How To Make a Good Presentation

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Making Presentations That Audiences Will Love : 

Making Presentations That Audiences Will Love

Use a Template : 

Use a Template Use a set font and color scheme. Different styles are disconcerting to the audience. You want the audience to focus on what you present, not the way you present.

Fonts : 

Fonts Choose a clean font that is easy to read. Roman and Gothic typefaces are easier to read than Script or Comic. Stick with one or two types of fonts.

Bullets : 

Bullets Keep each bullet to one line, two at the most. Limit the number of bullets in a screen to six

Bullets & Cueing : 

Bullets & Cueing Bullets allow you to “cue” the audience in on what you are going to say. Cues can be thought of as a brief “preview.” This gives the audience a “framework” to build upon.

Caps and Italics : 

Caps and Italics Do not use all capital letters Makes text hard to read Conceals acronyms Denies their use for EMPHASIS Italics Used for “quotes” Used to highlight thoughts or ideas Used for book, journal, or magazine titles

Colors : 

Colors Reds and oranges are high-energy but can be difficult to stay focused on. Greens, blues, and browns are mellower, but not as attention grabbing.

Backgrounds : 

Backgrounds A white on a dark background is used for this presentation as: The author assumes most users will view the presentation on their own computer. Having a darker background on a computer screen reduces glare. White on dark background should not be used if the audience is more than 20 feet away.

The Color Wheel : 

The Color Wheel Colors separated by another color are contrasting colors (also known as complementary) Adjacent colors (next to each other) harmonize with one another. e.g. Green and Yellow

Slide 10: 

Attention Grabber To make a slide stand out, change the font and/or background

Illustrations : 

Illustrations Use only when needed, otherwise they become distracters instead of communicators They should relate to the message and help make a point Ask yourself if it makes the message clearer Simple diagrams are great communicators

Flipcharts : 

Flipcharts Make letters at least a 1/4 high Flipcharts with lines are much easier to write on

Screen Size for Readability : 

Screen Size for Readability Screen 6’ 8’ 10’ 12’ 15’ 1/4 inch 30’ 40’ 50’ 60’ 90’ 3/8 inch 45’ 60’ 75’ 90’ 135’ 1/2 inch 60’ 80’ 100’ 120’ 180’ Examples 1/4” type shown on a screen size of 6’ can be seen 30’ away (20 point Times Roman equals 1/4” type) 1/2” type shown on a 10’ screen can be seen 75’ away (40 point Times Roman equals 1/4” type)

YOU : 

YOU Do not use the media to hide you The audience came to see you The media should enhance the presentation, not BE the presentation If all you are going to do is read from the slides or overheads, then just send them the slides Remember, only you can prevent “Death by PowerPoint”

Presentationsby Donald R. Clark : 

Presentationsby Donald R. Clark FOR MORE INFORMATION http://www.nwlink.com/~donclark/leader/leadpres.html http://www.nwlink.com/~donclark/hrd/templates/presentation.rtf donclark@nwlink.com