Tag Archive for 'PowerPoint'

Don’t be in the Dark

Recently I was the speaker for a large group in a Convention Center break-out room. When I arrived early to check everything out, the room was dark. Not because no one was in it — no, there were probably a couple hundred people there listening to a speaker. But they were sitting in the dusk. And the speaker was virtually in the dark at the front of the room. Now, the screen, oh yes, you could see the screen…

When that session broke up and I began my set-up, I asked several different people what could be done about the lighting. Every single one of them responded to me by saying, “The lights are turned down so the audience can see the screen.”

Aaugh! Let me pose this to you:

You’re an expert on something. You’ve been invited to speak to a group of hundreds of people about your expertise. It’s an opportunity for exposure, for credibility-building, for connecting with and relating to people about your subject matter. Given that, what’s more important? That your audience be able to see your PowerPoint slides? Or that they see you?

If you had no PowerPoint slides to show, would you stand in the front of a room in the dark?  When you’re sitting in an audience looking at these bright visuals on the screen, can you see the speaker at all, who often is simply silhouetted against the bright screen? When you attend an event or a program or a convention session, do you go because you can’t wait to see the PowerPoint slides?  Have you ever heard audience members exclaim before a presentation, “Man, I can’t wait to see this speaker’s visuals!”  Or afterwards, have you ever heard any of them say, “Wow, weren’t those PowerPoint slides really worth the time?”

No, no, no, no and no.  So why do speakers and venues do it in the dark?

One of my continuous refrains in my training business is, as a speaker you want the focus on you. So what if the screen is not quite as bright as it could be in a dark room? Trust me, with today’s bright lumen projectors, most screens are very visible in room with normal lighting. If you have good visuals (that’s another topic for another day!), you don’t need to turn the lights off or even down low. Your only concern is to make sure there are no spots or other lighting shining directly on the screen. If you’re speaking in a small- to medium-sized conference room, classroom or auditorium, you can probably take care of this yourself with a few tests of the light switches. In a larger facility that specializes in hosting speaking events, the staff should be able to work with you on this.

Other than the obvious difficulty created when lights shine right on the screen, I’ve never seen a problem with keeping normal lighting in the room. Remember, the objective is for the audience to see you.  And, don’t forget, it helps for you can see the audience.

Ironically, at this convention I was at recently, after I had to ask three or four people how I could get the lighting changed, my conference host ended up having to pay a convention employee to do it! That, of course, should not have been necessary. For a speaker to be in the light should not be an extra charge!

Purpose Solves Many Presentation Problems

Think about some of the presentations you’ve seen that were, shall we say, less than ideal. I’m going to guess the problems fell into one of three areas: Dull delivery; Wordy wanderlust; and PowerPoint poisoning.

At first blush, it’s probably not clear what these areas have in common, other than they all have the potential to sabotage your presentation’s success. What’s the common culprit, or more importantly, the common solution?

In a word, purposeful. Let’s look at how applying that adjective can solve each of these problems.

Dull Delivery. When gripped with the anxiety that’s so common with public speaking, a speaker can often just shut down. But if your delivery has purpose, you become much more powerful. Purposeful delivery means: You look at and talk to individual members of the audience as if your purpose was to have a one-on-one conversation with each of them. You use purposeful gestures, painting pictures with your hands and highlighting or underscoring points. You use props for demonstration purposes. You have purposeful movement where you stride across the front of the room, not pace. You step to the screen to refer to something specific on a slide. You put purposeful inflection in your voice-by varying your rate, volume, and inflection. You minimize the uhs and ums, because they have no purpose. Continue reading ‘Purpose Solves Many Presentation Problems’

Just Say No to PowerPoint

There’s actually a week in February called that: “Just Say No to PowerPoint Week.”  Really.  Initiated by a communication consultant in California, it’s her attempt to get presenters to focus on one-on-one communication instead of hiding behind the crutch that PowerPoint can be.

While I can understand her thinking—PowerPoint can really suck the life out of presentations—I won’t go so far as to admonish presenters to “just say no to PowerPoint.”

Instead, I’d like to offer some guidelines for PowerPoint quality that I wish more presenters would say “yes” to!

1. Be purposeful. Use a visual only when it fulfills what I call the UR rule. In other words, will it help the audience Understand or Remember something?  If not, it has no purpose. And with no purpose, it detracts from your presentation.

2.  Keep it simple . Use just key words and phrases.  You never need to use full sentences on a PowerPoint slide.

3.  Use large type. Minimum 30 pt. for text, 40 pt. for headlines.

4.   Follow the six by six rule: no more than six lines per visual, no more than six words per line.

5.   Use pictorials. By this I don’t necessarily mean pictures, although photos can be great choices. I’m thinking in terms of the
visual representation of text and numbers, such as charts and graphs. I’d stay away from clip art, which seldom fulfills the UR Rule.

6. Use appropriate contrast in your color choices: light type (white or yellow) on a dark (blue) background is the most readable.

7.  Be careful of animation. It takes up time and takes the focus off of you. In fact, you can say that about most of the “bells and whistles” of PPt, whether animated, flying bullets, timed slide transitions, or sound effects.

8.  Insert a black slide occasionally. When there’s nothing on the screen, it means the audience will be paying attention to you, not the visual. That should always be your objective!

My guiding philosophy about being a presenter is that the focus should be on you.  Visuals that are complex, hard to read, busy, noisy or never-ending don’t allow that to happen.  Visuals should complement and enhance your presentation, but never stand alone or take away from it.