Thursday, March 31, 2011

This is not the information age

We're moving on really fast. The so-called Information Age has arrived, settled in and changed our lives. We've been drowning in data from all directions for a while now. We know where to find it all and the technology delivers it pretty reliably, wherever we are. So what do we do with all this information?

Time to stop talking about the information age and start thinking about the persuasion age. How do you stand out and get your message heard?

 In the context of presentation technique, people have the resources to gather their own information and there are simple ways to get it to them. You really don't need to stand there listing all the facts. What many people need is the motivation and inspiration to use that information to get results. They need to know what stuff really means and why it's important. Where can they find the rest of the details and what can be done with them? What good is it? The big SO WHAT?

Far too many speakers are still just delivering information. They fail to connect their content to emotion and purpose and fail to motivate people to interest and action.

Your audience has become more demanding. Their time is a precious resource and they won't accept boring PowerPoint presentations full of details. We all demand relevance, stimulation and real understanding. We always have actually.

So slow down a bit. Work on connecting with the audience. Think about what you can add to the subject that they can't look up on Google or your website. It's really not so difficult once you dare to put yourself into the presentation.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

The trick is in the planning - step four

I love PostIts! You can do so much with them and they have to be the best planning tools ever. Maybe this would be a fun thing to try.

If you're planning a new presentation which is just a bit too complex and you have many ideas in desperate need of structuring, then try this. Take a pile of PostIts, maybe in different colours. Get hold of a pen with a nice broad tip. Find a big whiteboard or a piece of paper from a flip chart. A big desk surface will also do the trick.

Write down all of your separate ideas on PostIts and for the time being just spread them out over a surface so you can see them all. Break up big ideas into smaller ones and add even more PostIts. When the ideas start drying up, group the PostIts together into categories or subjects or sections of the talk. Pick out the best ideas and throw away the rest. Think about how much time you have and whether you can get through all this material. When you have the categories sorted out you can start to convert them to messages or statements. Think in terms of slide headlines that describe the main points you are trying to make.

Then you can arrange these main points in order and start to add some supporting statements or sources of data. After this you need some transitions between the main points, which could be written on PostIts of a different colour. You may want to add notes about how certain points can be put across, also on PostIts. Somewhere here you can transfer the whole thing into PowerPoint and turn the words into pictures, videos diagrams and other illustrations. What you have to think about is only writing the point itself on the PostIts, not the actual words you will use to get the point across. Supporting statements/data should also be very brief; keywords and bullet points.

It might not work all the way for you but most help can probably be had in the early planning stage of presentations. I find that deciding the order of slides or sections of the presentation is a lot easier using PostIts on a whiteboard than working in PowerPoint.

Hopefully you'll find a little bit of inspiration in there somewhere. Have fun!

Friday, March 18, 2011

Friday again!

All this snow is getting to me. Time to dig out the car again... Here are two small quotes to finish off the week.

"Of those who say nothing, few are silent."
Thomas Neiel

"The most precious things in speech are the pauses."
Sir Ralph Richardson

Monday, March 14, 2011

Designing slides - there's a lot of help out there

There are a few great books on the art of designing good slides. For example: " Presentation Zen: simple ideas on presentation design and delivery." by Garr Reynolds or "slide:ology: the art and science of creating great presentations." by Nancy Duarte. Nancy Duarte has also written the wonderful, beautiful book "resonate: present visual stories that transform audiences." which really does live up to its title. If you like graphic design in general then you'll love thumbing through this book. It's a wonderful source of inspiration on planning presentations in general and one of my absolutely favourite books.

But I would suggest that if you want to create really stunning slides then the best source of inspiration comes from books on graphic design. One of my favourites that's piled full of inspiration is "Design elements. A graphic style manual." by Timothy Samara. I have a couple more at home whose titles I've forgotten for the moment. Send me a mail if you're interested and I'll give you some more suggestions.

Friday, March 11, 2011

...and an extra thing just because it's Friday

"What you do speaks so loud that I cannot hear what you say."
Ralph Waldo Emerson


The trick is in the planning - step three. Make life easier for your audience!

When you figured out your main message and your purpose for being there, and you've considered who the audience are and what they want to hear from you, then you should have at least a general idea of what you're going to put into the presentation. At this point you might want to try the following approach. Open up a number of empty slides in PowerPoint (just keep pressing the new slide button). Pick a suitable number for the time that you're going to present. Then fill in the titles of the slides by writing what the point of that slide would be. Another way to look at this is to write the conclusion or the bottom line that belongs to each slide. Ideally you ought to be able to read all the titles from start to finish and hear yourself telling a story that has a beginning middle and end. So you can also start by writing out that story and then break it up into slide titles of course.



For example a slide somewhere in the middle of the presentation might describe a series of costs that would be entered into a budget in the form of the table. The title might be "Our total costs amount to XXX". So the conclusion becomes the title and the audience don't really need to listen to a description of the rest of it unless they are particularly interested. The more common title on a slide like this would be "Costs" or "Budget"or something else equally non-informative. It's usually a description of what the subject is rather than what the actual point is. You're placing quite heavy demands on your audience if they've got to listen to every detail you say in order to figure out themselves what the point of each part of the presentation is. So make it easy on them!