Title: Golden Rules for PowerPoint Presentations
1Golden Rules for PowerPoint Presentations
- Tina Ornstein
- Israel STC Convention
- February 6, 2003
2Why and Who
- TC as magician
- Assist others ? become companys PPT mayven
- Dazzle with your own
- Your humble servant
- gt20 years experience as TC (Words, e-Sim,
AppSwing) - Many PPT hours (training and pre-sales)
- Art of Presentation course for Words
3Highlights
- Keys to successful PowerPoint presentations
- A few words on content
- Slide design essentials
- Effective use of graphics
- Multimedia oy vey!
4The Three Cornerstones
Content
The Three Cornerstones
Delivery
Design
5Content
- Objectives
- Relevant
- Credible and convincing
- Clear
- Your responsibilities
- Research
- Organization filtering, ordering
6Design
- Objectives
- Enhance the message
- Visually pleasing
- Your responsibilities
- Consistent design concept (template)
- Division/distribution of content
- Graphic enhancements
7Delivery
- Objectives
- Relaxed and confident
- Engaging
- Your responsibilities
- Practice
- Awareness of audience
- Material for between the lines
8The Bottom Line
A great presentation...
...aims to change behavior
9Content in a Nutshell
- Adapt content to goal, objectives and audience
- Timing is of the essence
- Opening
- Engage be creative
- Establish credibility
- Set context
- Closing
- Drive home desired actions, listener benefits
- Verify understanding
10Slide Design
- Hierarchy and contrast
- Bullets
- Fonts
- Colors
PowerPoint is an on-line medium.
11But First, A Word on Templates
- Ensure consistency in specific design elements
- Provide overall presentation look-and-feel
- Consider using graphic artist
- Where you can find free templates
- http//www.presentersuniversity.com/index.cfm
- http//www.websiteestates.com/freetemplates.html
- http//www.presentationpro.com/FreeSamples/
- http//www.graphicsland.com/powerpoint-templates.h
tm
12Hierarchy and Contrast
- Rank and Simplify
- Rank your elements
- Group related elements
- There are 3 main ways to create contrast
- Size (no more than 3 type sizes)
- Text style
- Color
13Hierarchy
14Bullets
- No more than 46 bullets per slide
- No more than 5-6 words per bullet
- Insert 1 bullet point at a time
- Dim previous bullet to highlight current
- Use phrases (not full sentences)
15(No Transcript)
16Fonts
- Type is unconscious persuader, sets style and
tone - Should serve text, not overpower
- No good/bad, just appropriate/inappropriate
17Fonts
- Fonts can convey formal vs casual, cold vs warm
18Fonts
- EsperFonto Daniel Will-Harriss interactive site
for choosing appropriate font http//webdesign.abo
ut.com/gi/dynamic/offsite.htm?sitehttp//www.will
-harris.com/use-type.htm
19Fonts
On-screen headerPrint body
- Font families
- Serif Times New Roman, Garamond
- Sans-serif Verdana, Arial
- Cursive Comic, Corsiva
On-screen bodyPrint header
Quotes, special effects
20Fonts
- To emphasize, use Bold, Shadow, Italic.
- Body Minimum 20 points.
- Headlines 35-45 points.
21Fonts Rules for Mixing
- Dont Same font for body and headlines, vary
weights/widths - 1 Serif (body) 1 Sans serif (headlines)
ideally of the same style (formal, casual, etc.) - Be consistent throughout, use master slides
22Colors
- Be consistent with corporate identity
- Hot vs cool
23Colors
- Choose background first
- If hot, decrease saturation
24Color Wheel Complementary Colors
25Color
- Create a presentation color scheme FormatgtSlide
Color SchemegtCustom
- Good font color contrast for readability
26(No Transcript)
27Graphics A Picture Is Worth 1000 Words
- The medium is the message
- Images reinforce text and narrative
- Increase learning by 200
- Increase retention of main points by 38
- Reduce explanation time by 40
28Graphics A Picture Is Worth 1000 Words
- Images evoke emotional response more likely to
change behavior - Done well expensive (time/) but worth it
PowerPoint is an on-line, highly visual medium.
29Graphics Support
Comments, Labels
30More on Graphics
- No more than 6 consecutive slides without a
graphic - Optimize for on-screen viewing
- Resources for finding graphics
- Microsoft Online Clipart Gallery
http//dgl.microsoft.com/ Â Â Â Â Â Â Â - Links to jokes, cartoons, funny sounds and
images http//www.funnybanners.com/ - http//www.presentersuniversity.com/downloads/dl_r
esources.cfm - Lycos search site for pictures, audio, video
http//multimedia.lycos.com/
31Poor Examples
Too busy
Small font
Contrast
32Poor Examples
33Better Use of Graphics
34Multimedia
- Sound, video, complex animation
- Even more features in Office 2002
PowerPoint is on-line, highly visual, multimedia.
35Bad Example
Dont you hate presentations that do this?
For every bullet!!
And then assault your senses with
36Built-in Multimedia Features
37When Used Properly
- Adds pizazz
- Wakes up the audience
- Drives home the main message
- If in doubt dont
38Golden Rules of PowerPoint Presentations
- A good PowerPoint presentation aims to change
behavior. - PowerPoint is on-line, highly visual, multimedia.
39Golden Rules of PowerPoint Presentations
- Fit content to goal, objectives, audience,
timeframe - Strong opening and closing
- Distribute content well across slides
- Consistent, visually pleasing design
- Fit font(s), color scheme to subject, audience
- No more than 1 serif and 1 sans serif font
- Complementary colors, good contrast
- Graphics to enhance text, add eye candy
- Animation to convey flow, dynamics
- Multimedia sparingly, to add pizazz