The document provides advice on using the right presentation software. It outlines 5 golden rules for great presentations, including that the screen should support the presenter, not distract from them. It discusses the differences between PowerPoint/Keynote which are best for linear presentations making one point after another, and Prezi which allows zooming into details on one canvas. It also recommends Haiku Deck as a neat alternative that forces lean presentations through its limitations of one picture, headline and optional subline or chart per slide.
Re-membering the Bard: Revisiting The Compleat Wrks of Wllm Shkspr (Abridged)...
Use the proper presentation software (right)
1. The Right Presentation Software
Never (ab)use the (wrong) software for
prsentations anymore.
2. Table of content
• About presenting
• 5 Golden Rules for a great presentation
• The secret difference between ppt/key and prezi
• A neat alternative
All statements in this presentations are gender-neutral.
Whenever I talk about a „he“, it could also be a „she“. vice versa.
14. There is this one friend. He is not really
hyperactive, would not call him a slacker, tho.
You could not say that about him that he is very
innovative, maybe not even inspiring. Seems
not to be much into books, all that kind of
things, either.
22. As much as we know that inspiration is
important. And sharing time with people who
have something to tell and learn from, as well.
But we are human and in case of doubt we
prefer the company with people we enjoy
spending time with.
23. What makes you the 2nd guy with the
inspiration potential of the 1st guy?
29. The 5 Golden Rules of a great presentation.
• The screen should support you, not vice versa.
30. The 5 Golden Rules of a great ppt/key
• The screen should support you, not vice versa.
• Look at your own chart for 2 sec. Close your eyes. List
what you can remember seeing. Delete the rest.
31. The 5 Golden Rules of a great ppt/key
• The screen should support you, not vice versa.
• Look at your own chart for 2 sec. Close your eyes. List
what you can remember seeing. Delete the rest.
• No animated transitions. Please. They are distracting and
terribly ugly.
32. The 5 Golden Rules of a great ppt/key
• The screen should support you, not vice versa.
• Look at your own chart for 2 sec. Close your eyes. List
what you can remember seeing. Delete the rest.
• No animated transitions. Please. They are distracting and
terribly ugly.
• Design every page. Design. Every. Page.
33. The 5 Golden Rules of a great ppt/key
• The screen should support you, not vice versa.
• Look at your own chart for 2 sec. Close your eyes. List
what you can remember seeing. Delete the rest.
• No animated transitions. Please. They are distracting and
terribly ugly.
• Design every page. Design. Every. Page.
• Use pics? Be aware of loyalty rights!
35. Power Point/Key Note
A talk like a journey. You make one point after the other and
arrive at a conclusion. Maybe in one go, maybe in chapters.
A „red string“ is very important. One chart should be a logic
follow-up to the previous.
Power Point/Key Note is the perfect software for 99% of all
presentations.
36. Prezi
You have a big picture. And you want to show the big picture.
And then you want to highlight aspects of the bic picture. You
can zoom into details and elaborate on them.
The whole concept fits one canvas.
Prezi is NOT a cool transition and animation software. Dont
zoom, twist and twirrl. Its distraction, annoying, terrible.
38. Haiku Deck
A picture. A headline. Maybe a subline. Or a nice chart. Thats
it. Haiku forces you into lean presentations. But in a very
supportive way: with keyword search, the sw offers you some
background visuals to use for your presentation.
You can make a good looking presentation in only a few
minutes. Works on web and tablets.
www.haikudeck.com
PS: this is not paid advertising. just like the app.
39. GOOD LUCK WITH A
GREAT PRESENTATION.
Interested in more?
Visit us online: www.myschooloftalk.com
courses, workshops, trainings accessible on regular basis
sot@iacy.com