Category Archives: PowerPoint

Presentation Summit 2012 (And I’m a Featured Speaker)

For the last couple of years, I’ve headed west to various cities to attend Rick Altman’s excellent Presentation Summit. It’s the only conference in the world dedicated solely to presentation, and it attracts the top players in the industry as attendees and speakers (Nancy Duarte, Garr Reynolds, etc.)

And this year I’m honored to be a speaker myself. I’ll be giving a seminar entitled…

“In The Trenches: Real-World Solutions to Corporate Presentation Challenges”

While I don’t come from a corporate background, that’s the space I’ve been playing in for years. And the business world throws up endless challenges to good design and effective communication—and not just with regard to presentation. 

In this session, I’ll share tips and tricks that I’ve developed over the years to address these corporate challenges while still producing effective presentations. I’ll discuss strategies for encouraging clients to write less on screen, for painlessly creating separate handouts, for creating custom templates in minutes by “reskinning,” and for keeping content highly editable. I’ll also discuss some unique PowerPoint formats for when the client says, “But I don’t want it to look like PowerPoint…”

Take a look at the entire conference lineup which includes a video preview I recorded. Or you can watch it here…

 

It’s a great conference. If you think you might benefit from attending, drop me a line. I’d be happy to tell you more about it. Or just sign up here!

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Buying Presentation Graphics

Last week, Duarte Design, launched Duarte Diagrammer, an online store offering pre-made presentation diagrams and graphics. All graphics are downloadable as PPT files, whereupon they can be edited, recolored and further customized. Duarte is certainly not the first to this game, but I do like their iTunes-like pricing (everything is 99 cents) and the categorization that attempts to help the user identify exactly the type of diagram they need. Many of the diagrams will be familiar to readers of Nancy’s excellent book, Slide:ology, which includes a healthy section on various diagrams and process graphics.

It should be no secret by now that I’m all for shortcuts for presentation design—such as reusing elements from previous presentation, using PPT’s tools instead of Photoshop and even “stealing”. But, I have another dirty secret, and that is that on occasion I actually buy other people’s work in the form of pre-made graphics.

Get Out the Credit Card

Because I have the skills to create many graphics myself, most often I do fire up the sketch pad or Illustrator or PPT and start building needed graphics from scratch. (Sometimes, I will also make use of pre-made vector stock files.)

But every so often, I have a need for a presentation graphic that someone has already spent a lot of time and thought creating. So I get out my credit card.

A recent client insisted that their product line be shown as a hierarchical pyramid. Okay. I wanted to give them a 3D pyramid, but I couldn’t find anything with the right number of levels in my past work or on any professional stock site (like Shutterstock or Getty.) But I did find a perfect set of 40 PowerPoint-ready pyramids at PresentationLoad.com. So, $29 and 3 minutes later, I had my pyramid and continued working on the content. Sure, I could have spent an hour or two perfecting the perspective myself in Illustrator, then importing into PowerPoint, but it just wasn’t worth the time. Take a look—you can buy the same pyramid right here

What’s Your Time Worth?

My friend Mike Parkinson runs a great site called BizGraphicsOnDemand.com, and puts it to me this way a few years ago:

“What’s your time worth? Isn’t spending a few bucks on a pre-made graphic better than spending hours designing it yourself when the result will be the same or probably even better?”

He’s right. I’ve bought a few things from him over the years. Mike’s site also has really nice categorization, and if you’re interested in really learning how to create and choose the right business graphics, I suggest Mike’s seminars, book and other resources which you learn about at his other site, BillionDollarGraphics.com.

Graphics, Not Templates

The above are just a few that sites provide quality elements for your presentations, but there are many more you can find that will sell you whole template designs. The reason I’m not recommending those sites is because I’m a firm believer that you don’t actually need templates for presentations. If you missed it, I discussed that in a guest post at Indezine.com. But since a graphic itself very often is the focus of a slide, by all means take advantage of those who have tread before you…

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Presidential Presentation

If you were in control, how would you present the world’s most important information? Written document? Speech? Video? Stone tablets? …PowerPoint?

Earlier this month the CIA declassified seven video intelligence briefings created for Ronald Reagan which got me thinking about Presidential presentation.

Arguably, some of the most vital contemporary information comes either from or to the President of the United States. And it’s interesting to note the various methods Presidents have used to communicate.

Speech

At the end of the day, the most lasting and world-changing presentations tend to be the unadorned live speech. Lincoln redefined America with 272 spoken words at Gettysburg. FDR calmed and connected with the nation through his radio fireside chats. Kennedy inspired millions with idealistic speech such as the Man on the Moon speech to Congress. And Reagan mourned for the country with his Challenger disaster address.  

PowerPoint?

While we have had a Presidential candidate present with PowerPoint (not a rousing success) and we’ve seen gubernatorial PowerPoint, we haven’t yet had a full-fledged slide presentation by a President.

Obama has come very close though with his State of the Union speeches. If you were in the House chamber, you would see no slides on screens, but the White House releases portrait-sized “slides” to accompany the speeches. These graphics served both as a documentary complement and as visual speaker support when combined with the video in an “Enhanced State of the Union” version. I have to say that if you haven’t seen the enhanced version online, it’s quite smart. And the graphics (slides) are incredibly well done.

Written Document

While the Founding Fathers may have produced this country’s most effective piece of communication via written document, it may be true that more vital information flows to the President on the printed page than flows out.

Every day the President receives a top secret presentation of international intelligence called the President’s Daily Brief (PDB). The most famous and controversial of these was the one from August 6, 2001 which contained the written heading, “Bin Laden Determined to Strike in US.” 

Could there be a better format than written memo for the PDB? Maybe, maybe not.

But that brings us back to Reagan…

Video?

Though some may believe that Reagan requested all of his PDBs in video format, it’s certainly more likely and realistic that the newly released video briefings were occasional supplements on specific larger topics. Even today, producing a 10 minute informational video piece is not an easy or quick task. But one would hope that a video PDB were it produced today, would feel a bit more mature than Reagan’s which, quite frankly, seem more appropriate for a 5th grade social studies class than the Oval Office. Take a look…

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SlideShark – The Newest iPad PowerPoint Solution

In the neverending quest for a solid presentation solution for the iPad, the latest contender is SlideShark, an iPad app (with accompanying web management) from the good folks at BrainShark.

Whereas there have been presentation management and display apps for the iPad, such as the very good Presentation Link, SlideShark is the first app to my knowledge that accurately translates existing animated PowerPoint slides for iPad playback.

To use SlideShark, you need to first upload your PPT files to your account on their website where they are converted for use on the iPad. Then, once you have the iPad app installed, you can download your converted presentations and play them through the SlideShark app. On the iPad, you have the option to choose different presentations and to resequence or delete slides within a presentation, even on the fly while presenting.

What’s the catch? No content on your slides can be edited on the iPad as your PPT file has been converted to a proprietary format for playback. Also, slide transitions and certain advanced animations are not currently supported.

If you have a designed PowerPoint file which has necessary animations, then SlideShark is a good solution. If you are not concerned about animations and need to simply show static, non-editable slides, then Presentation Link or my personal favorite solution—JPEGs in the iPad Photo App—is still a good road to go down.

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Categories: Animation, iPad, PowerPoint.

11 Rules for Better Presentation Typography

1. Use Sans Serif Fonts

Much has been written on this topic, so I will just say that I much prefer sans serif fonts (such as Helvetica or Century Gothic) to serif fonts (such as Times New Roman.) The difference is in those little embellishments on the letters which are called “serifs.” Traditionally, serifs helped the eye to read printed text by linking the letters, but today they generally mark something as a text-heavy document. 

On-screen presentation—which should have far fewer words than a printed piece—generally calls for sans serif fonts.

2. Use Standard Fonts

Here’s the scoop: If you use a cool custom font, then send your presentation to another computer for viewing or editing, your work will no longer look the way you intended it to if the new computer does not have your custom font installed. “But I’m using a font that came installed with my PC!,” you say. Well, here’s a secret: Every version of Windows and every business’s system configuration can contain different sets of fonts. You can be guaranteed of always having a few in common, but don’t assume everyone has Gill Sans…

“Can’t I just include the font file?” you ask? Well, you may know how to add a font to your computer, but most of corporate America does not (trust me.) Then what happens when someone forgets to keep the font with the file, or a company’s security policy forbids font installation? And then there are the legal issues to sharing a purchased font… 

Believe me, I hate Arial as much as the next person, but what I really hate is getting a call from a client or boss complaining that the text is all F’d up and I need to fix it immediately. 

So, do I ever use custom fonts? Occasionally. But I do it ONLY when I am 100% confident that I will be controlling every version of a deck on my own computers or if I will ONLY be distributing a PDF to others. 

I wrote about my favorite standard font here

3. Be VERY careful turning text into a graphic

One technique for using non-standard fonts in a presentation is to turn the text into a graphic, either with Photoshop or Illustrator, or by using copy and paste-special (as a .png) within PowerPoint.

I use both of these techniques, but the challenge is that you end up with uneditable text that cannot be changed or added to by other users. Whenever possible, you want to keep PowerPoint files completely editable by all users, so tread carefully.

4. Don’t Embed Fonts

PowerPoint has long offered the ability to embed fonts into a file so that other users without specified custom fonts can view and edit a presentation. The problem here is that font embedding is simply one of the program’s buggiest feature. In short, only certain TrueType fonts can be embedded, the feature is not cross-platform, and there is a good chance that an embedded font will corrupt a presentation, making it uneditable even by the original owner. Just avoid to prevent teary late nights.  

5. Avoid “Subtlety”

Thin fonts (such as Helvetica Light) are favorites of print designers, but they have a tendency to break up on screen, especially at smaller type sizes. 

Similarly, text without enough contrast (such as light gray type over a white background) may completely disappear in low contrast screen situations such as a brightly lit room with an underpowered projector. 

Keep things beefy and high contrast.

6. Avoid Centering Multiple lines of text

Headers need not be top left justified, but if you do center your headers, don’t let your text extend beyond a single line. It will take the eye longer to “carriage-return” from one line to the one below it if the next words are not in the same horizontal position as those above it. You should be helping an audience read as quickly as possible, not challenging their eyeballs. 

You can more easily get away with multiple lines of centered text in the body of a slide, but you do need to keep the left sides of your paragraphs as neat and in line as possible (see “soft returns” below.)

7. Use Tabs & Soft Returns

It’s tempting to keep hitting the spacebar to create space within a line of text or to move a word to the next line without creating a new paragraph, but it’s really bad form. Set and use tabs to move text; and hit shift-return to create a “soft return” when you want to avoid starting a new paragraph. You’ll thank me when your boss starts editing your text.

Pay particular attention to using soft returns when your paragraphs break up sets of words that really should be kept together. For example, if your layout leaves “United” at the end of one line and “Nations” on the next, put a soft return in before “United” so this phrase stays whole. (Professional layout programs have options to prevent phrases like these from ever breaking, but alas you have to do it manually in PowerPoint.) 

8. Emphasize Text Correctly

Whether producing a document for print or for screen with PowerPoint, create restrained variety by varying text through:

  • Bold Type
  • Contrasting Colored Type
  • Larger Sized Type
  • All Caps/Small Caps
  • Isolation from other text on a page (use of negative space)

Note that you can italicize text to highlight, but I have found that with most fonts, this doesn’t create as strong a contrast on screen as do the above solutions. So just make sure it’s catching your viewer’s eye the way you want it to. 

Here are a two incorrect ways to emphasize text…

  • Different Fonts. Only mix and match fonts if it is for a very specific purpose such as putting all headers in a handwritten font or putting a series of block quotes in a serif font. You’ll hear many people say to limit your slides to a maximum of two or three fonts. 95% of my presentations use a single font. Stick to one.
  • Underlined Text. This is a holdover from the days of typewriters. In addition to underlining being very difficult on the eye to read, today it simply indicates a hyperlink. So only use it for hyperlinks

9. Avoid Widows & Orphans

There is some disagreement as to what exactly defines a “widow” or “orphan,” and in print layout there is more to consider. But for presentation purposes let’s define widows and orphans as words that appear all by their lonesome on the last line of a paragraph or that jut out from the right side of a paragraph, breaking the vertical right line of a left-justified paragraph. 

These typographical outliers create visual tension and make for more difficult reading. The solution is to use soft returns (see above) to wrap text in a more visually pleasing manner. But watch out: as text is edited, you may have to remove or change some of these soft returns.

10. Use Paragraph & Line Spacing

Do NOT hit return twice to insert a space between paragraphs. Instead, use paragraph spacing to set a value for “after paragraph.” This will save you extra keystrokes and allow you to globally adjust spacing on a page should you need to fill things out or squeeze in extra content. Paragraph spacing can be set in a master text box or for any individual chunk of text.

Line spacing in PowerPoint is set to a default of “1” but I often find that a little much and change it to “.9” If you do change line spacing, make sure you do a multiple of 1 instead of an actual text point size. This will ensure things don’t get out of whack when you have to change the font size on a page. 

11. One Space After a Period

Sorry folks, but this is neither a choice, nor a matter of stylistic preference. Two spaces after a period was a necessary convention to separate sentences when we used typewriters and all letters were the same width. 

Unless you’re using a single space font (like Courier) to mimic a typewriter, stick to one space after a period. Period.

 

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Categories: Design, Fonts, PowerPoint.

My Favorite Presentation Font

Like most graphic designers, I have thousands of fonts on my computer that I’ve collected over the years. And, like most graphic designers, I probably only ever use a half dozen of those fonts on any regular basis. When it comes to presentation, I use even fewer.

At Edelman, we use Franklin Gothic as it’s one of the more professional-looking fonts included in our standard PC build—even though it should not be considered a “standard font.” (When distributing presentations digitally, we nearly always convert to PDF, which eliminates any issues if the receiver does not have Franklin Gothic.)

But when I’m not using Franklin Gothic or the dreaded Arial (which is often an unfortunate necessity), my favorite font is Century Gothic.

Like Arial and Times New Roman, Century Gothic is a standard font available on nearly all PCs and Macs. Unlike those first two stalwarts, however, Century Gothic has maintained a relatively fresh, contemporary feel. It feels modern and clean with just the right amount of stylization. 

Century Gothic is to Justin Long’s Mac as Arial is to John Hodgman’s PC.

It is also on the wide side, which I like to think forces shorter headlines and text blocks (unlike Arial Narrow which seems to beg for overwriting.)

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Categories: Design, Fonts, PowerPoint.

Speaker Deck – Another Competitor to Slideshare

There’s another website setting out to compete with Slideshare, and I think it’s really, really good. Speaker Deck is, as far as I can tell, only a few weeks old, but they’ve clearly been thinking for a long time about functionality, design and user interface.

Similar to Slideshare, Speaker Deck is a platform for uploading and sharing presentations. What sets it apart though is the clean interface and “scanability” of each deck. Just by moving your mouse, you can get previews of an entire deck just from a presentation’s thumbnail. I’ve never seen anything like it. Just go to the site and see what I mean.

Also, Speaker Deck understands, just as Present.me does, that users want to navigate and skim presentations as quickly as possible.

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Categories: PDF, PowerPoint, Simplicity.

Is Clip Art Ever Okay?

To paraphrase my friend Scott Schwertly from his book How to Be a Presentation God…

If you’re comfortable walking into a
client meeting with a clip-on tie, 

then by all means go ahead and use clip art.

While the umbrella of “clip art” can include tasteful and professional images or graphics, in general it defines cheesy, stereotypical and juvenile artwork. Of course, no one wants to be perceived by an audience or client as cheesy, but with clip art there’s a greater danger lurking than simply being tagged as a goofball:

Clip art can undermine your entire credibility and legitimacy of message, because it screams: “Don’t take what I have to say seriously.”

Example? A recent (non-classified) US Army presentation entitled, “Strategic Choices — Adapt to Win.” This one deck may actually break every single rule of good presentation design (bad fonts, colors, low resolution imagery, lack of balance, death by bullet points, little white space, nonsensical charts, and the list goes on and on…) Truly, I think someone could write a PhD dissertation on ineffective communication in this document, but for me the most disturbing part of it was the very serious subject matter at the heart of this that was being treated with cutesy cartoons and tons of clip art. 

The above is far from the worst slide, but I think it’s emblematic of the whole deck, with its cartoons, lightning bolts (?) and heavily beveled arrows. Does the graphic treatment match the importance and gravity of supporting and supplying our military? I’m not saying the design should be austere or solemn—just not comical.

And speaking of comical, here are a few more slides in all their comic sans glory. Download the whole deck here.

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Record and Deliver Your Presentations with Present.me

Present.me is a brand new presentation site that I’m very excited about. 

Some people have described it as Slideshare meets Youtube.

Slideshare, if you’re not familiar with it, is the most popular site for posting and sharing presentations on the web. While there are a lot of good things about Slideshare (including their annual Best Presentation contest), the format does not allow for animation, narration or video of the speaker. This has led to criticism that Slideshare encourages presenters to put everything on their slides so they can be understood without the presenter. When presenting live, however, this is anything but a best practice. Personally, I think slides are strongest when they require a presenter to fully explain them. In this way, slides function as true speaker support and not the presentation itself.

Video Narration of Your Slides

Enter present.me which allows users to upload their PowerPoint or PDF files which are then converted, animations included. Then, using your computer’s webcam, you record yourself delivering the presentation (advancing slide by slide). You can stop at any point and rerecord sections. Once you are happy with the result, you can publish your slides and accompanying video narration to the site either publicly or privately. Present.me also allows you to embed your presentation on another site.

Easy Playback

The thing I love most about the site is it’s playback engine: The viewer is given thumbnails of the slides so he or she can easily jump ahead or back to any section—and the video instantly picks up at the appropriate slide. Unlike most video on the web, there is no blind guessing and lag when you try to fast forward. What this means is that you can easily “skim” a long presentation, something I am sure we all wish we could do when watching certain live presentations.

Present.me is still officially in beta and the developers are working hard on improving functionality. I think the site has great possibilities including sales pitches, training modules and issues advocacy. My current favorite idea though is to use this to practice and review presentations and pitches. Imagine that your boss, who happens to be on another continent, asks to see the deck you plan on presenting to a potential client. He can comment on the slide content, but not much else.

But if you record a rehearsal with present.me, he can see your slide, but also how you’ll present—what you’ll say and how you’ll interact with your slides. And in that way, maybe you won’t be tempted to put EVERYTHING on your slides.

I’ve posted a few presentations under my login “nhaims“. Take a look and let me know what you think! 

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visual training presentation