B U L L E TS CAN KILL
A GR EAT PRE SENTATION
   10  Key  Points  to  Avoid  Boring  Your  Audience




          written  by  Paul  Clegg


                                                        ©Paul  Clegg  2010  
From time to time
... a great many of us are asked to make a presentation and adding visuals, brings life to the
content and inspiration to our audience.
It takes time, know how and experience to use visuals effectively, but let’s start with 10 Key
Points that Kill Presentations and bore your audience.

1. A projector too close to the screen, produces an image that’s too small. Just because the
venue placed your projector two feet from the screen doesn’t mean you have to leave it there.
Move it back until the images fill the screen. Then go check the view from the back of the
room and see what others will see.

2. Images grip an audience, especially photos of people. Funny, serious, sad. A family photo
in the centre of the screen can look isolated. Fill the screen, rotate for impact and movement,
crop into part of the photo. Cropping can be as simple as dragging the corners until they sit
outside of the presentation template. You can see the whole photo but your audience will only
see what’s on the screen when you hot play.

3. Fuzzy, low quality images. There are plenty of free quality images on the net. You never
have to use poor ones. How about being original. Take your camera with you everywhere and
photograph your own stuff . One of my favourite sources of free images is Flickr, but don’t fall
foul of copyright law. Fastest way to find images you can use commercially for free is on Flickr
Storm. Search box, advanced pull down menu so you can check copyright attribution then
click search ... easy.

4. Get rid of bullet points unless you really want to kill your presentation or even the audience.

I sat through a presentation recently with as many as 6 bullet points (actual sentences)! Guess
what. Few people could see them, let alone read them, except of course the presenter ... who
read every word (looking at the screen instead of his audience). Get creative with images and
let them communicate the main point of each message. If you need to, add a single word or
three at most.

If you really must use bullets, but no more than three to a page and one line per bullet.

5. White space gives clarity. Resist the temptation to fill every centimetre of space on the
screen. White space let’s your words breath when you want to provide clarity or impact.

6. Too many fonts on a page confuse the message as does too many colours.

7. Too many transitions between slides. The wonderful ways you can move images and text
around make it tempting to show off this new technology. They’re there to add interest and
keep the audience gripped, but if they’re overdone they lose their significance. Anyway, it’s
your job to keep your audience on the edge of their seats.



                                                                                 ©Paul  Clegg  2010  
8. Get a good remote. You know, the device to move the slides on. And learn how to use it in
advance. There’s nothing more distracting than constantly moving to the laptop in order to hit
the arrow keys.

9. Handing out stuff in the middle of your presentation or before the next person is about to
speak. You must control what your audience is focused on. It’s ok to get something in your
audience’s hands. Involving your audience is a powerful way for people to grasp an issue but it
takes a lot more control and takes more time. You will need to allow more time if you want
audience participation.

10 Timing. Don’t overstay your welcome. You know how long you have been asked to speak
for and to begin with, it can be difficult to decide what to include and what to leave out of a
presentation. Presentations are easier for you to control timing but workshops are
unpredictable if you are encouraging audience participation.

Support the key points you want to make and compare the number of slides you have with the
time you have. 30 slides in 30 minutes means you have a minute a slide - do you present at that
pace? You may be using a sequence of slides rapidly to make a point so naturally you will take
that into consideration but it’s always a good to cross check the final number of slides with the
time you have ... then be prepared to edit.



So now you’ve produced a great presentation. Consider sharing it with a wider audience to
build your visibility and enhance your reputation. Those present in the audience can review or
even download your slides and you get to be seen as the real pro.

Check out www.slideshare.com. Here’s what I am presently sharing. While you’re there, check
out the rest of the site for inspirational ideas for your next presentation.




                        Paul  Clegg  is  a  specialist  at  helping  people  develop  marketing  partnerships  that  lead  to  
                        increase  business.    His  background  in  marketing,  combining  10  years  experience  in  relationship  
                        networking  in  the  South  West  and  online,  provides  him  with  a  level  of  expertise  that  is  difficult  
                        to  find.    He  lives  in  Somerset,  England  and  writes  a  regular  newsletter  called  How  to  Turn  
                        Business  Cards  into  Business  at  Any  Networking  Event.    

                        He  has  also  written:  If  Follow  Up  is  Critical  to  Your  Business,  Why  Don’t  You  Do  It?    

Follow  the  link  to  receive  your  copy  or  contact  him  direct  at  paul.clegg@mac.com




                                                                                                                      ©Paul  Clegg  2010  

More Related Content

PAGES
bullets kill
PDF
Powerpoint: Bullets Kill Presentations
PDF
How to Use Photography for Great Presentations
PPTX
Powerpoint can be a big asset to your advertising
PDF
5 Key Principles of Using Photography in Presentations
PDF
Time To Bring Some Marketing To Your Presentations
PDF
10 Killer Tips for an Amazing Presentation - Way Before You Actually Give One
PPTX
How to Create an Outstanding Presentation
bullets kill
Powerpoint: Bullets Kill Presentations
How to Use Photography for Great Presentations
Powerpoint can be a big asset to your advertising
5 Key Principles of Using Photography in Presentations
Time To Bring Some Marketing To Your Presentations
10 Killer Tips for an Amazing Presentation - Way Before You Actually Give One
How to Create an Outstanding Presentation

What's hot (20)

PDF
You Suck At PowerPoint! by @jessedee
PDF
Formula for a Winning Presentation Design
 
PDF
Making Slides that Rock and Resonate
PPTX
The Top 10 Ugliest Powerpoint Slides
PDF
Why Presentations Matter
PDF
One Point Per Slide – Why It’s Important and How to Do It
PDF
Visual Silence can help your PowerPoint slides
PDF
REAL Delivery: GoTo Training
PPTX
Sales Presentations: How to Lose Your Audience in 10 Ways
 
PDF
8 Tips To Create Epic Visual Presentations
PDF
10 Commandments for Great Presentations
PPTX
Stop Breaking The Basic Rules of Presenting
PDF
Exaltus Presentation Design Services
PPT
I Hate PowerPoint
PPTX
Effective use of power point as a presentation tool
PDF
You suckatpowerpoint2
PDF
Good presentation styles
PDF
Taking Your Slide Deck to the Next Level
PPT
Presentations still suck here
PDF
How to Design and Love Your Content
You Suck At PowerPoint! by @jessedee
Formula for a Winning Presentation Design
 
Making Slides that Rock and Resonate
The Top 10 Ugliest Powerpoint Slides
Why Presentations Matter
One Point Per Slide – Why It’s Important and How to Do It
Visual Silence can help your PowerPoint slides
REAL Delivery: GoTo Training
Sales Presentations: How to Lose Your Audience in 10 Ways
 
8 Tips To Create Epic Visual Presentations
10 Commandments for Great Presentations
Stop Breaking The Basic Rules of Presenting
Exaltus Presentation Design Services
I Hate PowerPoint
Effective use of power point as a presentation tool
You suckatpowerpoint2
Good presentation styles
Taking Your Slide Deck to the Next Level
Presentations still suck here
How to Design and Love Your Content
Ad

Viewers also liked (20)

PPT
Arnatsiaq
 
PPT
Ppt this is the way we learn
PPTX
THIS IS HOW WE ROLL: Communion
DOC
Drunken priest
PDF
Rave on communication
PDF
Disha building capabilities
PPT
Hans Peter
 
PDF
EIU_Dupont_Australia_WEB_executive.pdf
PPTX
PPTX
20140123 ncgg7 inventorysession_proposal
PPT
1st karachi salesforce platform dug meetup
PPT
Johannes Lars
 
PDF
2014 Maxxis Spansih Motocross Championship in Valencia
PPT
Michael
PPT
Johannes Lars
 
PPT
Tp1 Design for All part2
PPT
Priest Refresh Austin
PDF
Why the New Zealand Government and others choose Plone
PDF
The saturday economist 2nd june
PPTX
TCI2013 How can design be a platform for the development of a regional cluste...
Arnatsiaq
 
Ppt this is the way we learn
THIS IS HOW WE ROLL: Communion
Drunken priest
Rave on communication
Disha building capabilities
Hans Peter
 
EIU_Dupont_Australia_WEB_executive.pdf
20140123 ncgg7 inventorysession_proposal
1st karachi salesforce platform dug meetup
Johannes Lars
 
2014 Maxxis Spansih Motocross Championship in Valencia
Michael
Johannes Lars
 
Tp1 Design for All part2
Priest Refresh Austin
Why the New Zealand Government and others choose Plone
The saturday economist 2nd june
TCI2013 How can design be a platform for the development of a regional cluste...
Ad

Similar to bullets+kill (20)

PDF
Presentation ideas
PDF
Presentation tips
DOCX
Film presentation
PDF
Scary slides @powerfulpoint
PPT
Effective use of powerpoint as a presentation tool.
PDF
Stories to help you better your presentations
PPTX
Powerpoint1_ludovice
PDF
Effective presentation
PDF
Guide to Presenting Like a Professional
PPTX
Effective use of power point as a presentation tool
PPT
Effective use of powerpoint
PPTX
Powerpoint activity 1 morales
PDF
Seth Godin - BAD PowerPoint
PDF
CS-AGRI Presentation and Video Editing Workshop.pdf
PDF
Maximizing your research impact through kick-ass presentations
PDF
The art of Powerpoint
PDF
reallybad-1
PPTX
Effective use of powerpoint
PDF
How to create a really GOOD Presentation
PPTX
Presentation ideas
Presentation tips
Film presentation
Scary slides @powerfulpoint
Effective use of powerpoint as a presentation tool.
Stories to help you better your presentations
Powerpoint1_ludovice
Effective presentation
Guide to Presenting Like a Professional
Effective use of power point as a presentation tool
Effective use of powerpoint
Powerpoint activity 1 morales
Seth Godin - BAD PowerPoint
CS-AGRI Presentation and Video Editing Workshop.pdf
Maximizing your research impact through kick-ass presentations
The art of Powerpoint
reallybad-1
Effective use of powerpoint
How to create a really GOOD Presentation

bullets+kill

  • 1. B U L L E TS CAN KILL A GR EAT PRE SENTATION 10  Key  Points  to  Avoid  Boring  Your  Audience written  by  Paul  Clegg ©Paul  Clegg  2010  
  • 2. From time to time ... a great many of us are asked to make a presentation and adding visuals, brings life to the content and inspiration to our audience. It takes time, know how and experience to use visuals effectively, but let’s start with 10 Key Points that Kill Presentations and bore your audience. 1. A projector too close to the screen, produces an image that’s too small. Just because the venue placed your projector two feet from the screen doesn’t mean you have to leave it there. Move it back until the images fill the screen. Then go check the view from the back of the room and see what others will see. 2. Images grip an audience, especially photos of people. Funny, serious, sad. A family photo in the centre of the screen can look isolated. Fill the screen, rotate for impact and movement, crop into part of the photo. Cropping can be as simple as dragging the corners until they sit outside of the presentation template. You can see the whole photo but your audience will only see what’s on the screen when you hot play. 3. Fuzzy, low quality images. There are plenty of free quality images on the net. You never have to use poor ones. How about being original. Take your camera with you everywhere and photograph your own stuff . One of my favourite sources of free images is Flickr, but don’t fall foul of copyright law. Fastest way to find images you can use commercially for free is on Flickr Storm. Search box, advanced pull down menu so you can check copyright attribution then click search ... easy. 4. Get rid of bullet points unless you really want to kill your presentation or even the audience. I sat through a presentation recently with as many as 6 bullet points (actual sentences)! Guess what. Few people could see them, let alone read them, except of course the presenter ... who read every word (looking at the screen instead of his audience). Get creative with images and let them communicate the main point of each message. If you need to, add a single word or three at most. If you really must use bullets, but no more than three to a page and one line per bullet. 5. White space gives clarity. Resist the temptation to fill every centimetre of space on the screen. White space let’s your words breath when you want to provide clarity or impact. 6. Too many fonts on a page confuse the message as does too many colours. 7. Too many transitions between slides. The wonderful ways you can move images and text around make it tempting to show off this new technology. They’re there to add interest and keep the audience gripped, but if they’re overdone they lose their significance. Anyway, it’s your job to keep your audience on the edge of their seats. ©Paul  Clegg  2010  
  • 3. 8. Get a good remote. You know, the device to move the slides on. And learn how to use it in advance. There’s nothing more distracting than constantly moving to the laptop in order to hit the arrow keys. 9. Handing out stuff in the middle of your presentation or before the next person is about to speak. You must control what your audience is focused on. It’s ok to get something in your audience’s hands. Involving your audience is a powerful way for people to grasp an issue but it takes a lot more control and takes more time. You will need to allow more time if you want audience participation. 10 Timing. Don’t overstay your welcome. You know how long you have been asked to speak for and to begin with, it can be difficult to decide what to include and what to leave out of a presentation. Presentations are easier for you to control timing but workshops are unpredictable if you are encouraging audience participation. Support the key points you want to make and compare the number of slides you have with the time you have. 30 slides in 30 minutes means you have a minute a slide - do you present at that pace? You may be using a sequence of slides rapidly to make a point so naturally you will take that into consideration but it’s always a good to cross check the final number of slides with the time you have ... then be prepared to edit. So now you’ve produced a great presentation. Consider sharing it with a wider audience to build your visibility and enhance your reputation. Those present in the audience can review or even download your slides and you get to be seen as the real pro. Check out www.slideshare.com. Here’s what I am presently sharing. While you’re there, check out the rest of the site for inspirational ideas for your next presentation. Paul  Clegg  is  a  specialist  at  helping  people  develop  marketing  partnerships  that  lead  to   increase  business.    His  background  in  marketing,  combining  10  years  experience  in  relationship   networking  in  the  South  West  and  online,  provides  him  with  a  level  of  expertise  that  is  difficult   to  find.    He  lives  in  Somerset,  England  and  writes  a  regular  newsletter  called  How  to  Turn   Business  Cards  into  Business  at  Any  Networking  Event.     He  has  also  written:  If  Follow  Up  is  Critical  to  Your  Business,  Why  Don’t  You  Do  It?     Follow  the  link  to  receive  your  copy  or  contact  him  direct  at  paul.clegg@mac.com ©Paul  Clegg  2010