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Death by PowerPoint (and how to fight it)

Death by PowerPoint (and how to fight it). There are 300 million PowerPoint users in the world*. * estimate. They do 30 million presentations each day *. * estimate. About a million presentations are going on right now*. * estimate. 50% of them are unbearable *.

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Death by PowerPoint (and how to fight it)

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  1. Death by PowerPoint (and how to fight it)

  2. There are 300 million PowerPoint users in the world* * estimate

  3. They do 30 million presentations each day* * estimate

  4. About a million presentations are going on right now* * estimate

  5. 50% of them are unbearable* * conservative estimate

  6. LOTS of people are killing each otherwith bad presentations. NOW.

  7. Don’t make this your audience!

  8.  Significance

  9. Why do you present? • To “pass the information”? • Your boss told you to? • Or to make meaning?

  10. What’s the subject and why does it matter to you?

  11. How presentations work Significance creates passion Passion attracts attention Attention leads to action

  12.  Structure

  13. Structure is how you place the building blocksof your story.

  14. Give 3-4 reasons supporting your point. They will not remember more anyway.

  15. } Memorable opening 1 More details... 1 argument 2 More details... 3 More details... 45 minutes 1 More details... 2 argument 2 More details... 3 More details... 1 More details... 3 argument 2 More details... 3 More details... Memorable closing

  16. You can tell this in... • 5 minutes • 15 minutes • 45 minutes It is scalable.

  17.  Simplicity

  18. ” Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler.

  19. Apparently, being simple is not that simple. Will give you some examples.

  20. PowerPoint helps to: Visualize ideas Create key points Impress

  21. They use it as:  Prompter  Handouts  Data dumps

  22. Too much text Can it be said instead of written?  Is there a visual that can convey the same information? Use no more than six lines, with each line containing no more than six words. Too much information per slide Each slide should convey one main idea.  The audience should be able to take in the visual in 20 seconds or less. Information relevant to another idea should be moved to another slide.  Irrelevant details should be excluded altogether. Small text No text should be small that 24 pt, including text in an imported figure.  If the figure text is not important, Photoshop it out.  White or bright backgrounds Use light (not white) text on a dark background to minimize visual fatigue. Inconsistent fonts/colors/backgrounds Using consistent fonts/colors/backgrounds keeps the focus on your science. Absent labeling of graphical representations Make sure each figure includes sufficient labeling for the audience to make sense of it, including axis labels for graphs.Too many slidesPresent only the ideas and science necessary to tell your story, not every experiment you have ever done. A 15 min presentation should have 10-12 slides.  Unnecessary animation Animation should only be used to focus your audience’s attention.  Revealing one lane of a gel at a time as you discuss an experiment is appropriate.  Swirling in every figure is not. Red/green heatmaps or other visuals Remember that those who are red/green colorblind cannot interpret figures that rely on distinguishing red and green.  Use blue and yellow instead. People read faster than you speak. This means you are useless.

  23. How much is an extra slide? $0.00. Zero Dollars. Break it in several. It’s free.

  24. What’s the point?One simple point? Remove everything else.

  25. Ditch stupid “rules” • Do you remember the rule: • 7 lines per slide or less • 7 words per line or less? • Well, it is just plain stupid • If you follow this “rule” • You get a slide like this

  26. Ditch stupid “rules” Cramped! Boring! • Do you remember the rule: • 7 lines per slide or less • 7 words per line or less? • Well, it is just plain stupid • If you follow this “rule” • You get a slide like this

  27. Simple Design Rules One point per slide Few matching colours Very few fonts Photos, not clipart

  28. Less text. More imagery. Wild imagery.

  29. But what if I need to send or print the slides?

  30. Write a document

  31. Make 2 sets of slides

  32. Print with notes

  33. Inform with little text* * yes you can

  34.  Rehearsal

  35. It will never work completely for the first time. Trust me.

  36. YOU PRESENTATION RECIPIENT Feedback. Go get some.

  37. No audience? Present to the furniture. But aloud. Try it.

  38. Check the room and equipment.

  39. Presentation checklist

  40. All this leads to...

  41. Wow* * great presentations

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