Category Archives: PowerPoint

Still Using PowerPoint 2007

More often than not, software upgrades mean a visibly improved product. And then we have PowerPoint 2007.

The upgrade from PPT 2003 actually contained some very useful feature additions, but unfortunately the software’s improvements were largely obscured by a boneheaded brand new and completely unintuitive interface called “The Ribbon.” 

Many corporations, being the lumbering aircraft carriers they are, simply have not upgraded to Office 2007. As a result, many presentation designers I’ve talked with recently have also been late to the PPT 2007 picnic. 

Just a few months ago I was swearing to myself that I would retain PowerPoint 2003 as my primary presentation design software. But because of the new job’s workflow, 2007 is now my default presentation program, and I’ve found a lot to like about it. I’ve been urging my freelancers to make the switch, and if you do a lot of PPT design, I recommend upgrading if you can.

Top Ten Reasons to Move to PowerPoint 2007

  1. Soft shadows and reflection
  2. Text columns
  3. Unlimited custom master placeholder images
  4. Move and edit objects within a group
  5. Non-destructive image effects (soft edges, duotone coloring, change image shape, etc.)
  6. “Change Picture” function
  7. Better gradient control
  8. Plays better with Macs
  9. Layer visibility panel (designers will appreciate this one)
  10. Everyone else is doing it (or at least they will soon be)

Of course, there are still things to dislike about it: Video & flash support is still problematic…nothing new in animation…clunky downsaving to PPT 2003…ill-conceived interface…

The switch WILL be difficult, but just give it some time and you’ll find yourself actually working faster and better.

But is there a reason still to hold out? Well, PPT 2010 IS just around the corner… http://tinyurl.com/klaw28

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Categories: PowerPoint.

Need your PowerPoint files to be smaller?

Need your PowerPoint files to be smaller?

Of course you do since most corporate firewalls impose a 5MB limit on email attachments. (You knew that, right?)

Text and animation take up very little space in a PPT file, but imagery can easily balloon the size of a file if you’re not careful. (To help with the size of video, see the sidebar over to your right…)

And if you’ve ever tried to do it, Zipping a PPT file just doesn’t reduce the size of it at all.

PowerPoint has for some time offered, (but in typical fashion buried) a built-in image compression function that will compress an individual image or all images in your deck. In PPT 2003, right-click on any image in the presentation and go to Format Picture: Picture: Compress… In PPT 2007 go to the Format tab: Compress Pictures (it’s in the upper left corner.)

Unfortunately, Microsoft’s built-in compression sucks. You’re not given much control and more often than not, you end up with unacceptable artifacted JPEGy and blurry images. Not cool.

Enter NXPowerLite…


I don’t know how they do it, but the guys at NXPowerLite created and continue to refine an awesome compression tool that shrinks the hell out of a PPT file without losing significant image quality. I’ve seen it take 20MB files down to 3MB in a few seconds. The software offers multiple levels of compression and control, now works with Word and Excel files, can integrate into Outlook, is drag and drop, is super fast and just all around puts Microsoft to shame. They even offer a server edition. And most importantly, NXPowerLite never overwrites your files, but always creates a newly named perfectly normal PPT file. Obviously I can’t say enough about this program, and I think the $45 price tag is well worth it. Alas, there’s no Mac version. Yet…

But what if your file is still over 5MB and you have to get it to your client in the next 5 minutes?

Say hello to YouSendIt…

 YouSendIt was one of the first server-based large file transfer tools and I think it’s still one of the best. I use FTP sites, integrated network file transfer tools and various cloud storage solutions, but I always find myself returning to YouSendIt. 

In a nutshell, YouSendIt allows you to upload a file to their servers at which point they send out an email and web link to whoever you specify alerting them that the file is ready for download.

They offer a good web interface, but I prefer their free desktop client (available for MAC and PC) that allows me to drag and drop files and keep an address book of email addresses. It’s fast, reliable and FREE for single files up to 100MB. If you find yourself needing to send larger files, you can purchase a pro account.

I just can’t say enough about YouSendIt either. And the price is right at $0.

 

Use PowerPoint add-in PFC to manage the heartache of video 

Reliably playing video within PowerPoint has brought many a person to tears and resulted in countless overtime hours for IT departments, video editors and presentation designers. 

I’ll address the use of video in the future (and try to explain why under the hood PowerPoint does not use Windows Media Player, but an aging video engine that hasn’t changed in well over a decade…) 

But in the meantime, if you want to reduce the size of your videos, do some rudimentary editing (including cropping) and generally make sure your videos will work in PPT, take a look at the third-party plug-in “Plays for Certain” from AT&W Technologies.

These guys offer two versions of the program both of which are available for PPT 2003 or 2007 right here:

 

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Categories: PowerPoint, Video.

More Uses for Disappear with Previous animations

Footnotes and page numbers are the most most common elements to apply a Disappear With Previous animation, but there are other things on your slides that you might want only to appear in a print deck and not on screen.

Remember, there is just so much text that can be processed and read when presenting on screen. 

So, let’s say you have a slide with three bullet points, each with 3 sub bullet points that you may not be specifically talking to when presenting, but that you would like to be in your printed handouts.


Create individual text boxes for each bullet and for each set of sub bullets. Then apply a Disappear With Previous animation to each of the sub bullet boxes. The result is that your audience will only see the large primary bullets on screen and you still have your visible talking points. The less important (and much harder to read) sub bullets in their smaller font size, will only appear in the printed deck.


If you are creative, and if you can lay out your slides appropriately, you can use this technique to keep your on screen show cleaner and easier to read.

What else truly doesn’t need to be viewed in screen?

  • Logo bugs?
  • Legal disclaimer?
  • Copyright notice?
  • Sub heading?
  • “FPO” notations?
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Do You Really Need Footnotes and Page Numbers?

I’m a minimalist, so I’m always looking for for what I can remove on a screen, always looking for what’s not truly needed to tell or aid a story.

Page numbers and footnotes most often do absolutely nothing to tell your story on screen. 

So, let’s just get rid of them. Well, okay maybe you need them sometimes.  

But before we decide when we need them, we really need to be honest with ourselves about how our presentations are being used. There are 3 primary situations:

  1. On screen presented deck (speaker support)
  2. Printed deck
  3. Emailed/personal viewing 

1. On screen presented deck (speaker support)
Let’s assume we are presenting on screen for an audience of 25. You do not need page numbers. (Except maybe for the writing and editing process, in which case you should delete them prior to presenting.)

How about footnotes? Nope, don’t need them either. “But what about my legal team’s insistence?” Well, you can’t read 8pt text in 99% of presentation situations, which means you’re not actually using footnotes. You’re just adding graphic junk to your screen. (Assure your legal team that you will provide citations in your distributed material.) 

2. Printed Deck
First, are you sure this shouldn’t be a Word Document…? Do you have paragraphs and paragraphs of text and little imagery… Still has to be PowerPoint…? Legal is still insistant?

Solution? USE ENDNOTES. Remember those from college?

3. Emailed/Personal Viewing
In effect, a deck that is meant to be viewed by one person on their own screen is nearly identical to the needs of a printed deck. And you never know if the person is simply going to print it out for easier reading anyway. See above.

The Multipurpose Deck
In an ideal world, a presentation should fall only into one of the above categories. But too often, we want our decks to serve all three purposes. Understand that this is like designing a magazine ad and then using the exact same ad as a billboard…and as a web banner ad…and as a subway ad…It’s no shame to not have the resources to create different decks for different purposes (although if you were designing an ad campaign, you’d make the effort, right?)

So, if you must have a multipurpose deck, and in its printed form, you need your page numbers and your footnotes (you’re sure you can’t use endnotes…?), here’s a PowerPoint technique for having these things be invisible on the screen, but visible when printed:

The “With Previous Disappear” Animation 
For page numbers, you’ll need to go into your master page(s) and select the page number text field. Bring up your custom animation panel and apply a “disappear” exit animation and set it to animate “with previous.” 

What you have just done is tell PowerPoint to immediately animate out the page number on every page as soon as you advance to the slide in slideshow mode. Regardless of the type of slide transitions you apply (and you’re just using “fades,” right…?), you will never even see a glimpse of the page number as long as you’re in slideshow mode. Of course, the page number still appears in layout mode and thus will always print.

Similarly, for footnotes, you can apply this same type of animation on each individual slide. Or, if you’re using PPT 2007, you can set up a custom placeholder text box in a master for footnotes and apply the animation in the master.

I should point out that if for any reason you have to move backward in your slideshow to a previous slide, you may be surprised to see your “invisible” page numbers or footnotes start appearing just before moving back to the previous slide. This is because PowerPoint is reversing the animations, and there’s no real way around it.

Also, this technique unfortunately does not work in Keynote as you will see a flash of the page number each time you arrive on the slide.

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Categories: Animation, PowerPoint.

Jumping to Slide #…

Ever wanted to skip those 10 slides your boss made you put in on the fly? Ever need to go back to a previous slide to answer an audience question?

Instead of clumsily going into slide sorter or hurriedly advancing through slides, just type in the slide number on your keyboard and hit “enter.” This works for both PowerPoint and Keynote.

Don’t know what slide number you want to go to? Keep a handy cheat sheet with you or print out a page of thumbnails. 

This tip is also great for accessing appendix slides.

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Start your slideshow automatically

A presentation, even in the most informal settings, should be seamless. 

Like a good magician, “hide your wires” by saving your PowerPoint “Presentation” (.ppt) as a PowerPoint “Show” (.pps). This will open your presentation in slideshow mode.

A quicker way is to just manually change the extension on the file from .ppt to .pps. (Ignore PowerPoint’s warning about altering the file when you do this.)

In Keynote, select “Automatically play upon opening” in the Inspector: Document panel.

Presenting a PDF? Set the document properties to “Open in full screen mode.”

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Categories: Keynote, PDF, PowerPoint.

What a Broadway Lighting Designer Can Teach You About Your Slides

Years ago, in my theatre directing days, I was assistant director on a big show in Chicago. As a young director, I used the opportunity to talk with the designers about how they liked a director to work with them. The veteran lighting designer told me the following story about a scene full of actors that he once lit.

The director of that play requested more light on the lead actress center stage. The designer pumped up the lighting. “Brighter,” the director said. The designer made it brighter. “Brighter!” the director demanded. The designer set the light at 100% “Brighter!!!” the director screamed. The designer added more lights on the actress at 100%. Still, the director yelled that it still wasn’t bright enough.

“I can’t make it any brighter,” the designer explained. “What are you trying to accomplish?”

“I want more focus on the actress,” the director said.

“Oh,” responded the designer.

And he REDUCED the lighting on every actor EXCEPT the lead actress.

When you highlight everything, you highlight nothing.

Don’t try to make ALL the data in a chart “pop.” Don’t bold and underline and increase the point size of all 5 bullet points. What’s the ONE point that needs to be stressed in each slide?

(And don’t try to do your designers’ jobs for them. Just explain what you want to accomplish.)

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Categories: Keynote, PowerPoint.
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