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10 Tips For More Effective PowerPoint Presentations

The document provides 10 tips for creating more effective PowerPoint presentations: 1) Write a script first before creating slides, 2) Only include one main point per slide, 3) Avoid paragraphs of text on slides, 4) Pay attention to simple design elements like fonts, backgrounds, and alignment, 5) Use images sparingly when they enhance the content, 6) Consider your own presentation style beyond just the slides, 7) Open with an attention-grabbing hook, 8) Engage the audience with questions, 9) Maintain a lively speaking style with variation, and 10) Be willing to break rules when it improves the presentation.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
85 views

10 Tips For More Effective PowerPoint Presentations

The document provides 10 tips for creating more effective PowerPoint presentations: 1) Write a script first before creating slides, 2) Only include one main point per slide, 3) Avoid paragraphs of text on slides, 4) Pay attention to simple design elements like fonts, backgrounds, and alignment, 5) Use images sparingly when they enhance the content, 6) Consider your own presentation style beyond just the slides, 7) Open with an attention-grabbing hook, 8) Engage the audience with questions, 9) Maintain a lively speaking style with variation, and 10) Be willing to break rules when it improves the presentation.

Uploaded by

Oana Dolea
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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10 Tips for More Effective PowerPoint Presentations

 BY DUSTIN WAX
How much does it suck to be in the audience for yet another drawn-out, boring, lifeless slideshow? Worse yet, how
much does it such to be the onegiving it?
The truth is, bad PowerPoint happens to good people, and quite often the person giving the presentation is just as
much a victim as the poor sods listening to her or him.
Here are ten tips to help you add a little zing! to your next presentation. They are, of course, far from
comprehensive, but they’re a start. Feel free to share your own tips in the comments.
1. Write a script.
A little planning goes a long way. Most presentations are written in PowerPoint (or some other presentation
package) without any sort of rhyme or reason.
That’s bass-ackwards. Since the point of your slides is to illustrate and expand what you are going to say to your
audience. You should know what you intend to say and then figure out how to visualize it. Unless you are an expert
at improvising, make sure you write out or at least outline your presentation before trying to put together slides.
And make sure your script follows good storytelling conventions: give it a beginning, middle, and end; have a clear
arc that builds towards some sort of climax; make your audience appreciate each slide but be anxious to find out
what’s next; and when possible, always leave ‘em wanting more.
2. One thing at a time, please.
At any given moment, what should be on the screen is the thing you’re talking about. Our audience will almost
instantly read every slide as soon as it’s displayed; if you have the next four points you plan to make up there, they’ll
be three steps ahead of you, waiting for you to catch up rather than listening with interest to the point you’re making.
Plan your presentation so just one new point is displayed at any given moment. Bullet points can be revealed one at
a time as you reach them. Charts can be put on the next slide to be referenced when you get to the data the chart
displays. Your job as presenter is to control the flow of information so that you and your audience stay in sync.
3. No paragraphs.
Where most presentations fail is that their authors, convinced they are producing some kind of stand-alone
document, put everything they want to say onto their slides, in great big chunky blocks of text.
Congratulations. You’ve just killed a roomful of people. Cause of death: terminal boredom poisoning.
Your slides are the illustrations for your presentation, not the presentation itself. They should underline and
reinforce what you’re saying as you give your presentation — save the paragraphs of text for your script.
PowerPoint and other presentation software have functions to display notes onto the presenter’s screen that do not
get sent to the projector, or you can use notecards, a separate word processor document, or your memory. Just don’t
put it on the screen – and for goodness’ sake, if you do for some reason put it on the screen, don’t stand with your
back to your audience and read it from the screen!
4. Pay attention to design.
PowerPoint and other presentation packages offer all sorts of ways to add visual “flash” to your slides: fades,
swipes, flashing text, and other annoyances are all too easy to insert with a few mouse clicks.
Avoid the temptation to dress up your pages with cheesy effects and focus instead on simple design basics:
 Use a sans serif font for body text. Sans serifs like Arial, Helvetica, or Calibri tend to be the easiest to read
on screens.
 Use decorative fonts only for slide headers, and then only if they’re easy to read. Decorative fonts –
calligraphy, German blackface, futuristic, psychotic handwriting, flowers, art nouveau, etc. – are hard to read
and should be reserved only for large headlines at the top of the page. Better yet, stick to a classy serif font like
Georgia or Baskerville.
 Put dark text on a light background. Again, this is easiest to read. If you must use a dark background – for
instance, if your company uses a standard template with a dark background – make sure your text is quite light
(white, cream, light grey, or pastels) and maybe bump the font size up two or three notches.
 Align text left or right. Centered text is harder to read and looks amateurish. Line up all your text to a right-
hand or left-hand baseline – it will look better and be easier to follow.
 Avoid clutter. A headline, a few bullet points, maybe an image – anything more than that and you risk
losing your audience as they sort it all out.
5. Use images sparingly
There are two schools of thought about images in presentations. Some say they add visual interest and keep
audiences engaged; others say images are an unnecessary distraction.
Both arguments have some merit, so in this case the best option is to split the difference: use images only when they
add important information or make an abstract point more concrete.
While we’re on the subject, absolutely do not use PowerPoint’s built-in clipart. Anything from Office 2003 and
earlier has been seen by everyone in your audience a thousand times – they’ve become tired, used-up clichés, and I
hopefully don’t need to tell you to avoid tired, used-up clichés in your presentations. Office 2007 and non-Office
programs have some clipart that isn’t so familiar (though it will be, and soon) but by now, the entire concept of
clipart has about run its course – it just doesn’t feel fresh and new anymore.
6. Think outside the screen.
Remember, the slides on the screen are only part of the presentation – and not the main part. Even though you’re
liable to be presenting in a darkened room, give some thought to your own presentation manner – how you hold
yourself, what you wear, how you move around the room. You are the focus when you’re presenting, no matter how
interesting your slides are.
7. Have a hook.
Like the best writing, the best presentation shook their audiences early and then reel them in. Open with something
surprising or intriguing, something that will get your audience to sit up and take notice. The most powerful hooks
are often those that appeal directly to your audience’s emotions – offer them something awesome or, if it’s
appropriate, scare the pants off of them. The rest of your presentation, then, will be effectively your promise to make
the awesome thing happen, or the scary thing not happen.
8. Ask questions.
Questions arouse interest, pique curiosity, and engage audiences. So ask a lot of them. Build tension by posing a
question and letting your audience stew a moment before moving to the next slide with the answer. Quiz their
knowledge and then show them how little they know. If appropriate, engage in a little question-and-answer with
your audience, with you asking the questions.
9. Modulate, modulate, modulate.
Especially when you’ve done a presentation before, it can be easy to fall into a drone, going on and on and on and
on and on with only minimal changes to your inflection. Always speak as if you were speaking to a friend, not as if
you are reading off of index cards (even if you are). If keeping up a lively and personable tone of voice is difficult
for you when presenting, do a couple of practice run-throughs. If you still can’t get it right and presentations are a
big part of your job, take a public speaking course or join Toastmasters.
10. Break the rules.
As with everything else, there are times when each of these rules – or any other rule you know – won’t apply. If you
know there’s a good reason to break a rule, go ahead and do it. Rule breaking is perfectly acceptable behavior – it’s
ignoring the rules or breaking them because you just don’t know any better that leads to shoddy boring presentations
that lead to boredom, depression, psychopathic breaks, and eventually death. And you don’t want that, do you?
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