Upcoming Presentation Webinars

Upcoming Webinars

While most of my training continues to be onsite at clients, you can occasionally catch me online. And I have two upcoming webinars.

American Management Association – April 7, 2016

American Management Association

 

This Thursday, April 7, I will again be giving Creating Visual Presentations for the AMA.

This 90-minute session is an overview on how to become a better visual storyteller. We’ll cover proven strategies for reducing text, how to avoid the bullet point trap by using the “chunking” technique, how to harness the picture  superiority effect and basic graphic design layout principles to make your presentations look more professional.

For more information and to sign up, click here.

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Presentationxpert – April 13, 2016

The next is foPresentationxpertr my friends at Presentationxpert.com where this time I will be giving a free 1-hour session on Creating an Effective Presentation Story. Much of my training revolves around what to do after you have created a clear and compelling story, but now I’ll take some time to dive into all the things you need to do before you start burying your head in PowerPoint.

In the webinar, I’ll guide you through creating your own persuasive presentation structure step by step, and reveal each question that needs to be answered along the way. From the very first and most important determining piece of information (it’s not what you think…) to identifying your audience, creating singular messaging, calls to action, simple ideation techniques and easy outlining.

You’ll learn how to define your “Point A” and your “Point B,” how to write your presentation bumper sticker and how to use certain PowerPoint tools to your advantage to stay organized.

I’ll even discuss what makes good a header and how to avoid jargon and business-speak.

Sign up for free here!

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Announcing The Presentation Podcast

The Presentation PodcastSo apparently, there are these things called podcasts. They’ve been around for a while, I’m told, but until now there has not been a podcast dedicated to the world and business of presentation design. This week marks the official launch of The Presentation Podcast!

And along with two of the best and most knowledgeable designers in the country, I am one of the hosts. We’re going to let you in on everything there is to know about presentations large and small.

Though millions of PowerPoint and Keynote slides are created each day, it’s a small world when it comes to professionals who make their living creating presentations at the highest level for others. The Presentation Podcast will give listeners access to those professionals and all the tricks, tips, best practices and secrets to creating better presentations and the business of presentation. We’ll talk about how and when to hire a pro and how much that should cost, what hardware and software you should be using to make your life easier, where to look for inspiration and resources – we’ve even got a whole podcast dedicated to fonts. (Are you geeking out yet?)

Soon enough we’ll bring on guests from around the presentation universe, but to start off, your hosts are:

Troy_circleTroy Chollar, President and Co-Founder, TLC Creative Services, Inc.

You know when they introduce new car models with 100′ screens and pyrotechnics? Yeah, Troy makes those things.

Sandra_JohnsonSandra Johnson, Owner & Chief Presentation Officer, Presentation Wiz, Inc.

You know when CEOs get up on stage to launch new products in front of 1,000s of people? Yeah, Sandy is the person behind that.

Nolan_HaimsNolan Haims, Owner, Nolan Haims Creative

I do stuff. But you knew that. That’s why you’re reading this in the first place, right?

 

You can find The Presentation Podcast on iTunes right now. Our first two episodes cover how to ensure your clients or colleagues are seeing exactly what you’re seeing in your presentations on your own computer and the current multi-faceted state of PowerPoint versions out there and which you should be using. (If you’re not on 2016 yet, we’ll tell you what you’re missing.) Plus, in every episode we’ll cover  news and happenings in the world of presentation along with our favorite tech and professional design tips – everything from useful websites to PowerPoint hacks and hidden features.

What are you waiting for – head on over to iTunes and subscribe now!

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Categories: Visual Thinking.

New Solutions for Old PowerPoint Font Problems + Software Giveaway!

Font issues are probably the #1 complaint when it comes to PowerPoint. For as long as the program has been in existence, if you wanted to be certain that others were viewing your presentation that way you designed it, you had to stick with the limited and generally boring collection of “safe” fonts such as Arial, Verdana, Times New Roman and the like. Presentitude.com has great information on the safe fonts. Yes, you can embed some fonts for users of PCs (Mac don’t support embedded fonts), but I have never recommended doing that for about a thousand reasons. Trust me, it leads to tears.

Solutions to the font problem include making a PDF or turning your slides into pictures, both of which eliminate animation and any hope of editing. Sure, you could send the font file to your client, but have you ever tried to walk someone with zero computer knowledge through installing a font over the phone? More tears.

After all these years, there is still no perfect solution, and the font landscape has actually gotten more complicated for PowerPoint even as it’s gotten far better for web content and Adobe documents with web fonts, Google fonts and typekit.

But there are two new-ish tools out there for drying those PowerPoint font tears.

Presentation Font Embedder for the Mac + Software Giveaway!

PowerPoint for the Mac has never been able to embed fonts or read fonts embedded in a presentation on the PC side, but this new app, available on the App Store, solves the first problem by letting a Mac user embed fonts used in a presentation so that those embedded fonts can be read and used by a PC user. This may be useful for some people and some workflows, but you still can only embed TrueType fonts and then only certain TrueType fonts. Furthermore, even though you can embed the fonts, once you open the presentation on the Mac, you still get the warning that Mac cannot do anything with the fonts. So, this is not a solution for sending a presentation to other Mac users.presentation font embedder

But Presentation Font Embedder adds a second option called “Universal” embedding (the first method is called “Editable”) which takes all your live text boxes and converts them to transparent images. This is very cool, and you can actually see the conversion happening slide by slide resulting in a deck whose typography will look the way you want it to look on all computers and platforms. Animations as long as they are applied to whole text boxes are retained.

The app is drag and drop and stupidly easy to use. I don’t see that many users taking advantage of the “Editable” method, but can definitely see the benefit of the “Universal” one. Note though that the resolution the text is saved out as may be less than optimal for retina displays.

If you’re someone who could benefit from the new app, I’ve got 5 free licenses to give away. First 5 people to contact me will get one. Just email me.

Text-to-Outline PowerPoint Add-in

Jamie Garroch and YouPresent, makers of custom PowerPoint solutions, have created a very cool PowerPoint add-in called Text-to-Outline that, you guessed it, converts live text to vector outlines, meaning your fonts are no longer fonts, but shapes that can be viewed by anyone on any platform. No font files required!

Outlining fonts has long been a trick of graphic designers for distributing art files. For example, a designer might create a logo using a typeface, but when creating distributable files, will outline that type so it will look the way it should. Below is the result of a line of type run through the add-in.PowerPoint Text to Outline Add-in 1.png

 

Text-to-Outlines is simple to install use. You have options for saving only certain fonts, only certain selected text boxes or fonts throughout an entire presentation. And it will even save your live type on the pasteboard for you if you like, just in case.
PowerPoint Text to Outline Add-in 2

The only downside with Text-to-Outlines is that, of course, it is only for PCs. But it does work on 2013 and 2016, and has a number of applications beyond sharing presentations which Jamie discusses here.

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Categories: Fonts, PowerPoint.

Neo/Ipsum PPT Add-in

Justin Bretschneider just released an incredibly cool free add-in for PowerPoint (PC-only) called Neo/Ipsum.

Often, one has to begin design of a presentation before all content has been written, and so very often designers will place “greeked” text in headers and text boxes to show how the slide will look down the road. You can laboriously cut and paste Lorem Ipsum or use PowerPoint’s secret key commands of =lorem() and =rand(), but you still need to do this one slide and one text box at a time. This is where Neo/Ipsum comes in.

neo ipsum dialogue boxAfter a painless install, just select the new “Fill Placeholders” button on your Insert ribbon, choose which slides you want to work on, select one of a number of types of dummy text (Classic Lorem Ipsum, Hipster Ipsum, Famous Final Words Ipsum, and a few others) and hit confirm. That’s it.

The add-in turns empty slides with empty placeholders like this…

neo ipsum PowerPoint Tex add-in before

 

Into this…

neo ipsum PowerPoint Text add-in

 

Download it here!

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Categories: Design, PowerPoint.
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