“Hypnotising chickens”

Today in the New York Times an Army General stated that “PowerPoint makes us stupid.” The article cites more examples of how the use of bullet points and neither coherent, well thought out sentences nor imagery along with a story are being used to communicate today.

In General McMaster’s view, PowerPoint’s worst offense is not a chart like the spaghetti graphic, which was first uncovered by NBC’s Richard Engel, but rigid lists of bullet points (in, say, a presentation on a conflict’s causes) that take no account of interconnected political, economic and ethnic forces. “If you divorce war from all of that, it becomes a targeting exercise,” General McMaster said.

The author of the article is right: Don’t blame PowerPoint: Blame the misuse of it.

PowerPoint is an incredibly effective tool, that catch is it must be used properly. Since we are in the information age, the age of instant gratification, efficiency, speed and savings, any corners we can cut to transfer information from one person to another are being taken.

Why did we get like this?

Someone decided to use PowerPoint when something like Word would be a better tool to convey the information and that propagated. Because we are knowledge workers and time is such a “soft cost” the actual amount of money (read: time) spent on understanding and misunderstanding goes unaccounted for and we continue the cycle.

Seth Godin blogged today referencing an ebook he wrote, thinking the ideas would spread and the problem would go away. While I agree that writing an ebook is a great thing, the expectation that it will spread like wildfire and the problem will go away even after a number of years is a little over confident.

Do you frequently have to sit through presentations that don’t engage you? How can you better your communication in your organization? What can you do to improve it? You can start with Seth’s ebook, my ebook, or Jon Thomasebook. All excellent and all free.

 

download slideas!I am pleased to announce the first version of the eBook “Slideas: Eight Steps to Compelling Presentations” is available for download. This work is published under a Creative Commons License. I invite you to contribute and build upon the ideas and framework presented here. This is version 0.1. How can you help contribute to version 0.2?

The eventual goal is a physically published book.

The book covers four elements needed in your presentations and provides a simple 8-step framework for you to follow in ensuring your audience is engaged and gets the important thing: your message.

The Table of Contents:

    Why should you read this book?
    An invitation to contribute

    Four Elements of Presentations
    Science
    Engineering
    Art
    Design

    Eight Steps to a Compelling Presentation
    Step 1: Identify One Key Message
    Step 2: Identify Your Environment
    Step 3: Bridge the Gap
    Step 4: Arrange Your Story
    Step 5: Visualize Each Point
    Step 6: Craft Your Slides
    Step 7: Rehearse. Rearrange. Iterate.
    Step 8: Violate Your Audiences Expectations… In a Positive Way!

    Other Considerations
    What to avoid: Common mistakes in presentations

    Suggested Reading
    Books
    Articles
    SlideShares

    References

    About the Author(s)*
    Todd Lombardo
    Your Name Here

I’d love to know your thoughts. If you would like to contribute, please contact us or drop a note in the comments.

 

Using notes in PowerPoint

In a workshop last week, I was discussing use of the notes section in PowerPoint. Once you have your outline of your talk, type in what you’d want to say in the notes section. We were doing an exercise with sticky notes and walking through the steps to move from sticky notes to create slides. Rather than type on the slide, start in the notes. This way, all those bullet points you would have put on the slide go in the notes and your slide is saved from the bullet points. So is your audience.

One participant of the workshop commented that by forcing oneself to START in the notes section, it left the opportunity to think about how to visualize the point up on the slide.

Try it! Did it work for you?

notes-input

 

Two things

Seth Godin has a great post about Two Elements of a Great Presenter.

He talks about love to the audience, which is great for connecting with them. I’d like to add that love of the subject matter your speaking about is equally as important. How often have you heard someone present something to you when their heart is not in it? Is it obvious? What was your reaction? Did you remember what they said? If you cannot remember much from that presentation, it might tell you something about a presenter’s enthusiasm for their topic.

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That’s right. Outside the box. What box, you say? Open up PowerPoint and what do you see? That’s right, you see this:

A box, two boxes actually, telling you to add a title and text to each slide. You start typing away, right?

STOP! Don’t do it.

Remember the billboard: There are no titles nor bulletpoints. How can you get your point across outside those boxes? Images? Graphics? Something?

Anything but bulletpoints.

 

PowerPoint 2010 Preview

 

What’s the main thing?

When working with clients I always ask the questions: what’s the main thing you want to get across in your talk? Another way to put that would be: if I were to ask an audience member walking out of the room after you finished your presentation, what is the one point you want this person to remember?

Distill and distill. The distill some more. Be careful of the word “and.” Its presence can show that you haven’t distilled your point enough.

For example:

Our technology can save people money and increase energy efficiency while heating their homes and reduce the carbon footprint of the economy, is easy to install because it has on ly 2 parts and it only costs $30.

See what I mean?

There’s the flip-side to this and that is to have your point so distilled, its too general. For example:

Our technology can save people hundreds of dollars

Right. Who doesn’t claim that?

Often times I find that if I’m working with a team, the individuals of the team have differing opinions on this. Make sure you (and your team, if applicable) know what the main point is. Just one main point. That will help you set the direction for your entire presentation and all your surrounding points will guide you to the ‘main thing.’ Your audience will thank you.

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