If you’re making a presentation to get an idea, a concept across or to persuade your audience to take action on something, sometimes words are not enough.
As the saying goes
‘a picture says a thousand words’, some things are just easier to explain with
the aid of an image. Diagrams, charts, product
images are all great aids to your presentation.
A good slide deck
is worth its weight in gold, but there are some vital things to remember.
The slide deck is a visual aid –
not a verbal aid
It should not be
your notes on screen. Firstly, because
you should not be reading the screen as you lose contact with your
audience. Secondly, because text-heavy
slides divert attention from you to the slides.
Some of your audience will read and re-read your slides, instead of
listening to you.
Keep it simple
Images need to be
simple and easy to understand. If it
takes you ten minutes to explain your diagram, it’s not a good visual aid. Bar charts and pie charts that show clear differentials
are great, but don’t get too complicated.
A month-by-month growth chart, with nice fat bars, is much easier for
your audience to process than a day-by-day version, with dozens of tiny lines.
Don’t go to the
other extreme and put images on the screen with no explanation. If you’re putting a graph up, add the title
and the designation of your vertical and horizontal values – at least.
This also means NOT
using fancy fonts. A simple sans-serif
font is the easiest on the audience’s eyes.
Ensure text is big enough to be read from a distance, don’t make your
audience work too hard to decipher your message.
Quality over quantity
Every slide must
work for its place. 80 slides for a 10
minute presentation is far too many! (And yes, I’ve seen this. The presenter, could almost not have been
present, he just clicked from slide to slide and everything was on the screen.) Pare your slides down to the essentials.
Words have a place
There’s nothing
wrong with the (very) occasional quotation, as long as it has value in your
presentation.
Sometimes, if you
have a step-by-step process, including the steps will help the audience to get
that process accurately. My own rule of
thumb is no more than three one-line bullet points on a single slide.
e.g.
- Write a 300 word
article for your blog
- Take soundbites to use
for social media
- Use the article to lead
your newsletter with value
I would use a
graphic to demonstrate, so the slide would look like this:
Stay in control
When you’re not
talking about a slide turn it off! When
there is information on a screen people tend to re-read, re-examine and are not
concentrating on the speaker. If you hit
B on your keyboard, the screen will go black – and do it again and you’re back
on your slides. (W makes the screen go
white, but that often means you end up as a backlit silhouette!). Some clickers have an option for a blank
screen too.
A well-designed
slide deck will help to keep your audience engaged and underline your key
points professionally. Most slide
builders will offer help with structure and design – or use an AI aid like
Gamma.
Keep in mind that you
are the presenter, not your slide-deck, so ensure that the focus is on you.
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