This document provides guidance on structuring presentations and reports using a logical framework called the Pyramid Principle. It begins with an introduction to the key elements of structuring information, including establishing a situation, complication, and question to set up the main topic. It then covers techniques for ordering ideas in a deductive or inductive manner to tell a clear story or make a logical argument. Each section builds on this framework, with guidance on developing a question/answer dialogue, using a pyramid structure of main and subsidiary ideas, and ensuring vertical and horizontal logical relationships. The document emphasizes keeping reports concise yet comprehensive by following best practices for structure, format, flow, and ensuring the significance or "so what" of each point is explained
4. Enabling Change
Reports that convey understanding quickly are key to
gaining agreement and enabling the change needed
Understanding
Agreement
Time
4
5. Format and Structure
The message can be lost through poor format or poor
structure in a presentation or report
Poor Format
Poor Structure
5
6. Failure to Gain Support
...resulting in additional cost, delays in issue resolution
or project and an unhappy customer
Unhappy Customer
Additional Cost
Delays
6
7. Presentation as a Report
This set of techniques is using the approach of a report
within a presentation
Report
Key Note
Formality
Report in a
Presentation
7
8. Proven Logical Structure
The Pyramid Principle focuses on using a structure that
orders ideas in the way the mind thinks
Barbara Minto defined The Pyramid Principle
Ordering of ideas aligned with the way the mind thinks
It uses a pyramid structure
Single thought
Ideas relate vertically
Ideas relate horizontally
8
10. Top Down Ordering – Chemical Engineering
Structuring a report starting with the main idea enables
immediate understanding and need to know more
Structure A
Report to determine whether Blue
Engineering should invest in Benzene
production
Topic A: Benzene Demand
Hazardous
Replacement
Competitive vs Middle East
Conclusion
Increasing 3% per year
Plant shutdown
Benzene is in oversupply
Manufacturers moving from
Benzene
Not cost competitive with Middle
East
Recommend: Do Not Proceed
Benzene is hazardous and
manufacturers are looking for
alternatives
Topic C: Not Cost Competitive
Although 3% growth plants are
being shutdown due to oversupply
Topic B: Benzene Hazardous
Benzene is in oversupply
Manufacturers are moving from
Benzene
Not cost competitive with Middle
East
Topic A: Benzene Oversupply
Topic C: Cost
Topic B: Benzene Exposure
Structure B
Blue Engineering should not proceed
with investing in Benzene production
Conclusion Preview
South Wales is not cost competitive
compared to Middle East
Recommend: Do Not Proceed
10
11. A Pyramid to Tell a Story
Structure a report as a pyramid under a single idea with
elements of the story line below
Idea
Story
Line
Story
Line
Story
Line
11
12. Decompose The Problem
A longer report can be decomposed into sections that
correspond to categories or parts of the story to be told
Idea
Section/
Category
Story
Line
Section/
Category
Section/
Category
Story
Line
Story
Line
Story
Line
Story
Line
Section/
Category
Story
Line
Section/
Category
Section/
Category
Story
Line
Story
Line
Story
Line
12
13. Seven Ideas +/- 2
Keep the number of subsidiary ideas to seven (plus or
minus two) to help people remember your story
A human brain can hold 7 ideas +/- 2 in short term memory
Breakdown into categories
Difficult to Remember?
Bleach
Eggs
Carrots
Green Beans
Vegetables
Cleaning
Potatoes
Milk
Easier to Remember?
Bleach
Floor
Cleaner
Mop
Floor Cleaner Mop
Cheese
Potatoes
Carrots
Green
Beans
Dairy
Butter
Milk
Eggs
Butter
Cheese
13
14. Vertical Logic
Each idea above should summarise all the ideas below
and all the ideas below should be within the idea above
Idea
Vertical
Relationship
Section/
Category
Story
Line
Section/
Category
Story
Line
Story
Line
Section/
Category
Story
Line
Story
Line
14
15. Horizontal Logic
A horizontal relationship should create a storyline
summarising the points being presented
Horizontal Relationship
Idea
Section/
Category
Story
Line
Section/
Category
Section/
Category
Story
Line
Story
Line
Story
Line
Story
Line
Section/
Category
Story
Line
Section/
Category
Section/
Category
Story
Line
Story
Line
Story
Line
15
17. Report Structure
Reports should start with a Situation, Complication, and
Question structure followed by the main ideas
Introduction
Situation
Complication
Key Question (and/or Answer)
Main Idea
• First subsidiary idea
• Second subsidiary idea
• Second subsidiary idea
17
18. The Situation
Establishes the context stating something the audience
can agree with and leaves them expecting more
Situation
Establishes context
Audience can agree
Only information needed
Audience expects more
Example:
The IBM 2012 Tech Trends report from developerWorks and the IBM
Center for Applied Insights is based on a survey of more than 1,200 IT
and business decision makers who are determining when, where and
how their organizations adopt mobile, analytics, cloud and social
technologies.
18
19. The Complication
Identifies the problem to be discussed in the context of
the situation
Complication
Identifies the problem
Sufficient to understand all elements
Example:
Only 1 out of 10 organizations believes it has all the mobile, analytics,
cloud and social business skills needed to put those technologies to
work.
19
20. The Key Question (and/or Answer)
The Key Question and/or Answer should define the single
idea the rest of the report will be about
Key Question (and/or Answer)
Identifies question report will answer
Example:
Jim Corgel, General Manager IBM Software, challenges the business
and IT communities to rally together to bridge the skill gaps
threatening our collective ability to innovate – and shares the steps
IBM is taking to help address this critical issue.
See https://www.ibm.com/developerworks/mydeveloperworks/blogs/techtrends/?lang=en
20
21. Situation
The world is demanding more and more energy. The projected growth of
worldwide energy demand by 2030 is 36.8% according to the International
Energy Outlook 2008.
Question / Answer Complication
Introduction Example
This introduction follows the principles of Situation,
Complication and Question/Answer
The power generation industry faces major challenges in meeting this
growing demand, not least because of inhibitors such as regulation and
legislation; inadequate investment returns and unhelpful economic
incentives; and of course the supply of natural resources.
The report recommends investing in energy production for consumers :
• Optimise: Apply smart solutions to extend existing capabilities.
• Grow: Rapidly grow existing capability through smarter design and
operation.
• Accelerate: Nurture and accelerate new capabilities to commercial scale.
21
22. Changing Tone
Changing the order of the introduction elements
changes the tone of the report
Standard Order
Situation
Complication
Solution
Concerned Order
Complication
Situation
Solution
Direct Order
Solution
Situation
Complication
Aggressive Order
Question
Situation
Complication
22
24. Question Complication
Situation
Example Introduction
Using this example introduction we can develop the
body of the report
The data centre hosting the University systems is located in the centre of
London and hosts all administration and central student IT facilities.
All the systems the systems became unavailable on the 5th November for 36
hours due to a lack of power to the systems in the data centre.
This report examines why the power failed in the data centre.
24
25. Question/Answer Dialogue
Create a question/answer dialogue elaborating until
reader has no further logical questions
Power feed
failed to the
Data Centre
Why?
Generators
were
overloaded
Fire at
sub-station
Why was
there a fire?
Someone
deliberately
set the fire
How were
they able to
do this?
Physical
security was
insufficient
As new
project added
additional
load
Why is
power limited?
Why was
generator
overloaded?
Why was
additional power
not identified?
No check
made for
additional
power
Batteries
had limited
power
As no
resilience in
generators
Generator
was
designed to
take over
Therefore
Data Centre
had no power
What was the
technical
impact?
3121 servers
for 20
customers
failed
Why no
resilience?
Generator
designed
with no
resilience
25
26. Horizontal Relationship
Answering the questions below follows a logical
sequence by either deductive or inductive grouping
Deductive Grouping
Inductive Grouping
Generators
were
overloaded
Power Failed
to the Data
Centre
Why?
Fire at
sub-station
Generators
were
overloaded
Summarise
Batteries
had limited
power
Therefore
Data Centre
had no power
Why was
generator
overloaded?
As new
project added
additional
load
As no
resilience in
generators
26
27. Deductive Grouping
Use of deductive grouping is used when you want to
describe process steps, timeline or instructions
Deductive Grouping
Argument in successive steps
Implication from preceding steps
Indicated by
Process Steps
Timeline
Instructions
Ordered Recommendations
Paper Production
Obtain
Trees
Debarking
& Chipping
Pulp
Preparation
Paper
Formation
Paper
Finishing
27
28. Inductive Grouping
Used for a set of related ideas that can be described by
a plural noun
Inductive Grouping
• A set of related ideas
• Can be described by a plural noun
•
E.g. Reasons for, reasons against, steps, problems
Paper
Hazards
General
Noise
Machine
Guarding
Lockout/
Tagout
Pressure
Vessels
28
29. Developing the Structure
A pyramid of questions and answers can be developed
that support the overall subject of the presentation.
1
6 New Q
7
3
Idea
S=4
C=5
Q=2
Fill in the top box
1. What is the idea?
2. What is the question about the idea?
3. What is the answer about the idea?
Match The Answer to the Introduction
4. What is the Situation?
5. What is the Complication?
2. Check Question and Answer?
Find the story line
6. What new Question is raised by the
answer?
7. Deductive or Inductive answer?
7. If inductive, what is your plural noun?
8
Structure supporting points
8. Repeat the question answer process at
this level?
Source: The Minto Pyramid Principle
29
30. Mind Mapping
It can help to develop the structure of the presentation
using mind mapping tools such as Freemind
30
32. Why a Storyline on a Slide?
Many more stakeholders than at the initial presentation
need to understand a report through the story line
Key stakeholder availability
No verbal explanation
Story line enables understanding
32
33. Starting With A Report
Start on paper writing a story line for the report and check the
message can be understood without the main body of the slide
Story Line
Write the story line
and check it flows by
reading the titles of
the report in sequence
– this will be your
executive summary.
33
34. One Thought Per Slide
Use only one message per slide with only information relevant
to the message otherwise the message will be diluted
Keep the slide simple
One message per slide
Only what is relevant to the message ...
and no more
34
35. So What?
Always ask of a slide or report section, so what am I trying to
present and does it convey an important message?
So What?
So what is this slide telling the audience?
So what is so important I need to have the slide?
So what role does the slide have in presenting the message?
35
36. Explain the Significance
Ensure your slide describes the significance of the ideas being
presented that keeps the audience interested to know more
This provides facts
without the
significance of the
population rise
The title and
supporting content
states the impact of
the rise in population
36
37. Parts of the Slide
The slide can be split into three main parts – the Short
Title, Story Line and Main Body
Short Title
Story Line
Main Body
37
38. Story Line
The story line should state the significance of the slide
and should be sufficient without the main body
State what the main
message of the slide
(which should be
sufficient without the
body of the slide)
38
39. Body of the Slide
The main body should elaborate the storyline but not
introduce any further ideas
The main body should
elaborate the detail of
the story line but not
introduce any more
information than is in
the story line
39
41. Slide Transition
To make a presentation flow begin the transition to the
next slide before moving on and write into slide notes
Begin transition before
moving on
Showing next slide will
take attention away
Write into slide notes
41
42. Printing and Animation
Ensure your slides convey the same message when
printed and minimise the use of animation
Situation
Complication
Solution
Situation
Complication
Solution
42
44. Reports
When creating a formal report, create a presentation first
to create story line and ensure a coherent story
Formal report
Create a story line
Elaborate each slide
Information to be gathered
Group Development
Ensure story line is coherent
Work can be distributed
44
45. Situation
Benzene is a key building block for the production of other chemicals. It’s most
widely produced derivative is ethylbenzene, a precursor to styrene, which is
used to make polymers and plastics. Cumene is converted phenol for resins and
adhesives. Cyclohexane is used in the manufacture of Nylon. Smaller amounts of
benzene are used to make some types of rubbers, lubricants, dyes, detergents,
drugs, explosives, and pesticides.
Complication
After the recession of 2010, benzene, an aromatic chemical building block used
primarily for the production of other chemicals, including styrene and cumene,
experienced growing demand in 2011, with world demand forecast increasing
from 41 to 42 million metric tons by the IHS Chemical global market study from
IHS (NYSE: IHS).
Question
Report Introduction
The same structure of Situation, Complication and
Question can be used in a formal report
Blue Chemical Engineering plc think the growth in demand for benzene may be
an opportunity for investment and have engaged Jarratt Consulting to investigate
whether to invest in a new plant in South Wales able to produce 100,000 kg/h of
benzene.
45
46. Idea 1
• Whilst there has been increasing demand at 3% per year there is
oversupply in the marketplace and refineries that produce Benzene as a
by-product are being shut down.
Idea 2
After examining the market and financial implications, Jarratt Consulting do not
recommend investment in a new Benzene plant in South Wales for the following
reasons:
• Exposure to Benzene is hazardous and as a result some products are
looking to replace it as a component of manufacture which is holding
back growth.
Idea 3
Main Idea
Report Main Ideas
The main recommendation is up front with each key idea
summarised to form the basis of each major section
• The cost of Benzene production in South Wales would not be
competitive against global producers in Asia and the Middle East.
46
47. Report Structure
A report will follow the same structure with an Executive
Summary providing senior management communication
Same structure as a
Executive Summary
presentation
Introduction (Summary)
Sections will form chapters
Main Point
Executive Summary to
understand the
implications
Situation
Complication
Question and/or Answer
Point 1
Point 2
Point 2
Introduction
Situation
Complication
Question and/or Answer
Key message 1
Key message 2
Key message 3
Chapter – Key Message 1
Chapter – Key Message 2
Chapter – Key Message 3
Summary
48. Email Structure
The same pyramid approach can be used to structure
emails and clearly communicate the message
From: Fred Bloggs
To: Joe Smith
Subject: Application Hardware Upgrade Required
Hi Joe,
Situation
Performance has always been something we monitor for the application to ensure we
do not reach the limits of the systems.
Complication Over the past month there has been a 20% growth in traffic in the application.
Question &
Answer
We needed to know when we might read the limits of the underlying system and found
that we have a further six months of capacity.
Main Point
We looked at the options and recommend a full replacement of the current system with
new computer systems. The options we looked at were:
1. Increasing memory and disk for a cost of $200k would only give us another six
months of capacity and the underlying hardware would be at it’s natural end of life.
2. Full replacement of the hardware at a cost of $500k which would give us two
years of additional capacity with the option to add an additional two years of
capacity.
Point 1
Point 2
Please could you review the attached report and confirm our recommendation.
48
49. Summary
Use the proven approach for structuring presentations
will take effort but will result in improved productivity
Clearly communicate using a logic
The Pyramid Principle is proven
It will take practice and extra effort
But it will improve productivity
Structure
It
Frame
It
Introduce
It
Present
Using
Logic
Question
It
Reuse
It
Describe
It
49
50. References and Tools
References
Chevallier, Arnaud (2012) Use logic to think and communicate effectively [online]. Published
by: slideshare.com. Available from http://www.slideshare.net/achevallier/use-logic-to-thinkand-communicate-effectively [Accessed 6 January 2013]
Chevallier, Arnaud (2012) Powerful problem solving: Ideas to become outstanding problem
solvers [online]. Published by: Powerful Problem Solving. http://powerful-problemsolving.com/use-logic [Accessed 6 January 2013]
IBM (2012). Fast track to the future: The 2012 IBM Tech Trends Report [online]. Published
by: IBM Corporation. Available from
https://www.ibm.com/developerworks/mydeveloperworks/blogs/techtrends/?lang=en
[Accessed 6 January 2013]
Minto, Barbara (2002) The Pyramid Principle: Logic in Writing and Thinking 3rd ed. ISBN: 0273-65903-0. Essex: Pearson Education Limited
Minto, Barbara (2012) The Minto Pyramid Principle: Logic in Writing, Thinking and Problem
Solving ISBN: 0-09601910-3-8
Zelazny, Gene (2006) Say It with Presentations: How to Design and Deliver Successful
Business Presentations ISBN: 0-07-147289-4
Tools
Freemind – http://freemind.sourceforge.net
Free Xmind - http://sourceforge.net/projects/xmind3/
50
51. The Minto Pyramid Principle
Logic in Writing, Thinking and Problem Solving
Barbara Minto ISBN 0-9601910-3-8
Part One: Logic in Writing
Why a Pyramid Structure?
The Substructures with the Pyramid
How to Build a Pyramid Structure
Fine Points of Introductions
Deduction and Induction: The
Difference
Part Two: Logic in Thinking
Imposing Logical Order
Summarising Grouped Ideas
Logic in Problem Solving
Defining the Problem
Structuring the Analysis of the
Problem
Logic in Presentation
Reflecting the Pyramid on the Page
Reflecting the Pyramid on a Screen
Reflecting the Pyramid in Prose
Appendix A: Problem Solving in
Structureless Situations
Appendix B: Examples of Introductory
Structures
Appendix C: Summary of Key Points
Mentioned in the Text
http://www.barbaraminto.com/
51
Editor's Notes
Creating reports and presentations often seems like trying to climb a mountain - like these in the Picos de Europa in Northern Spain.Finding the right path up the mountain is difficult without a clear map to the top.In creating a report or presentation we need a technique to enable us to find the right path to communicate effectively. This presentation describes a technique to be used where a report is being created to answer a problem. It can be used not only for presentations but also documents and emails to create a clear logical storyline to keep an audience interested and gain the agreement needed.I am describing a technique using logic based on the The Minto Pyramid Principle that has been used by the worlds leading management consultancies for over 40 years. It is supplemented by material from other bestselling authors of presentation techniques and my experience using the technique over the past 10 years.
So What?I have split the presentation into six sections:We start with the section Frame It to set the context on why using logic for a presentation is important and then introduce the TheMinto Pyramid Principle. The second section, Structure It elaborates the top-down approach used with the concepts of horizontal and vertical logic. We follow this with the section Introduce It where I describe the structure of the introduction of a report in a presentation or document. It is important to set the context to idea being presented. We then continue on to the section Question It where I describe how to create a hierarchy of questions and answers to build the body of a report.Once we have described how to introduce and create the main content of a report the section Describe It shows how a slide should be laid out to give a clear message. and finally the section Reuse It shows how the same approach can be used in other forms of communication including documents and emails.TransitionSo lets start...
So What?...with the sectionFrame It where we look at how presentations, reports and emails - if poorly structured can cost effort, introduce delays and reduce customer satisfaction.TransitionToday we spend large amounts of time creating and presenting presentations to persuade people of our point of view – so getting this right is extremely important.
So What?Getting a presentation right is key to enabling change: Many jobs need presentations and reports that clearly convey key messages. With face-to-face meetings becoming a rarity and many of the stakeholders never attending the meeting you may hold online, the message needs to be clear. We may get to a meeting and the key decision makers often say they have less time than is allocated. They are often short of time and grow bored easily if the presentation takes a long time to get to the key message. The stakeholders that may be short of time or not attend the meeting may be key to gaining agreement to decisions that will enable the change needed.TransitionSo what key factors do we need to think about when creating a presentation?
So What?We need to think about the The Format andStructureof a presentation or report.The format can hide a message by beingUntidy ... Inconsistent ... Too busy ... Boring ...Most importantly, no logical flow or structure can make the messageConfusing... Lost in detail... Missing message... Incorrect ...There are many great books on the format of a presentation but having a well formatted presentation does not help if the message is not clear.TransitionSo why should we spend the effort on getting the format andstructure of a report right?
So What?If we don’t get it right it could resulting in a decision not being made or a failure to gain support for what is being presented.If I am trying to persuade a meeting of 20 people who have all travelled to hear you present a report where you do not have a clear message this is time wasted. This is a very expensive meeting that may need to be repeated or it might mean you have lost the opportunity to make the important change.If this was a major incident that is causing a service outage you may extend the outage as the solution us not clearly communicated.If you are dealing with a customer it could reduce customer satisfaction as a result of being unable to communicate clearly.If you are a student, if you cannot communicate your ideas in coursework you may get marked down. The person who moderates across the course (and did not attend your verbal presentation) may mark you down if they cannot understand the ideas.All of these are good reasons to get your communication clear.TransitionThis presentation is focussing on the structure of a presentation as there are many great books on the format of presentations that are easy to read.One such book is “Say it with Presentations’ by Gene Zelazny.So what sort of presentation structure are we focussing on?
So What?The technique we are discussing uses the structure of a formal report but in the form of a presentation.It is not a Key Note presentation where the slides need a speaker to elaborate the message. The slides in this context need to standalone without a speaker and can be understood without a speaker.TransitionThe technique is based on a technique developed over forty years ago at McKinsey and Company to write reports.
So What?The Pyramid Principle is about the ordering of ideas that align with the way the mind processes information and was originally developed by Barbara Minto in 1967 whilst at McKinsey and Company.It uses a pyramid structure to bring ideas to a single thought.Where the ideas will relate vertically by summarising the thoughts belowAnd the ideas relate horizontally to present a logical argumentMany consulting companies including IBM teach this to their consultants.TransitionSo lets examine how this works.
So What?We will now move on to look at structuring a presentation using a top-down approach.Unless the words and relationships between ideas are easy to understand, readers will find it hard to understand their significance.A reader will read from the start of the documentWill first have to recognise and interpret the contentThen have to understand the relationship between ideasAnd then they have to understand the significance of ideasAll of this takes a lot of processing by the brain and unless it is clearly presented the key idea will be lost.TransitionLets start with an example showing a recommendation that is difficult to process and how it can be rearranged.
So What?Here is an example.On the left is a report where the information reads as a story but you cannot tell the message until the end is reached. The messages on the left also do not explain the significance of what is being presented. When you get to the end the brain is trying to remember the context of what has come previously and understand how it relates to the conclusion.On the right the message is given at the start allowing the reader to then ask in their mind for the next level of detail. The messages also in this example emphasis the significance at each stage.Putting the main message at the top and elaborating top-down enables the reader understand the significance from the start.If the main point is at the end of a report (in a conclusion) a reader will have to wait until they reach the end before they understand the relationship and the significance of the writing.TransitionThis forms the basis of the pyramid logic. We will now walk through the principles step-by-step.
So What?The starting point is a single idea that should be at the top of a pyramid with elements of the story line below.These story line items are then broken down further into supporting information about the ideas above.TransitionThis is a simple pyramid but documents are normally much more complex.
So What?For a longer report the story line can be grouped into sections or categories to make the story easier to remember - in the same way this presentation has been created for different topics.The topics could connect to form a story such as step 1, 2 and 3 in a process. Or they could be categories where the connection is that they are of the same type such as London, Birmingham and Manchester.TransitionThe brain is limited in what it can process and the number of ideas below the main idea need to be limited to not confuse the reader.
So What?To help people remember the story the number of ideas need to be limited to seven +/- two.Look at the example of the shopping list on the left. The list is made of 10 items that are not related.By grouping the items into groups of small lists of items the items can be more easily remembered. I know I have three groups and it is easier to remember there are three or four items.In this case to make things easier to remember I might display using colour to remember the grouping. I could use the colour code – Pink/red for hazardous cleaning materials, Yellow for dairy products such as butter and cheese with green for vegetablesI might even relate the Vegetables to individual colours: I want Red Potatoes, Orange Carrots and Green BeansYou could use colour coding to get people to remember your message.TransitionTo ensure the information is complete and related to the key idea there also needs to be a vertical relationship.
So What?In a pyramid, each idea above should summarise the ideas below and the ideas below should be within the scope of the idea above.If the sections or story lines are not within the idea above1. Either the idea above needs to change2. Or the idea below should be removedThis ensures the ideas are complete and do not deviate from the message being presented.TransitionAs well as a vertical relationship there must be a horizontal relationship.
So What?There should be a horizontal relationship between the main ideas being presented to create a story line. This makes the presentation flow in a logical sequence.TransitionAt this point we have talked about a pyramid starting with a single principle idea broken down further with a vertical and horizontal relationship between the ideas.Lets now look at how we practically structure this in a report.
So What?The report we create needs to be introduced using a section to provide the context for the report.
So What?The overall report should have two main sections An introduction to set the context A body to convey the main ideas in the form of a pyramidThe introduction consists of a Situation, Complication together with a Key Question and/or Answer.This information sets the context to the report.TransitionLets look at the introduction in more detail.
So What?The first part of the introduction is to set the context by stating something the audience can agree with and leaves them expecting more.It contains only the information needed for the report and no moreIt should be sufficient in itself without the need for additional information.Look at the example from a web page introducing the IBM tech trends report.https://www.ibm.com/developerworks/mydeveloperworks/blogs/techtrends/?lang=enTransitionNext we need to introduce the problem we are trying to solve
So What?The complication identifies the problem in the context of the situation Something went or could go wrong Something changed or could change Here is what we might expect to find A person has a different point of view There are n alternatives we haveIt should be sufficient to understand all the elements being considered later in the report.In this example is that there is a lack of skills in key technology areas.TransitionIt does not yet tell you what question is going to be answered.
So What?This comes next with a question and potentially an answer that is elaborated in the rest of the report.Again, this should be in the context of the Situation and Complication previously.This is sufficient to introduce the report based on a single idea.In this example, an answer is provided without a question.TransitionLets look at another example.
So What?In this example, the situation is stating we need more energy and there is a projected growth of 36.8%The complication is that the industry faces challenges in meeting that demand and this is inhibited.The Question/Answer goes direct to three recommendations or answers.TransitionYou will see in these examples the question has been removed and the slide goes direct to the answer. You can change the order to change the tone or emphasis.
So What?The standard Situation-Complication-Question/Answer can be changed to Situation-Complication-Solution.You can also change the tone completely with an agressive order of Question-Situation-Complication.In all cases the Situation and Complication is used and the Question/Answer part can be changed to Solution.The order of these standard parts can be used to change the tone or emphasis.TransitionLets move onto the next section.
So What?There is a logical process of refinement to create the main body of the text by using a question/answer structure.TransitionIn this section we will take you through the principles of elaborating the ideas.
So What?Here is another example we can use as an introduction to the body of a report being used as an example. It describes the situation – a power failure and the complication is that it impacted the data centre with the question being ‘how did this happen?’TransitionLets look at a technique to elaborate the ideas within the body of the report.
So What?In this example, we take the first question and produce answers as to why the failure took place. This question and answer dialogue continues on down.Notice that at the first level the answers are in sequence and one is a consequence of the previous one.From these first answers further questions are asked until no further logical answers come.The answers should go to the same level of detail – so don’t start getting into the detailed implementation for one component when another idea is at a high level.In this case I have not gone as far as I can but this gives you an idea of how it can be done.TransitionIn developing the question and answers the ideas below another a top-level generally follow two forms.
So What?You will see the deductive grouping where one answer is deduced from the previous answer. In this case there was a fire at the sub-station which cause a loss of power and as a result the generators supplying power to the data centre came online but were overloaded and the batteries that provided backup did not last for long resulting in a total failure of the data centre power. The other alternative is a set of related ideas. In this case the ideas are related as they were reasons why the generator was overloaded. If the projects had not added new demand for power and there was some spare capacity or resilience in the generators the generators would not have been overloaded.TransitionLets look at some other examples to describe the horizontal relationship between ideas.
So What?A deductive grouping may be used where process steps, a timeline, instructions or ordered recommendations are needed.An argument in successive steps is created with the next step implied from the previous step.In this example a process flow of paper production could be used to describe the flow of ideas to be described.TransitionLets look at an inductive grouping example.
So What?In this case the example a set of hazards in paper production. It is a set of related ideas that can be described by a plural noun – in this case ‘hazards’.The grouping should all be at the same level of detail and related to the primary idea.TransitionWe have now talked about the introduction and creating the body of the story by questions and answers. But what are the steps we should take to build the story?
So What?In the Minto Pyramid Principle they describe a series of steps starting with defining the Idea of what is being written.Then identify, the Question about the idea and the Answer you are looking for. In other words you should know what the top-level answer is before you start.Then go back and define the Situation that will set the overall context that people can agree with. Given you know the question/answer you can define the Complication that leads to the question.Check the Question and Answer still work with the Situation and Complication you have documented.What new Question or Questions are raised by the first Answer? You can then decided whether you want to use Deductive or Inductive reasoning. This will be indicated by the structure of the answer. If the answer is a process flow or follows a timeline it would be Deductive.If it is Inductive, what is the plural noun to describe the group of answers.Keep repeating the process making sure the answers are fully supporting the idea above to ensure vertical logic.TransitionThis process is the basis of all reports whether their form is a document, presentation, email or website.Tools can help in development of the structure.
So What?Using a mind mapping tool can help build the structure of the presentation visually that can then be the basis of the report to be created.There are many free mind mapping tools such as Freemind and Xmind.TransitionLets move onto the next section.
So What?Now we come to the section where we describe how a slide should be laid out to give a clear message.TransitionFirst we start with understanding why we use this format.
So What?When a report is presented, not all key stakeholders will be available (if you are a student this may include the lecturer who marks your work)Stakeholders not attending need to be able to understand the key messages without a verbal explanationThe story line at the top of each slide ensures the stakeholders not attending can understand the key ideas of the presentation clearly.TransitionAs I said before, this is not meant to be a key note presentation where a few picture will do to assist the speaker.Lets start then with the story line for each slide.
So What?Once you have defined the key story for the introduction and body a good place to start is to define the storyline as a storyboard with the key message for each slide on a separate piece of paper.Read the story line in sequence and it should be the basis for an executive summary of a written report.Even if you are going to write a formal report, writing the storyline for a set of slides give you the opportunity to check the flow of the key messages.TransitionThere are some key rules you need to follow when creating the storyboard.
So What?One have one message slide and no more.Only what is relevant and no more. Don’t add an interesting unrelated fact that will divert the audience.If you have two ideas – create two slides. It should take no longer to talk about but the message will be clear.TransitionHaving a single message is still not enough.
So What?It is important that the message is relevant. So what is this slide telling the audience? So what is so important I need to have the slide? So what role does the slide have in presenting the message?If you cannot answer this – change the slide or remove it?Often the storyline will state a fact and follow this with an implication that gives the ‘so what?’ message.TransitionLets look at an example.
So What?In this case we have two examples.On the left the slide just has a title but does not meet the ‘So What?’ rule and the supporting graph below gives us no clue as to the message.The second example on the right passed the So What? Test as it states the fact and an implication of the fact. The content below supports the storyline above as well.TransitionLets now spend a bit of time looking at the layout.
So What?Different people have different ways of absorbing the information and in this case I am using a short title. I have found that some people do not like the storyline and still want a short snappy title.This is then followed by the storyline following the ‘So What?’ principles and below that the main body of the slide that supports the storyline.TransitionLets talk more about the storyline.
So What?The storyline of the slide has a single idea and follows the ‘So What?’ principle. It should also be sufficient to communicate the key message without the body of the slide.TransitionAnd the body of the slide...
So What?The main body should elaborate the storyline but not introduce any further ideas. This follows the vertical logic principles introduced earlier. Each of the three bullets support ideas in the storyline.TransitionTo support the slide some notes may need be documented.
So What?Elaborate the So What message by documenting them in the notes of the slide.You may not read these notes word for word but they are useful in making sure the message you are presenting flows.TransitionNext it is important to move to the next slide in a controlled way.If you just put the next slide up the attention is diverted from the words you are speaking to the content of the slide.So start the message of the next slide before you move on.
So What?Writing the Transition words into the Notes is also a useful step to keep the flow of the presentation.TransitionNow we have described the concepts of the pyramid principle and how it can be used practically in writing a report in a presentation.The next section shows how you can reuse the same techniques in other writing.
So What?This section demonstrates how the same approach can be re-used for reports and emails.TransitionFirst lets consider how this can be used in reports.
So What?When creating a formal report, create a presentation first to create story line and ensure a coherent story.When creating a formal reportCreate a story line using a set of slidesElaborate in each slide further messagesDefine what information needs to be gatheredWhen a report is being developed as part of a group isIt can be used to ensure the story line is coherentWork can be distributed to complete the detailThis helps when creating a report with a groupTransitionHere is an example of an executive summary using the same structure of writing.
So What?The report has the same Situation, Complication and Question structure for the introduction for a written report.This could have started life as three slides in a presentation.TransitionMoving onto the body of the report...http://press.ihs.com/press-release/benzene/demand-benzene-key-chemical-building-block-rebounds-2012-excess-capacity-hurti
So What?There is a single answer or main idea is then supported by three further ideas. These ideas would form the basis of three sections for the report.TransitionSo lets go on to look at the structure of the report...http://press.ihs.com/press-release/benzene/demand-benzene-key-chemical-building-block-rebounds-2012-excess-capacity-hurti
So What?The introduction and main body of the report shown in the previous two slides will form the executive summary.A formal report will follow the same structure as a presentation with the next level ideas and/or sections forming the chapters of in a document.Senior management should be able to just read the Executive Summary to understand the implications.TransitionThe same structure can also be used for emails...
So What?In this case the email uses the same structure we introduced for the presentation and formal report.It makes sure the key recommendations are up front and clearly documented. It leaves you with an understanding of what is recommended and interested to examine the report that is attached.TransitionNow we have come to the end of this presentation...
So What?The presentation has demonstrated that Using a logic for structuring of presentations and reports will ensure a message is clearly communicated The Pyramid Principle is a proven way of structuring presentations and reports But making use of these techniques will take practice and extra time will be needed initially to learn – so don’t give up, spend the time – it will get easier. But spending the extra effort up front will improve yourperformance by reducing the time taken and cost to gain agreement on difficult decisionsTransitionIncluded in the pack is a list of references for material used to create this presentation.If you want to read more in-depth on the principles make sure you consult ‘The Minto Pyramid Principle’ published in 2012