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Simplifying PowerPoint

If you want to set yourself apart from the others, simplify your PowerPoint.

Simplifying PowerPoint

 

Simplifying PowerPoint

The way people typically design PowerPoint slides is a joke, mostly due to outdated guidelines.  PowerPoint practitioners used to say, "You shouldn't have more than five bullets on each slide, with no more than six words per bullet and one minute spent on each slide."

But here’s the math.  Let’s say this applies a 60-minute presentation.

5 bullets x 6 words per bullet = 30 words a slide
30 words a slide x 60 slides = 1800 words

There are colleges in this country that don’t assign 1800-word term papers until you’re a sophomore!  Having done the math, is it reasonable to expect your audience to read an 1,800-word essay over your shoulder, while you’re talking, over the course of an hour?  Keep in mind they’re also trying to listen and understand what you're saying.

When you think about it in that context, it’s ridiculous.  Designers like Nancy Duarte and Garr Reynolds have offered more streamlined concepts; both have written excellent books on PowerPoint design as well.  I’d recommend reading their work on your own time, but for now I’ll stick with the basics.

To begin with, an overflow of words isn’t going to work for you, so what should you do instead?  It’s simple: use a very dramatic picture.  Have a story to tell.  Use another dramatic picture.  Accompany it with another story.  Repeat.  Words and reading don’t necessarily run the show.  It’s about keeping the audience’s interest.  The presentation is a visual guide.

You may think, "Well, I've got to tell these people some technical details about what we're trying to sell."  Great.  That doesn't belong on the slide.  That belongs in a handout where people can take notes and take it home with them.  You have to be discerning as you decide how much information shows up on the wall and how much information winds up in people's hands.

In short, a presentation doesn’t have to revolve around words and details.  It’s about the message and the value you’re trying to communicate.  If you want to set yourself apart from the others, simplify your PowerPoint.  In some ways, it’s like poetry – if nothing can be added or taken away without destroying its core meaning, then you’re in good shape.


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Mark Jewell

Mark Jewell

Mark Jewell is the President and co-founder of Selling Energy. He is a subject matter expert, coach, speaker and best-selling author focused on overcoming barriers to implementing projects. Mark teaches other professionals and organizations how to turbocharge their sales success.

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