telling stories to illustrate points, focusing on one main point, providing an overview at the start, creating a hashtag for audience feedback, using engaging visuals rather than bullet points on each slide, speaking conversationally while making eye contact, showing passion through emotion and body language, keeping the audience engaged, and concluding by summarizing key points and thanking the audience.
The document discusses common mistakes in PowerPoint presentation design, including putting too much word-for-word text on slides, not including enough visual elements, using low quality images, having an inconsistent layout, and lack of preparation. It provides examples of each mistake and recommends allocating sufficient time to plan, gather content, and rehearse the presentation in order to create an effective design that supports the speaker without overloading the audience with text.
Similar to 17 Ways to Design a Presentation People Want to View (20)
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HubSpot's 5th annual INBOUND marketing conference brought global marketing experts together to teach 19,000 attendees the keys to tomorrow's Marketing.
Content Marketing World: Training with Content Marketing Jedi Masters #CMWorldJim MacLeod
For a few days in late 2016, The Content Marketing Institute brought together the world's leaders in Content Marketing. Here are a few of the pearls of wisdom that they delivered to save us from the dark side of Marketing.
30 Social Media Marketing World 2016 Takeaways, Insights, and Keys to Success...Jim MacLeod
Many of the world's leaders in modern marketing gathered in beautiful San Diego, CA to share their knowledge with the thousands of attendees. I've captured some of the best insights that were presented.
22 Key Takeaways from The Email Design ConferenceJim MacLeod
This document summarizes key takeaways from the 2015 Email Design Conference. It shares quotes from various speakers on topics like email design principles for different platforms and devices, segmentation, interactivity, and adapting to email clients. The quotes encourage things like focusing on the user experience on mobile, keeping code clean and accessible, and treating email design like web design while recognizing its limitations.
10 Must-Have Items to Track on Your Creative Department Job SheetJim MacLeod
This is the first in a series of presentations that will help you launch an in-house design/creative department. This presentation focuses on the all-important job tracking spreadsheet.
15 Business Inspiration Quotes from Mad MenJim MacLeod
As Mad Men wrapped up their historic run, I found a series of quotes that can be applied to not only creative industries, but almost any business, and life. I also created the illustrations.
See what Don Draper, Roger Sterling, Peggy Olson, and the rest of the team think.
I listen to a lot of podcasts. These are the six that are currently "must listens" while I'm driving. They're focused on marketing, design, and technology
In the past 12 years, Boston sports has seen 8 championships. Since 2002, 42% of the time there has been at least one reigning champion. This infographic has a few more details on the Celtics, Patriots, Red Sox and Bruins' dominance.
stackconf 2024 | Ignite: Is rust good for Kubernetes by Natalie Serebryakova ...NETWAYS
Rust is a powerful and safe systems programming language that has been gaining popularity among developers due to its emphasis on safety, speed, and concurrency. Kubernetes, on the other hand, is an open-source container orchestration platform that automates deploying, scaling, and managing containerized applications written in Go.
This talk will cover how easy it is to develop Rust-based Operators in Kubernetes using an example of an operator for Managing the PVC Lifecycle.
stackconf 2024 | Test like a ninja with Go by Ivan Presenti.pdfNETWAYS
Not tested? Not done! Yet another talk about tests? I aim to present you with the techniques and tools you might use to build efficient and reliable tests. We’ll use Go, which provides a great testing experience. I’ll show you overlooked techniques such as benchmarking, fuzzing, etc. Plus, I’ll introduce you to the most popular libraries and packages used to test Go code.
stackconf 2024 | Make You Ops-Life Easy – ansible usecases you didn´t out of ...NETWAYS
Most of you are familiar with Ansible. We are excited to show you some use cases within the “normal Ansible scope”. Using Ansible-AWX as a platform, we have streamlined tasks for admins and for developers, enabling effortless automation of routine operations. With services designed to simplify the daily work, we can all be a bit more lazy (#faul) 😉
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Several years ago, when you had a monolithic application, it was fairly easy to debug and diagnose since there was probably only one service with a couple of users. Nowadays systems are broken up into smaller microservices deployed in containers on top of Kubernetes in multiple clusters across different cloud environments. In these kinds of distributed environments, there is a need to observe it all, both the overall picture, and, if need be, at a more granular level. Observability can be roughly divided into three sub-categories: logging, metrics, and tracing. In this blog post we’ll show you how simple it is to get set up with tracing in your new or existing MinIO application. We’ll build a small MinIO app that does a few basic requests; this will be our base application to which we’ll add tracing to gain a better picture of how system components and functions interact.
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3. They’re ineffective. Why do we keep
doing them the same old way?
This isn’t a guide that tells you how to add the perfect
drop shadow or beveled gradient to a text box (don’t
do that – it’s unprofessional). This eBook will give you
an overview of how to get people to
and keep them engaged.
pay attention
4. You’re giving a presentation
for a reason:
to get a sale or
impart information.
6. We’ve all sat through these presentations, (and
worse, we’ve all created these presentations).
They’re painful and a waste of everyone’s time.
People don’t pay attention.
You need engagement before you get buy in.
But how do you get a viewer engaged who has
already seen presentations that are nearly identical?
design
7. People have been communicating with images for tens of
thousands of years longer than we have been communicating
with the written word. Visual communication had a 35,000 year
head start ahead of the written word1
. Our brains are better
equipped to comprehend and store visual information.
8. Visual communication is
and sticks in the memory far more effectively. An image
can create an instant emotional connection. If you can
link your message to the viewer’s emotional center,
you’ve already won the battle.
simply easier to understand
10. If you’re in a sales pitch, it’s unlikely that this is the first
impression the viewer has of your company. But this is
the first impression the viewer has of you.
You wouldn’t wear shlubby clothes to a meeting like
this. Why dress up your pitch in an ugly suit? Wrap your
message in a professional package that shows that
1) you take this seriously 2) you know what you’re
talking about.
12. For those of you giving a presentation, it’s possible that
your cover slide could be on display for the entire lead
up/introduction to the presentation. During this time, the
audience could be analyzing and dissecting your cover.
You might be giving a five minute overview of who you are
and what you’re going to cover. What you don’t want is the
audience to be distracted by a bad typeface or image. It’s
the first impression your audience will have of you and
what you have to say.
13. If you’re creating a presentation that will only
live online, the cover is the single most
important piece. The cover determines whether
the viewer clicks to view more or they ignore it.
You could have the answers to the greatest
questions in the universe, but if they’re hidden
behind a bad cover, nobody will ever find them.
14. visual
theme
have a
Each slide should look like it’s part of the same story.
A consistent design theme keeps the viewer engaged.
15. The cover will set the tone for your
presentation. Once you determine the
font and color palette (more on these
later), stick with it.
You’ve seen presentations where
it’s obvious that the deck was
Frankensteined together from other
decks. One or two great slides can
really ruin it for the rest of the slides.
Don’t give the viewer any excuse to stop
paying attention to your message.
If your presentation is broken up into
different sections, feel free to give each
section a related visual theme. By
slightly altering the color, you can let
the viewer know that they are now in a
different section, but it’s clearly part of
the same presentation. Think of these
as chapters of a book.
When to break this
rule: When you really
want a key point to
be recognized.
(like this)
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