You've most likely found yourself in this position
at least once in your career: A higher-up walks up
to you and tells you, "We need to get a presentation
together for the Forbin Project fast!" Because the
deadline for such a "request" is usually yesterday,
now is the time to reach for your favorite
presentation graphics program. State-of-the-art
software makes it easy to assemble and update an
engineering, scientific, or business presentation.
Just because you don't have the time to create a
multimedia extravaganza doesn't mean your
presentation has to be lackluster. Here are ten
steps that can help make noticeable improvements to
your next presentation.
1. Analyze your audience
Take the time to define exactly who will be listening to the presentation to
guarantee your program is on target. Start by asking a few questions: What's
their educational background? Are they the general public or your peers? Are
they new to the field or experienced in it? And most important of all: Why are
you giving the presentation? Write your answers on sticky notes and stick them
to your computer screen as a reminder as you work on the rest of the steps.
2. Make a plan
After you've defined your audience, decide what to say and how you want to
say it. Ask yourself a few more questions: What do you want to accomplish with
the presentation? What specific items must be covered? How exactly do you want
your audience to react? Build an outline of your presentation based on your
responses. How you deliver the message is harder to quantify than the content,
but keep your options open: The presentation will be successful only if the
audience reacts positively to the message.
3. Keep it short
Resist the urge to create an epic. The Right Stuff and Gone with the Wind are
good films despite their length, not because of it. The longer the presentation,
the greater the danger of losing your audience's attention. Once you pass 15
minutes, vary the pace of the presentation or it's all over-even before the fat
lady has sung.
4. Use a minimum of colors
You're an engineer or scientist or businessperson -not an art director. Just
because your computer lets you use 16.9 million colors on a slide doesn't mean
you have to use all of them! Work with a few colors. Stay away from dark type on
a light background-and vice versa-unless you want your viewers' eyeballs popping
out of their heads. The less contrast between type and background colors, the
less strain on the eyes. This doesn't mean the colors should be muted:
Experiment with cool backgrounds and warm type and avoid extremes.
5. Don't use special effects for their own sake
Most presentation packages now include animation and video-like frame
transitions, but be careful! These effects should enhance your message, not
compete with it. Dancing, bouncing logos may be good for an opening and
closing-especially for a question-and-answer slide show-but use them sparingly.
If viewers are looking at your effects and saying, "Wow, that's cool," they're
missing your message. As in all aspects of presentation design, restraint is a
virtue.
6. Keep the number of words per slide to a minimum
Billboard companies generally allow a maximum of eight words per sign. Use a
similar rule for your presentations-you will quickly discover that is better to
have more slides with less information than vice versa. One of the worst things
that can happen is when the viewer is reading point five while you are talking
about point one (or vice versa). In either case, your viewers won't be listening
to what you're saying. Adding more slides is the single most important thing you
can do to improve the impact of your presentation, and it needn't cost extra:
One of the advantages of computer-based presentations is that they carry no
outside imaging costs.
7. Use a consistent graphic style
Graphics, like special effects, should draw and hold the viewer's attention.
The graphics should be in harmony with the rest of the presentation: Any changes
to the visual rhythm may cause the viewer to pause and think about the way you
are presenting your information. While they are mulling this over, they are
missing the rest of your presentation. For example, use the same font for all
main text in your presentation. Feel free to use other typefaces for emphasis or
headers, but don't overdo.
8. Use photographs effectively
One of the best ways to add interest to any presentation is to use
photographs. Companies like Corel Systems Corp. offer hundreds of Photo CD
stock-image discs that you can use to enhance your presentations. Alternatively,
if you need a specific image-such as a photograph of your company's headquarters
or staff- use a professional photographer for the best results. Such expenditure
is not a luxury-it can save the life of your presentation. Give the photographer
a "shot list" with written descriptions of all images you want in your
presentation. Let him or her know that you would like to see a variety of camera
angles and perspectives, but be flexible: A good photographer will be able to
capture spontaneous images that can add life to any presentation. As an added
cost savings, these images can be reused in company publications. Don't be cheap
when negotiating the appropriate rights-it can save you money in the long run.
9. Avoid Visual Overload
Start by determining the size of the screen on which you will project your
slides. A graphic style that works great on a twelve-by-twelve-foot screen might
get way too busy on a screen half that size. And if you're presenting on a
monitor or a laptop's LCD screen, that's all the more reason to simplify,
simplify, simplify.
10. Vary your visuals
Keep your presentation moving by blending different types of slides. While
you can use all-text slides, adding graphics and photographs will create a more
effective program. Use dramatic storytelling charts and graphs combined with
text and photographs to keep the presentation from slowing down and becoming
predictable.
That's it: ten ways to make your next presentation easier to produce and
absorb. Just remember for whom you're creating the presentation, why you're
giving it, what you want to say, and how you want to accomplish those goals. The
rest is easy