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Jen Riehle Design, Education & Outreach, OIT BEYOND POWERPOINT: PRESENTATIONS 101

Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

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Presentation on how to give a good presentation (irony much?) with a focus on the tools one might choose to manage their slide content and how best to prepare those slides.

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Page 1: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

Jen RiehleDesign, Education & Outreach, OIT

BEYOND POWERPOINT:PRESENTATIONS 101

Page 2: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

PRESENTATION GOALS

To convey information and promote understanding

To engage audience and keep them focused

What are we here to learn? Effective Presentations

Page 3: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

TO BE MEMORABLE

Moonlightbulb

All the awesome information in the world doesn’t matter if people don’t focus and remember you.

So how do you be memorable?

Page 4: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

OK, HOW DO I DO THAT?

1.Preparation

2.Preparation

3.Preparation

Ok, that’s not helpful.

Page 5: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

OK, HOW DO I DO THAT?

1.Preparation - CONTENT

2.Preparation - AUDIENCE

3.Preparation - PRESENTATION

Know your content inside and outUnderstand your audience and the likely question; context is also important (type of event, location, time of presentation, etc.)This will help you establish IF you need a slidedeck and if so, 1 and 2 will ensure the best possible presentation

Page 6: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

SO WAIT, WE DON’T HAVE TO HAVE SLIDES!?

Nic McPhee

Nope. Not always the time or place. Or maybe it’s a really simple one with only a couple slides with goofy pictures.So why do we have slideshows almost always?

Page 7: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

THE RIGHT STUFF

What do you need to present?

Lots of visuals?

Lots of interaction?

Easy access? Reusing the presentation?

Consider both your audience and yourself

What is going to work for you and your audience? How much time do you have? What’s their level of expertise?

So why WOULD use a slideshow?

Page 8: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

Yay, Presentation!Presentation tools allow us to better organize and share our content with the audience

Presentation tools allow us to demonstrate the critical concepts of the presentation in visual ways

Presentation tools are more engaging and keep the viewers involved throughout the presentation

Presentation tools allow us to easily share parts of the content with users after-the-fact

People expect presentation tools so we need to have something when we show up!

No contrast; serif fonts are harder to read on screens

Page 9: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

Ok, this is better, right?

• Presentation tools allow us to better organize and share our content with the audience

• Presentation tools allow us to demonstrate the critical concepts of the presentation in visual ways

• Presentation tools are more engaging and keep the viewers involved throughout the presentation

• Presentation tools allow us to easily share parts of the content with users after-the-fact

• People expect presentation tools so we need to have something when we show up!

(san-serif, high contrast)No style, bright in dark rooms (better a dark background in a dark room and vice versa), LOTS of text in a small font

Page 10: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

Organize presentation content

Use visual aids to convey key messages

Keep participants engaged

Share presentation content easily

Manage participant expectations

WHY DO WE NEED PRESENTATION TOOLS?

Why does this slide work? Good contrast and color, useful heading, san-serif font, short and to-the-point bullets

Page 11: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

41%

32%

13%

8%

4% 2%

Speaker reads slidesPoor font choicesBullets too longToo much flying slides and textOverly complex diagram and chartsAnnoying use of sounds

MOST ANNOYING THINGS ABOUT PRESENTATIONS...

“Poor font choices” - illegible fonts, poor color contrast or too small

Others? Which do you hate the most?

Page 12: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

MAKING YOUR SLIDES WORK FOR YOU

Using the tools

Presentation interaction

Sharing the slides

If you are going to have slides, use the right tools in the best way

Page 13: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

USING THE TOOLS

Page 14: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

1.EXPLAINExplain what’sbeing displayed;make sure it’slegible!

2.HIGHLIGHTHighlight the keyconcepts

3.DISCUSSDiscuss the relevance

CHARTS AND GRAPHS

Use colors! Apply borders and shading!

Page 15: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

OUTLINE VIEW

Nice for having the content at your fingertips

Page 16: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

NOTES VIEW

Nice for keep track of key messages without putting all the content on the slide

Page 17: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

HANDOUTS

Slides per page

1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9

Outline view

Notes view

Exporting

Don’t forget to check on background color print options!

This can encourage people to stop listening - they have all the info already, right? - makes it that much harder to engage them. Don’t put everything in the slides.

Page 18: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

EFFECTIVE IMAGES

StefanGreat way to grab attention and make your point but can be scary to use.- You need to know your content REALLY well. No bullets to fallback on.- No context (without slide notes) on handouts.

Page 19: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

PRESENTATION INTERACTION(AKA, “WAKE UP!”)

Page 20: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

WHO’S THIS?

Who is this? Stephen Colbert

Page 21: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

WHO’S THIS?

And this? Bill Gates

Page 22: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

ANNND...

Steve Jobs

Why’d I do that? In this case it’s because they’re all great public speakers. Every now and then it’s good to make sure people are awake.Ask their opinion, get feedback, stop and stretch - whatever you need, depending on length of presentation

Page 23: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

SHARING YOUR PRESENTATION

Page 24: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

SHARING YOUR PRESENTATION

Think about intellectual property

Include notes. Or don’t. Your call.

Format of the presentation

creative commons!

Are you ok with anyone use this with attribution?One way to mitigate free-for-all usage is not including your notesSharing in a non-editable format (pdf)

Page 25: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

SHARING YOUR SLIDES

Formats

As a PDF

As a JPG

As a native file (.PPT, .PPTX, .KEY)

Emailing the presentation

Putting it online

Slideshare.net

PDF means no one can edit it; ppt or key mean other can modifyEmail may be tough if it’s in a proprietary formatOnline is easySharing on something like slideshare is contributing to shared knowledge - awesome!

Page 26: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

APPLICATION OPTIONS

PowerPoint

Keynote

Google Docs

Prezi

Beamer

PDF

Beamer- open source for Windows, Mac, Linux- requires knowledge of mark-up languagePrezi- web-based and free, but there is a Pro version

Page 27: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

STILL PAYING ATTENTION?

Page 28: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

PRESENTATION STRATEGIES

Have notes

Multiple copies of slides, in multiple locations, in multiple formats

Keep a copy of your fonts

Practice!

Page 29: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

HATE PUBLIC SPEAKING?

StefanI’m sorry. 1. Practice! You’ll feel better the better you feel about the content2. Make your slides fit your personality so you’re comfortable with them- have fun!Get started - things go more smoothly once you’re in the groove.

Page 30: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

PREPARE! PRACTICE!

Use the right tool(s) for your audience

Back-up your presentation; make it available in case of emergency

Consider sharing your presentation

Recap your important messages

IN CONCLUSION

Page 31: Beyond PowerPoint: Presentations 101

Questions?

Jen [email protected]

@ncsumarit

THANKS FOR YOUR TIME!