Small Business Resources, Business Advice and Forms from AllBusiness.com
 

Ten Tips for Avoiding PowerPoint Limbo

While the rise of PowerPoint has helped many an apprehensive presentation-giver, an unfortunate side effect is “PowerPoint limbo,” the point when a potentially interesting presentation slips into tedium from relying too much on the program.

Here are 10 tips designed to ensure engaging

and informative PowerPoint presentations:


  1. Keep slides to a minimum. The most common PowerPoint pitfall is “slide overload.” Avoid this problem by saving the slides for the points with the most visual component. It may be tempting to use a slide for each point, but keeping slides to a minimum ensures that each one will pack a more powerful visual punch.
  2. Brevity leads to longevity. Though it may seem counterintuitive, the shorter your presentation, the longer it will live on in the minds of your audience. Brief, meaningful points delivered during a tight presentation guarantee that your talk will leave the audience wanting more.
  3. Don’t data-dump. Inundating an audience with unnecessary information is a surefire way to irritate them. When preparing your PowerPoint presentation, distill any data down to its most vital findings. You can provide details in a handout for people to review later. The implications of your data are significantly more important than its finer points, so edit accordingly.
  4. Pump up the font. You can have the most riveting PowerPoint presentation ever, but if your tiny font is unreadable, all your work will be for naught. Be sure to bump up your font to a size that will be readable for the audience members farthest from the screen.
  5. Don’t let PowerPoint predominate. The fact that you’re presenting in PowerPoint should be the last thing on an audience member’s mind. Not enabling your subject matter to leap off the screen through an engaging delivery and creative organization means the most memorable point you present will be the program itself. Avoid this trap by focusing on your topic — let PowerPoint be an aid rather than a crutch.
  6. Tailor talks to your audience. Failing to account for an audience’s preexisting knowledge of your topic will bring them to inattention quicker than you can say, “Did you know that?” Taking your audience’s knowledge base into consideration when formulating your presentation can spare you time and energy wasted on making points that they’re already familiar with. Save your efforts for those aspects of your presentation that are novel and unique.
  7. Don’t stay on the “slide”-lines. Reciting the text listed on your PowerPoint slides will drive your audience to distraction. Instead of delivering a rote performance, use your slides as cue cards instead, incorporating a key word or phrase from each into your explanation of the larger point being illustrated. The audience is there to listen to your insight, not to read.
  8. The dimmer the room, the duller you get. While it may be easier to view your PowerPoint presentation in a darkened room, don’t reach for the dimmer right away. Cutting the lights immediately sends meeting attendees a message that their focus should be on the slides they’re seeing, rather than on the words they’re hearing from you. Combat this phenomena by developing a catchy, pithy introduction that ensures your audience will be all ears, even when the lights go down.
  9. Practice makes perfect. This may be an obvious one, but be sure to practice your PowerPoint presentation several times before you deliver it. Running through it beforehand will acquaint you with the material and make your talk seem more “natural.” Comfort with your subject matter builds the audience’s perception of you as very knowledgeable on the topic.
  10. Reconsider the handout handoff. While some may be inclined to distribute handouts ahead of a PowerPoint presentation, think twice about this. You’ve basically armed your audience with something to distract them from you! To hold their focus, let your presentation guide them through your topic, then hand out documentation afterward that summarizes your key points and findings, or provides details not in your presentation.

In addition, make sure to read these articles:

  • Creating stunning slide shows in Proshow Gold
  • Proshow Gold[R] and ProShow Producer[R] are becoming very popular for creating slide shows that go far beyond slide shows consisting oftransparencies, slide projectors and slide ......
  • PowerPoint Used Correctly Can Seal The Sale
  • Too much time is wasted by people who think they are doing a jam up job with their presentation. Don't waste your prospect's time.
  • Tear down those Office walls, Microsoft
  • My first reaction to Microsoft's Thursday announcement that it will release a new version of its Office suite for the Mac in 2010 can be ......
  • A collection of war stories
  • (Sidebar to main story "First aid for podium emergencies.") ......
  • ZD Education's New Computer Courseware Help...
  • ROCHESTER, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--September 27, 1999-- The division VP wants her presentation to be a multimedia extravaganza; you know enough to provide text with bullets. ZD ......
  • Missing the Point
  • Ever sit through a boring PowerPoint presentation? Okay, okay, everyone put your hands down—we all have. It seems that after presenters turn on the projector, ......
  • Sticky Rice Queen
  • Steven Kahn uses a PowerPoint presentation, bad karaoke singing and the provocative dance moves of a Bangkok prostitute to explore how gay Asian males perceive ......
  • Overcoming creative blocks
  • Your boss has asked you to create a new look for his PowerPoint presentation. For three straight days, you've stared at the computer screen trying ......
  • Nuts & Bolts -- Is this click really necessary?
  • When and where to use WBT ......
  • When Sales is a Laughing Matter
  • I recently attended a luncheon sponsored by a major electronics manufacturer that was presenting its position on the development of DVD technology. After the main ......
  • Stand and deliver
  • HEADNOTE Thoughtful preparation is the key to delivering an effective speech. Here's how to get your audience enthusing, not snoozing IMAGE ILLUSTRATION 1 HOLDING AN ......
  • Like being there
  • HEADNOTE edit this HEADNOTE Why do we think remote interaction can actually take the place of face-to-face meetings? my biggest problem with emeetings is speakers ......
  • A low-tech change-up can make your message stand...
  • At a recent conference, I had the pleasure of watching a presenter deliver an elegantly tailored 90-minute PowerPoint presentation. Anyone who has ever stood on ......
  • Closing pitcher
  • A true story: The risk manager swallowed hard. He stood before the general counsel of his company, a global giant. He was there to argue ......