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PowerPoint and Presenting Stuff

Thoughts and impressions of happenings in the world of PowerPoint and presentations, continuously updated since 2003.

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PowerPoint and Presenting Notes
PowerPoint and Presenting Glossary

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Monday, March 25, 2013, posted by Geetesh Bajaj at 9:30 am

While choosing texture fills for your text, you need not limit yourself to the default textures that PowerPoint offers. Third party custom textures are always an option, including our own Scribble Custom Textures that provide your text with an organic look, as if someone scribbled lines with a pencil to fill them! You can also try some more custom textures from our Ppted Background Texture Collection. Let us explore how to use these custom textures as fills for your text, in the following steps.

Learn how to use a custom texture as a fill for text in PowerPoint 2011 for Mac.

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Monday, March 25, 2013, posted by Geetesh Bajaj at 9:30 am

Jim Endicott

Jim Endicott
    
Jim Endicott is an internationally-recognized consultant, designer, speaker specializing in professional presentation messaging, design and delivery. Jim has been a Jesse H. Neal award-winning columnist for Presentations magazine with his contributions to the magazine’s Creative Techniques column. Jim has also contributed presentation-related content in magazines like Business Week, Consulting and Selling Power as well as a being a paid contributor for a number of industry-related websites.

In this conversation, Jim discusses the results of the 2013 Annual Presentation Impact Survey conducted by his company, Distinction Communication, Inc.

Geetesh: Thank you for doing this survey each year, and then sharing the results. Each year, these results shed light on changes happening in the world of presenting. Wwhat are the biggest changes this year?

Jim: Over the years we’ve established a baseline response on a few topics and we revisit those each year to spot any trends. One of the most relevant questions is this one… How would you rank the importance of personal presentation skills on your career and income? This year 89% of respondents, nearly 9 in 10, are saying that presentation skills directly impact their careers and income — up 3% from last year. As much as information has gone virtual, the human conduit for delivering information and ideas (in person or via the web) has become even more essential for most of us. ‘How’ we deliver it matters a lot. And those who struggle in this critical personal skill area will most likely find themselves at a disadvantage.

Since these skills seem to be so important to everyone year after year, we wanted to understand the challenges presenters are experiencing in getting better. This year 61% indicated they receive ‘little or no feedback’ and only 31% said their companies support the ongoing development of good presentation skills. This points out a unmistakable irony that exists today. Companies place a very high value (as do individuals) in being a good communicator yet when it comes to making that investment in time or money, it’s not happening very often.

It’s probably the one skill we all share that can make the most significant impact on our professional lives.

Geetesh: While so much changes, some things remain the same. Not much has changed as far as irritating presenter behaviors are concerned. Can you share some thoughts?

Jim: We added a few new questions this year around that area. I suspect we all have our pet peeves but we wanted to be able to give our respondents a chance to rack and stack their own. No matter where we come from, the categories seem to be universal.

Rank these presenter behaviors from most to least irritating or distracting, 1 being the worst (listed below from most irritating average score to least)

Here was the collective feedback.

  1. Reading directly from notes or off the screen
  2. The use of umm’s and uhhh’s (filler words)
  3. Pacing or nervous movement
  4. Eyes wander and won’t make eye contact with the audience
  5. Presenter wants to stay behind a podium or lectern

Another irritation we all have is how people approach their visuals. After all, as audience members, we have to stare at them for an hour or so we all have an opinion. This year we wanted to see how presenters assessed their own visuals.

What best describes the PowerPoint (or equivalent) presentations you or your team deliver? (Be as objective as you can)?

  • 12% — Very simple, sometimes bordering on too elementary
  • 16% — Overly complicated, way too much information on a slide
  • 50% — Average visuals, no better or worse than others I see
  • 22% — Awesome, high caliber and well-designed presentation visual

What should probably disturb us most is not the high and low responses, rather the big chunk of people in the middle who think their visuals are “average”. As most of us suspect, the bar seems to be set fairly low in most companies today so being “average” is probably not a very good thing — mediocrity rarely is. Next year we will ask survey respondents to reflect on the presentation visuals of others and I doubt they will be as gracious as the presenter’s self evaluation was this year.

One thing is for sure, there aren’t many natural born presenters, most of us have to work at it and we need more practical resources to do that.


The views and opinions expressed in this blog are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any other agency, organization, employer, or company.

See Also: Making the Complex Simple: by Jim Endicott

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Monday, March 25, 2013, posted by Geetesh Bajaj at 9:30 am

In a previous tutorial of the SlideBoom series, we explained you about the SlideBoom online presentation site. While you need not be a member of this site to view presentations, you must join as a member to do practically anything else such as posting presentations, downloading files, commenting, etc. In this tutorial, you’ll learn how you can become a member at SlideBoom. Remember — SlideBoom in its present form is a free service — and the basic membership level is also free.

Learn how you can join SlideBoom, a PowerPoint sharing site.

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Saturday, March 23, 2013, posted by Geetesh Bajaj at 9:30 am

You could easily drag and draw a rectangle in PowerPoint but everyone in your audience has seen thousands of such rectangles – and they do not stand apart any more. So how can you create a different type of rectangle that has no straight lines or perfect, geometrical shapes? You can easily achieve this hand drawn look with our Organic Shapes series. Rectangles are just one of the common shapes that we doodled on paper – and then reproduced as native PowerPoint shapes for you to use. Including rectangles, our Organic Shapes collection contains 8 shape types – each type has 10 variants – so you end up with 80 hand-drawn shape options! These shapes will help break the monotony of text heavy slides, and assist you in explaining difficult concepts better to your audiences. Using these organic shapes also convinces your audiences that you care enough about them to make the slides look appealing and comprehensible. What’s more, these shapes are also so much fun to use!

  

  

Buy and download these slides now.

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Friday, March 22, 2013, posted by Geetesh Bajaj at 9:30 am

One of PowerPoint’s greatest qualities is that you can get all sorts of content from disparate sources and add them all within one presentation to create a unified document. Pictures are one of the most important content types you add on your slides — however, each picture you insert may have different resolutions — and thus even though you may have sized your picture to look like a small postage stamp on your slide, it may be increasing your file size by several megabytes. You can of course manually compress pictures in your presentation — additionally, you can set the document resolution for any presentation — this option will compress pictures you insert automatically to the default resolution you set.

Learn how to set document resolution in PowerPoint 2010 for Windows.

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