Category Archives: Reducing Text

You Don’t Need a Header Bar

Yes, I have a lot of pet peeves with regard to presentation design, but at the top of the list is header bars. Often–though not always–it is necessary and/or helpful to have a title to your slide (a “header”). But when it comes to designing a “look” or a template for a presentation, it is almost never a good thing to design your slides so that they require a header. We’ve all seen templates like these…

Designs with dedicated headers should be avoided because they…

  • Waste valuable screen real estate
  • Force the user to write headlines when they may not be necessary, leading to cluttered and over-written slides
  • Create an inorganic “PowerPoint-y” look

Even good presentation designers often fall into the header bar trap, and I place the blame largely on Microsoft. PowerPoint is the only program I can think of in which the default “empty” page tells the user what kind of information should be placed on the page. Open up a blank PPT doc and you are immediately told to insert a header and body copy. Microsoft Word doesn’t tell you what kind of words to put down; it just gives you a white page. Photoshop doesn’t give you a page at all, less they bias you against a teal or a zebra-striped canvas.

But back to the waste of space. Take a look at this Microsoft-design template that comes pre-installed with PPT.

If you used this template for each page, after you inserted your mandatory header, you would have only 51% of your entire page left for actual content. If you always used Microsoft’s recommended “click to add text” content area, you’d only have 38% usable space! Note that on this template, Microsoft has added in a further, unnecessary gray bounding box (your screen should be your bounding box…) that further reduces usable area after you account for needed padding on the edges–text will always need a cushion of negative space around it to be readable.

Yes, Microsoft does provide a header-less layout for this template design, but the natural instinct is to keep the background the same for all slides, which then leads to unnecessary and often visually redundant headlines. Last weekend I was at a wine seminar on a Spanish wine region called Ribera Del Duero. I’ve recreated one of the slides showing the growing region. Since we talked about no other geography other than Ribera, my reaction to the use of a header bar on this page was a resounding, “Duh.” The header bar design in the template forced the presenter to include a header even when it was painfully unnecessary, forcing the content smaller, and distracting from it.

Even if you reduce the size of a header bar design, you’re still bound for trouble. The above examples are large enough to account for 2 line headers (if you absolutely must have a 2 line header…), but if you try to minimize the header area as shown here, you’re just going to run into problems with that one slide that just must have 2 or 3 lines for some reason.

 

 

So, what’s the solution? Keep as open and blank a canvas as you possibly can that allows for a header or title to come and go as needed. And if you can find or create a design that doesn’t fore the use of headers, you’ll be on your way to making slide headers the exception rather than the rule. Which is a good thing…

 

 

 

 

 

 

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My 9 Year Old Niece Gets It. Do You?

My sister recently asked me to help my 9 year old niece with a PowerPoint presentation she had to create for class on U.S. National Parks. No, I didn’t just do it for her, but I did send her some examples of presentations that made use of little text and beautiful full screen imagery. It just kind of seemed natural for her topic…

I didn’t hear anything else until last week when my sister sent me her completed assignment. The email came with two attachments: a PowerPoint presentation and a Word document.

I liked where this was going…

I’m going to give the credit on this to my niece’s teacher for understanding that there shouldn’t be a one size fits all format for delivering information. Too often, that one size is a PowerPoint document, and the in-person, on-screen presentation suffers from too much text and content as does the printed, leave behind that suffers from too little real writing and content.

I know, it’s just easier to make one slide-ument that can be presented, printed, handed out and downloaded. But as Olivia Mitchell says: It’s also easier to break up with your boyfriend by text message. That doesn’t make it right.

Last night someone gave me a spiral bound leave behind from a presentation by an $8 billion dollar hedge fund looking for new investors. It was an inexpensively bound identical copy of what was presented on screen. All my eyes saw were loads of text and information–probably all important and legally necessary, of course. But an $8 billion dollar venture should have created both a professionally printed and designed leave behind (think annual report…) and a professionally designed on screen companion presentation that walks the audience through the digestible highlights of the complete printed piece. And they should have distributed only the printed document. 

I have a client right now that approached us wanting help designing a “PowerPoint.” This is a new health consulting company that was paid a lot of money to do an assessment of a corporation involving research, surveys and analysis. My client had planned on presenting its findings in a PowerPoint deck (which would presumably be distributed). We advised them that while they of course will need an on screen version of their findings to present at their 2 hour client meeting, the real meat of their work needed to be presented much more seriously and professionally. So our primary work is now not a PowerPoint deck, but an 18 page professionally designed and printed report. Again, think annual report… After that is written and completed (we’re helping the client with their content as well), then we’ll focus on creating a matching companion PowerPoint deck to present.

I know it’s more work. But many times 2 distinct formats and documents is what’s needed.

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Categories: Imagery, Reducing Text.

The World’s Best Presentation Contest

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again.

People MAKE bad presentations because they SEE bad presentations.

It’s just that simple.

If your CEO or manager gives a talk to his employees with something like this…

…then he’s set a precedent for what is acceptable at your company, and the new hire fresh out of school will understand that THIS is the way he should present.

So, go and SEE good presentations–as often as you can. One good way to find good presentation design (and ideas to “borrow”) is to head over to SlideShare.net and take a look around at the presentations that users have uploaded to the site–especially in their Featured and Spotlight areas.

But to see truly excellent work, take a look at the winners of their just-finished World’s Best Presentation Contest.

But before you take a look, just imagine how YOU would create presentations about

  • Kidney disease
  • An African orphanage
  • The current healthcare debate (come on, this one’s an easy subject…) 

Now, take a look at how others told these stories.

(How many bullet points, templates and pie charts do you think you’re going to find?)

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Categories: Reducing Text.

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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