53. Use plenty of “white space”. After: The 6 Key Points about the Federal Budget Crisis
54. When can you present in B&W ? Detailed information is easier to read in black and white. But don’t call it a presentation. Call it a book, manual, guide or schedule.
55.
56. Final Words: When all you’ve got is a hammer, every problem starts looking like a nail.
58. In the end, it’s not about PowerPoint. It’s all about audience connectivity. The best speakers do not need PowerPoint to connect with their audience. But for many speakers like you…
59. This is only the beginning of your journey to creating unforgettable PowerPoint presentations. There are more tips and techniques to learn.
60. To guide you in your journey, bring these books along with you.
61. RECAP: Objective: to show you how to transform average presentations into unforgettable ones.
62. Take up the challenge. Be audience-centric. [email_address]
Notas do Editor
Why is it that we can sit still for two hours or more in a darkened hall watching a movie and tell others the story even a year later? Yet, we easily lose attention during a PowerPoint presentation and can’t remember what the speaker said a few hours later. The answer lies in the focus. The movie director thinks of how to make his story interesting and memorable to his viewers. The speaker thinks of what he wants to tell the audience. I call this movie director trait “audience-centric” and that of the presenter: “speaker-centric”.