- Plan your presentation before creating visual aids.
Know what you want the audience to do as a result of hearing your presentation. Then figure out what they need to know to do what you want them to do. Then create a simple outline that logically and clearly develops your main points. Finally, create visual aids to support your message.
- Use visual aids sparingly.
They are aids to your presentation – not its sum and substance. Use them to highlight and support your key points.
- Make them visible to the entire audience.
Projecting an image people can’t see is as senseless as speaking so softly people can’t hear.
- Talk to the audience, not to the aid.
Look at the audience at least 80% of the time. Avoid turning your back to the audience.
- Avoid laser pointers.
Your aid should be so clear that your audience can easily follow along. Use your hand, if necessary. (If you absolutely have to use a pointer, set it down after you are finished. Holding on to it will only encourage you to use it for every point on every slide.)
- Explain the content of the aid when you first show it.
As soon as you show people an object, they will look at it – even if you’re talking about something else. Don’t make them divide their attention.
- When you finish with the aid, remove it, cover it, or turn it off.
(See above.) When using PowerPoint, tap the B key and the screen will go to black. Tap any other key and the screen light up again.
- Limit the amount of material on any one aid.
Use each slide to convey a single point. Bullet points – no more than four or five per slide – explain, illustrate, or substantiate that one point.
- Avoid clip art from well-known sources.
It’s almost always boring and amateurish. DO use images, graphs, and charts, whenever possible and appropriate.
- Be prepared to give your presentation without your visual aids.
Murphy’s Law -- "if anything can go wrong, it will" -- applies in spades to anything involving technology and an audience. Have a backup plan in case something goes wrong. Take a hard copy of your slides.
Friday, 5 September 2014
09:30
Executive Republic
Posted in Personal Development
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