Choosing a Medium for Your Message


When Marshall McLuhan said, "The medium is the message," he was referring to the power of television and its influence on how we interpret information. Television is one type of media used to express information. Canvas is one type of media for a painter's artistic expression. The medium of expression is basically the link between the message and the mind.

NOTE

Media is plural and medium is singular, but sometimes media is used as a collective noun to describe a larger set (the newspaper media, for example). Okay, okay. Rather than asking you to consider semantics and form, from here on out, I will refer to everything as simply media, including flip charts , slides, overheads, electronic images, and other related items associated with the visual support used in a presentation.


The media choice represents the physical form of the message. It definitely affects the manner in which the presentation is delivered. For example, using overheads requires a different approach in delivery than an electronic presentation simply because the transparencies need to be handled (touched). Having "one more thing to do" affects the way in which the presenter delivers the message.

Although your delivery style is affected by the media choice, your objective should remain independent of the media. The very definition of visuals as "speaker-support" implies that you should be able to present your message without supporting media. I'm not trying to burst the PowerPoint bubble and suggest not using visuals at all. On the contrary, presentations with no visual support force the presenter to have the most exceptional delivery skills. Think about music. Without the orchestra, a singer is required to have perfect pitch to be a success. Unless you want to be the acappella presenter, I suggest you stick with visual support.

With that in mind, choosing how you expect to support your message involves the following:

  • Understanding media types

  • Working with design templates

  • Creating handout materials

Understanding Media Types

Presentations involve a number of support options including transparencies, 35mm slides, and electronic visuals. I place them in the order from most to least hands-on for the presenter. Overheads will require changing, slides may involve changing carousels, and electronic presentations are mostly hands-free. Multimedia is just an extension of the electronic presentation, although a degree of interactivity does occur when using elements triggered by the keyboard or mouse.

Flip charts and videotapes are omitted to limit this discussion to the most likely media types you would consider when using PowerPoint to design your presentation.

NOTE

PowerPoint calls the visuals you create "slides." However, in their electronic form (on your PC), they are really "visuals" or "images." If they are produced as 35mm chromes, only then do they become slides. If they are printed to transparency film, they become overheads. In fact, I always describe an electronic presentation as a screen show, not a slide show.

I am not trying to change the software, but throughout this part of the book, I will continue to use the words "visual" and "image" when referencing the media.


Overheads and slides are tangible and require an output device (printer or slide camera) to produce. Electronic visuals, although seemingly intangible, still require an output device (display) to be viewed . In all cases, the support is part of an overall production.

Okay, by now, you're probably aware that I think overheads and slides come in second in the media race. Electronic presentations work best. They offer so much more in the way of variety, interactivity, portability, and flexibility ”just to name a few reasons. In fact, as you develop presentations for a visual presenter to deliver to an audience of visual creatures additional components such as sound, animation and video will become considerations in the design of the visuals. The real "power" in PowerPoint is seen in the design of effective electronic events. The electronic presentation is currently the most effective media choice for delivering business presentations.

There, I said it. Right now, the people who make color printers, overhead projectors, and slide imaging devices all hate me. But I'll probably be a keynote speaker at the LCD Projector Convention!

I'm not saying never use slides or overheads, but I am saying that an audience of visual creatures has come to expect more. It used to be that presenting electronically had to be justified in some way. Today, you'll have a hard time explaining why you chose not to present with a computer.

You may even have to explain it environmentally. Electronic presentations are "green" ”that is, nothing has to be discarded at a later point that would affect the environment. Slides and overheads are not biodegradable. This is just one of many of the arguments for using electronic presentations.

In keeping with the notion of a visual presenter, you cannot ignore the growing acceptance of electronic presentations over slides and overheads. In fact, black-and-white overhead presentations are the most difficult for an audience to observe and still remain attentive to the message.

The Case for Color

When you watch a black-and-white overhead presentation, it doesn't take long before you start shifting in your seat, updating your daily planner, and checking the stack to see how many overheads are left.

Black text on a white background is called print, and print is meant for an audience of one. That's why you can work at your computer with its paper-white display. You can look away whenever you want and examine information for as long as you prefer.

A presentation is meant for an audience of more than one. An audience of more than one demands color. Color is what real life is made of; black and white is simulated and, therefore, less than real life. When people are faced with less than real visuals, they become distracted. When you present, you want the least amount of distraction possible. Present in color. Enough said.

If you evaluate types of media based on overall impact, color always supersedes black and white. In fact, if you're not using color, then you shouldn't even be thinking about 35mm slides or electronic presentations. Instead, you should stick with overheads. With color, however, the impact is greater, depending on the media type. The more flexibility you have with the media, the better the presentation.

Currently, electronic images offer the greatest flexibility when compared with slides and overheads. If you have several media choices available to you, choose the one with the most flexibility, which I find in most cases is electronic.

If you are already convinced of the benefits of presenting electronically, then you can skip the rest of this section on media types. But, if you need to justify a media choice, take a look at the following comparisons.

Flexibility in media can be examined based on the CCC Model, or Cost, Convenience, and Continuity. These three major considerations can help you decide which media choice to use for your color presentation. To better understand media types, we can apply the CCC Model to overheads, slides, and electronic images.

Cost of Overheads

Sometimes referred to as transparencies, foils, or acetates, overheads are one of the most commonly used, yet least flexible, media types in business.

Often a company will try to use existing audiovisual equipment before investing in new technology, and the overhead projector is the most common in business. This makes sense. Moreover, for black-and-white presentations, the simplicity of inserting transparency material into a printer makes this choice an easy one with minimal cost.

NOTE

The easier it is for you to prepare the presentation, the harder it is for the audience to stay attentive to your message. If you quickly create a few transparencies with lots of lengthy phrases, you create a presentation meant to be read and not viewed. Easy for you, tough for us. But, if you take the time to design effective visuals, the audience will find it easier to watch the presentation.


But, when overhead presentations involve color, the cost issues change. After you prepare your presentation in PowerPoint, you can outsource the production of color overheads to a creative services company, or you can use in-house equipment.

The cost of outsourcing the production of the overheads may appear to be higher because the price is reflective of the original investment in equipment, the supplies used, and the time required to monitor the process. In addition, profit is built into the price, as well. However, in-house production has similar "costs" associated with the output.

In-house production of color overheads involves a cost of acquiring a color printer and a recurring cost of supplies. In addition, the cost of time associated with the output process itself is a factor as well.

NOTE

The factor of time is associated with equipment-related issues and not the time it takes to create the visuals in PowerPoint. That effort is generally the same regardless of the final form of the output. Your investment of five minutes to create a bar chart in PowerPoint doesn't change if you use slides, overheads, or electronic images as the final output.


Let's use the same type of example for the comparisons to slides and electronic images. Say, for example, that a company makes only one 20-minute presentation each week. That's our reference point: one 20-minute presentation per week.

For 20 minutes of presenting, you'll create about 10 color overheads. Over one year, that's 500 overheads. The supplies aren't free. You have to buy them. You can be more exact on supplies cost if you know the actual cost of the transparency material (film) and color cartridge (toner, ribbon, or ink). On average, each color overhead costs about $1.00. If you also factor in the cost of the equipment, even a $500 color printer adds another $1.00 to the supplies cost, if you spread the cost of the printer over a single year.

Ah, but we have one other cost factor. In addition to supplies, you need to consider the cost of time to manage the process of producing the color output. Someone has to do this, whether it is you or some other member of the company. The process includes setup of the printer, maintaining supplies, fixing jams, and waiting for each transparency to print. I've seen people on a Saturday afternoon waiting for stuff to print. What's sad is they actually started the printing on Thursday!

If you count changes, mistakes, setup, and other interruptions, about 30 minutes each week is required for the 10-overhead presentation we've been discussing. Although the hourly wage of whoever is managing the process makes a difference, even a $10 per hour wage adds another $0.50 per overhead to the cost.

So, the cost of producing 10 color overheads, in-house, might be as much as $2.50 each, when you factor in supplies and time. That's $25 a week. And this is assuming you only have one presentation per week.

If you outsource the color overheads by sending a PowerPoint presentation to a service bureau , you'll probably pay twice that or higher, depending on turnaround time. This is something to consider when weighing color overheads against slides or electronic presentations.

Cost of 35mm Slides

For 35mm slides , the cost of production also includes investment in equipment, plus the actual cost of developing and mounting the slides. Some companies have in-house equipment to complete the entire process, but many own a slide-imaging device (film camera) from which the 35mm film is sent to a local development lab for processing.

Although the time to maintain the equipment and manage the process is far less than for color overheads, the number of slides needed to make the same points is much higher. If you have 10 overheads in your 20-minute presentation, the same 20-minute presentation using 35mm slides would require you to use about 30 slides. The reason is simple. You use media types differently. Slides in a carousel advance more rapidly than overheads changed manually.

NOTE

MediaNet designed ShowSTARTER as a planning tool for a presentation. One of the calculations made by this software utility is to estimate the number of visuals you should have based on the length of the presentation. That's how I know you'll need about 30 slides or 10 overheads for the same 20-minute presentation. The actual quantities , when calculated by the software, are 31 slides and 11 overheads. But it's easier to use more rounded numbers for the example.

You might ask how these calculations are derived. We studied over 1,500 presentations over three years to gather most of the information built into ShowSTARTER. One issue was time. A person usually changes overheads every two minutes or so, because they can't be scaled onto the projector like Frisbees. We noticed that when overheads are printed in portrait style, instead of landscape, there is tendency to add even more text and thus leave each overhead up for a longer time. Slides stay up for less time because the aspect ratio is different (22/35) and less space is available for data. So, to cover the same information, you usually need more slides which means you spend less time on each slide (they change faster).

In addition, builds are used in many slide presentations, which increases the number of slides even though the number of full impressions is the same. A slide with four bullet points, when done as a build, will expand to five separate slides (heading plus four points). Yet those five slides still only deliver one visual impression .

With electronic images the choice of using builds and overlays to reveal information in stages increases the number of visuals beyond that of slides simply because there is no limitation as there is with a slide carousel tray.

This is why the number of visuals is dependent on the media choice, even though the length of the presentation is the same, regardless of the media choice.


Even though film cameras cost more than color printers, the cost per slide is similar to color overheads because you will use more slides per presentation. So, if you produce 30 slides per week for a year, and you invested in a $3,000 slide camera, your cost per slide is about $2.00. Add to that the actual cost of the roll of film and the developing charge, and it's about another $0.50 per slide. So, for about $2.50 per slide you could do it yourself.

If you sent a PowerPoint file to an imaging bureau, the cost of production will be somewhere between $5 and $10 or higher per slide, depending on turnaround time. Obviously, because you are using their camera equipment, their personnel, and their profit margin to image the slides, you will pay a higher cost.

Cost of Electronic Images

One important advantage with electronic images is that they require no additional production output, as with slides or overheads. This is important if you're like me ”time-starved!

It's true. I know I wait until the last minute to do stuff because there's always too much stuff to do. If I can work on my presentation and fine-tune the images on the plane, that's a better use of my time than sitting around waiting for film to develop!

The good news is that after you complete your PowerPoint presentation, you can use your PC to launch the screen show (slide show) using a display device . Nothing is free, however, and you need to consider the cost factor of the device used to project or display the image. Typically LCD projectors are used with notebook computers to present electronic PowerPoint presentations.

For cost analysis, you should only use the cost of the projection device. Don't add the cost of the PC because the computer has many more business uses beyond presentations. Also, you can't really assign a cost to each image because there is no extra charge to make 10 more electronic visuals in a presentation.

Using ShowSTARTER to calculate the number of visuals, our 20-minute presentation will require 35 images as compared to 10 overheads and 30 slides. This is because the change from one electronic image to another is a little faster than with slides. Hence, more visual impressions are possible when the duration stays the same (20 minutes).

Looking at cost per presentation, the equipment needed to project the image can be in-house (owned) or outsourced (rented). An LCD projector varies in price depending on feature/function issues, but if we assume owning one requires an investment of about $4,000, your weekly electronic presentation will cost about $80 ($4,000 divided by 50 weeks). Compared to 10 color overheads ($25) or 30 slides ($75), this appears to be the least cost-effective choice, on paper. In fact, if you went out and rented the LCD projector, your costs for that one presentation will be even higher ($200 or more). However, the outsourced costs are always higher.

TIP

One way to know if you should buy or rent the display device is to estimate the minimum number of electronic presentations you expect to give in one year. Divide that number into the cost of a projector. If the answer is lower than a typical rental charge for that type of projector, then you might want to consider a purchase.

For example, you plan on giving 50 presentations this year. You set your sights on a shiny new projector that costs $8,000 to buy. $8,000 divided by 50 is $160. If it costs more than $160 to rent the same kind of projector, then it makes sense to buy the unit.

Use a one year scenario even though your equipment will naturally last longer. To remain current with technology you would have to upgrade every year, so the rent or buy comparison is done against a one-year time frame to take the most conservative view. A five-year comparision would surely make you choose to buy everytime. In fact, most rental prices are based on the equipment paying for itself within one year.


One big issue is that electronic images have no incremental costs per additional visual. Thus, your hard disk can store hundreds of visuals, any of which can be accessed as backup or support information. Electronic presentations offer the flexibility to make changes, updates, create builds and overlays, and even allow for more advanced activity using multimedia and hyperlinks .

From a cost standpoint, that kind of flexibility makes the electronic visuals the better choice.

Convenience of Overheads

Convenience is about portability and relevancy. I mention portability because overheads are tangible. You have to carry them around and handle them. The handling factor makes overheads a less attractive media choice.

A three-ring binder of 50 color overheads in vinyl protective sleeves weighs about five pounds . Some presenters carry two or three times this much for certain presentations, which can amount to about 15 pounds of plastic! In addition, overheads can accidentally fall from the "stack," and many a presenter has experienced the "transparency crawl" in an attempt to quickly get everything back into the original sequence.

Another issue of convenience is relevancy, or keeping things current. Many presentations, especially financial ones, rely on the most up-to-date facts to drive home the message. Color overheads limit this timeliness of information to availability of the nearest color printer. In fact, the more specialized the printer you used, the less likely you can find a similar type when you are offsite at a presentation and you want to make changes or updates to several of your color overheads. This media is device-dependent and usually only reproduces consistently when using the same device that made it.

Foiled Again

I was consulting with a group of engineers from IBM several years ago (early 1990s, in case you just picked this book up at yard sale in the year 2015!). At the time, I suggested they present electronically, using an LCD panel and overhead projector. They wanted to present electronically, but hadn't budgeted for the equipment and were headed to six different cities, so renting LCD panels was not an option either. They already owned a color thermal wax-transfer printer, so they went with color overheads.

Now stay with me on this. Tektronix (big company) made the printer and that particular model had 6MB of RAM memory with PostScript features. Think of PostScript as "special fonts." (Yes, this information is important!) IBM's visuals were very "graphic" intensive , with lots of schematics, diagrams and drawings, and, every so often, text on an angle. Thank goodness for PostScript! The visuals took a while to print so the RAM memory was important.

Once prepared, the engineers embarked on the six-city tour with their binder of about 70 color overheads. First stop, Los Angeles. All goes well. But on the afternoon flight to San Francisco, somehow 12 overheads become plastic prunes from a cup of hot coffee! Yep, you guessed it ”the important 12 overheads.

Guess what? There was no hotel or public location with a Tektronix color printer. (No surprise there.) Now it's past 5:00 p.m. and the hotel business center is closed. But, after some begging, pleading, and the usual threat of physical harm, they manage to get the hotel manager to open the business center. YES! A color printer! What luck! Oh wait, it's an ink jet, not a thermal. It's a Xerox, not a Tektronix. RAM memory? Don't even go there! PostScript? I don't think so.

They printed the overheads anyway (just to have something), and, of course, they didn't look anything like the other overheads. The audience spent more time distracted than interested, and the presentation pretty much bombed.

Moral of the story: You can't rely on off-site locations to provide consistency with color printed material since that media is device dependent.

One other issue involves the lack of convenience in printing color overheads. After your visuals are created in PowerPoint, you typically have to leave your desk and go to the location of the color printer. In larger settings, this type of printer is not the office printer located a few steps from your desk. Instead, it usually resides in a more central location and may end up being shared by a larger number of users. More people waiting to use the same device will result in longer lines!

Convenience of 35mm Slides

Here's one for you: There are eight different ways to load 35mm slides into a carousel and only one way is correct. This can pose a problem if you are running out of time.

TIP

The fast way to load 35mm slides into a carousel is to face the carousel so the first slot (number one) is to your left. This would be the same as if you were standing in front of the lens looking down at the tray. Take a slide and hold it up to the light so it appears correctly oriented as you look at it. Now simply flip it backward (which will turn it upside-down) and drop it into the slot. This look, flip, and drop process can be done fairly quickly.


Remember that convenience is about portability and relevancy. For slides, the portability issue is not so much that they are heavy (like carrying 100 overheads). Instead, you have some limitations concerning how many you can use.

For instance, the number of slots in a carousel limits slides. When glass-mounted, slides are limited to 80 per carousel tray. With cardboard or plastic mounts, you can use a carousel that holds 140 slides, but the risk of the slides getting jammed increases with the thinner and lighter mounts. Of course you can bring several carousels, but the convenience of portability is affected.

As far as relevancy goes, you actually have less flexibility for making changes when using 35mm slides. It's not that you'll have trouble finding a development lab to process 35mm film; rather, how will you get the slides shot in the first place? The good news is that you can electronically send your PowerPoint file to 24-hour services for processing. But, turnaround time is at least a day if you are out of driving range. The bottom line is that it is not likely you'll be able to make changes to the slides conveniently.

Okay, it's not all negative with slides. (No pun intended.) For certain presentations, the slide's emulsion, a maximum of 5,200 horizontal lines (resolution), offers the best contrast for color and image definition. If you are giving a medical presentation and the audience needs to see the changes in skin tissue to determine a medical condition, the subtle shades and color variations will be most accurate with 35mm slides. Electronic LCD projectors and color printers do not have the resolution (yet) to match slides, so you need to consider the importance of color definition in your support visuals.

High-color definition requirements, such as images rendered in computer-aided design and manufacturing (CAD-CAM) applications, would be another instance where I would recommend 35mm slides over electronic images.

Convenience of Electronic Images

When your images are stored on your notebook computer, you are ready to present! Now that is convenience. When you look at portability and relevancy, electronic images pass those two tests with flying colors.

Portability regarding storage issues for visuals is virtually non-existent. Your notebook computer doesn't weigh more each time you add more images. That would be like saying every time you learn something new, your brain gets heavier and you gain weight. That means the smartest people in the world would be HUGE! Einstein would have weighed about 11,000 pounds!

As far as limitations go, you can store as many visuals as your hard disk can hold. There is no slide carousel to limit you.

But electronic images address portability in a different way. It has to do with transfer. The ability to transfer or disseminate information through other electronic methods makes the electronic presentation more useful. Check out Part V, "Working with PowerPoint on the Web," if you want to stimulate your thinking about information sharing.

Welcome to the Machine

Electronic presentations made today can be delivered in similar form, before and after the actual event. You can reinforce your message to create lasting impact.

For example, you can send a self-running "overview" of your presentation to people in advance. Nothing prevents you from emailing your PowerPoint show to expected attendees, which contains information that helps support your message. This may even prompt better attendance.

After the event, you might have a more detailed version of the presentation available on your Web site, for example, for people to download and reference. The idea of electronic color hard copy takes on a whole new meaning in terms of cost and convenience!

Clearly you don't have the same flexibility with slides and overheads as you do with the electronic form.

I think relevancy is the best quality of this media type. Instant updates, timely changes, and custom versions allow a presenter to tailor current content to more specific audiences. You might have a product presentation for both end-users of your product and your resellers (distribution channel). Many of the visuals are the same, but the end-users aren't going to see the visuals about the "wholesale-pricing model" and the "channel-promotion program." You can either have multiple versions of this presentation on your computer, or simply go to PowerPoint's Slide Sorter view and "hide" the images you don't wish displayed to certain groups.

The electronic presentation format also offers the convenience of instant access. Action buttons and hyperlinks allow easy navigation to back up and support information, including links to other applications on the computer. The capability to do "what-if" scenarios suggests a dimension in presenting that you cannot even consider with more traditional media like slides and overheads.

So, from a convenience perspective, electronic images have too many advantages to ignore.

Continuity of Overheads

The real clincher when deciding on a media type for the presentation is continuity, which is really about keeping the attention of the audience. If there is any break in the action ”any interruption of the flow, any distraction at all ”the continuity of the presentation will erode. This reduces the impact of the message.

From a continuity viewpoint, color overheads carry a limitation during the actual presentation process itself.

For one thing, the audience is subjected to the "blast of white light" each time there is a change to the next color overhead.

To overcome the "white light" issue, some presenters may choose to shut off the projector between changes, but that still doesn't eliminate the problem of guessing if the next visual placed on the projector will be straight when the light pops on. If the image is slanted or skewed in any way, the audience is distracted. You have to touch these things and manually place them on the projector, and you don't always get it right.

Even if the transparency is perfectly straight, the presenter, trying to make fast changes, eventually drifts closer to the projector. Soon, the presenter ends up blocking the view of the screen of some of the audience, prompting comments like "I know you're a pain but I still can't see though you!"

Finally, continuity is broken if a presenter has to search for support information. I've seen so many instances where an audience member brings up a specific issue, and the presenter spends a few minutes searching the stack of overheads for the "visual proof" of the point. During all that time, the rest of the crowd is generally distracted and they begin thinking more about dinner than discussion.

Continuity of 35mm Slides

You have fewer continuity problems with 35mm slides simply because there are no handling issues. Yes, slides can get jammed occasionally in a projector, but for the most part, this media type addresses the continuity issue nearly as well as electronic images.

One difference is quantity of images. The carousel is limited (80 to 140) and changing carousels during the presentation breaks the continuity. Of course, you don't want to keep an audience without a break for more than an hour, so 80 slides in a carousel should be more than enough to make it to each break.

The only minor continuity problem that 35mm slides pose is the on/off transition to the next slide. But, audiences get used to the pattern after a while, and it's not really a big deal.

In fact, many slide presentations incorporate more than one projector and cross-fade between projected images, which simulates an electronic presentation.

But if you go to that extent, why not use the computer?

Continuity of Electronic Images

Certain continuity issues demand the use of electronic images. They include builds and overlays, action buttons and hyperlinks, live applications, and multimedia options.

Builds and overlays, which reveal segments of information (text or graphics), help an audience understand more complex information. These techniques are most effective when done electronically. You can use slides for these effects, but you are limited in the number per carousel. You can attempt a text build with overheads. You know, the magic piece of paper that reveals yet another bullet! Ever notice how the paper always falls off the projector somewhere past the half-way point? Well, as Socrates once said, "Give it up, Crito!" Or, as I used to say, using my old Bronx accent , "Fuh-geddda-bowd-it."

Naturally, action buttons and hyperlinks allow non-linear navigation using the computer. This, by definition, requires electronic presentations. However, the instant access is what maintains the continuity of support information to the central theme.

Live software demonstrations , real-time computer applications, and multimedia presentations can only be done electronically; otherwise , the continuity of the event is completely missing. Imagine showing up to a lecture on using PowerPoint, and the presenter is displaying only screen shots of the software on overheads! Wait ”that's this book! Yeah, but a book is not a presentation; it's a book. The media must match the message.

The issues of cost, convenience, and continuity seem to point in the direction of electronic images as being the most effective media choice for business presentations. Selecting the proper media should be your first consideration, before you start designing any visuals.

Let's Back Up!

So, you think we should put an end to slides and overheads? Not so fast! Let me tell you a little story about the need for back-up.

There was this sales event, see, sort of like a tradeshow, see, where makers of "new products" were presenting to potential distributors . It cost $1,000 per minute to present to about 15 potential buyers . But, landing just one deal could be worth millions.

I was brought in to coach the presenters before each would make "the big pitch." I worked with this one guy named Jerry. His product was quite visual. Jerry made some changes to the presentation here and there, and left feeling much more confident.

Thirty minutes before his presentation, he arrived at the conference center, set up his laptop and LCD projector, launched his PowerPoint presentation, and made sure everything was working. As he waited for the audience to arrive , he stepped into the restroom next door for a few minutes. When he returned, his PC and projector had disappeared! No, not disappeared as in "Look, magic!"; disappeared as in "Look, stolen!"

Luckily, he still had his briefcase in which he had about seven 35mm slides from an older presentation on the same topic. Those few visuals along with several of his handwritten sketches using a flip chart helped him secure an order. Sure, they might have "felt sorry" for him for losing his equipment, but he couldn't know that in advance, even if it were true. The back-up media saved him.

Computers can be stolen, but no one wants your slides or overheads! You won't find some guy on the corner opening his jacket while you pass by, saying "Pssst! Check it out ”corporate slides!" It just doesn't happen.

So, having a set of back-up materials, whether it be slides or overheads, makes those media types a very viable and important part of the presentation process. They might come in handy someday!

Working with Design Templates

You already learned about templates in Chapter 2, "Creating a Basic Presentation," but I want to make a point about the relationship of the template to the readability and to the simplicity of the message.

Readability from a Distance

A clearly defined purpose needs the support of clearly readable visuals. Will everyone in the room be able to see everything on the screen? Whether you use overheads, 35mm slides, or electronic images, the audience must be able to read your support information or why show it to them? You can use several ways to test whether your images are going to be readable from a distance, even before you consider templates.

For overheads, place a transparency on the floor and stand over it. If you have no problem reading the text, then the audience member in the back of the room will not have a problem reading the information when projected.

For 35mm slides, hold a slide up to the light at arm's length. If you can read all the information clearly, chances are people sitting in the back will be able to read the slide when it is projected.

For electronic images, we use the "8 to 1 rule." The rule states that eight times the height of the image is the maximum viewing distance for the audience to read small- sized text. When I say small, I mean 24 points in size.

So, if your image is 6 feet high, people sitting 48 feet away can read text with a font size of 24 points. If the font sizes are smaller, people will have to sit closer to the screen.

NOTE

The height is based on the image, not the screen the image is projected on. You may have a 9- foot -high projection screen, but, depending on where you place your projection device, your image may not always fill the screen. In an art gallery, the size of the wall doesn't make the painting any bigger!


You can't control where people sit if you haven't planned the seating in advance. Sometimes you get to an event and the audience looks like they are sitting on another planet! You need to consider the sizes of the elements on your visuals.

TIP

Run your slide show in PowerPoint and stand back about eight feet from your computer, assuming your screen is about one foot high. Can you read all the text on every visual? Wherever you have trouble, go back and check the font size. You may have to make some adjustments.


Knowing the importance of visibility and readability from a distance, you can examine the use of templates in PowerPoint.

The templates are very helpful because they make choices for you and let you do your real job rather than the job of a graphic artist. But, you may need to make modifications in order for the templates to be effective.

In general, I find the templates in PowerPoint are designed more closely to the media of print than they are truly designed for presentation. I'll tell you why. It has to do with point size. That's the measurement term for a typeface, or font.

NOTE

PowerPoint calls typefaces "fonts." Actually, a typeface is a family of letter styles (Times Roman, Arial, Courier) and a font is what you do to a typeface, such as bold, italic, underline. But let's not worry about terminology for now.


The slide layouts that accompany nearly every template in PowerPoint tend to use the same font sizes, from 44 points in the title to as small as 20 points in the body of the layout. From an electronic visual design standpoint, you don't want to have font sizes less than 24 points on any image. This should already tell you that any text below the template's third level is probably unacceptable for your screen show.

But why dangle over the threshold of 24 points? Why push it? Set your sights on 36 points or higher. Adjust the template before you get started and make the titles 60 points and the first level 40 points. This will force you to use fewer words, making the visuals more conceptual and therefore easier for the audience to grasp and the presenter to deliver.

Simplicity in Design

The templates offer a variety of graphic elements, geometric shapes , and other interesting components to carry a design theme throughout the presentation.

When you work with templates, see if the design is generic or specific. Generic templates contain very simple geometric shapes. Specific templates contain more complex and noticeable designs. Complexity forces the brain to interpret and think. You don't want the background design in your visuals to get more attention than your message. If you're marveling at the costumes, you can't be listening to the lines!

Over the years, I've learned to simplify themes. For example, at MediaNet, our Electrifying Templates ¢ for PowerPoint is a collection of very simple geometric PowerPoint presentation designs that fit the generic model of almost any topic. When designing so many presentations for so many different companies, it's easier to start with a very simple template and then add the complexity only to the visuals that require it. You can create your own templates using the same logic ”simplicity!

Overall, templates should not hinder readability from a distance nor contain specific design elements that cause the audience to be distracted from the message. The presenter delivers the message; the visuals only support it.

Creating Handout Materials

Almost every presentation has some form of handouts. The nature and the timing of these materials are two very important issues. When you decide to give people information to walk away with, you have to think about exactly what they will be given and when they will receive it.

Nature of Handouts

The handouts should always be different from the presentation. I know this breaks your heart to think that you now have extra work to do, but you really need to consider this point. Let's think about the relationship between the handouts and the presentation. Typically, you might fall into the trap of printing out a hard copy of your visuals for the audience to take away with them. You can look at this in two ways ”conceptually or specifically .

If your presentation is designed for a visual presenter, it is conceptual in nature. The images are clear, readable, easy to understand, and very supportive of the stories and analogies used by the presenter. A copy of these visuals will be useless after a short time. When the event is over, people will not have the presenter available to explain the concepts. Someone will find a copy of the handout about three weeks later under a pile of desk rubble . The person will see a visual with an arrow, a circle, and a big number 11 and have absolutely no clue as to what it means. That is a useless handout.

Same scenario, except the handout reads like a book. Lots of text on each image, very wordy phrases, full sentences, extremely detailed charts, and complex tables of numbers. The handout is designed specifically. Nice handout and useful for a long time, but I pity the person who attended that presentation! It was probably a data dump on the audience with a presenter who simply read from the visuals most of the time. I have seen so many of these that one look at the handouts, and I can pretty much know how the presentation went.

Do you see how you can't win if you try to do two things at once? Handouts must be different from the presentation in the same way a book is different from the movie. How would you feel if you went to a movie and the book was on the big screen? That's right, the entire book ”huge pages turning slowly while you gaze in amazement, then turn to a friend, and say, "Wow, look at the size of those fonts!"

TIP

Use the notes feature (see Chapter 10, "Creating and Printing Presentation Materials") to enter the concept or actual script for each visual. If you print a set of these for the audience, then they can review the comments long after the presentation is ended. This makes the handout more useful.


If you plan on having the audience take notes, then you can consider note-taking handouts. You can make these handouts in PowerPoint (see Chapter 10). They should include a combination of your visuals and an area for note-taking so that the audience can create personal references for later review.

To leave people with supporting documents is better than to bombard them with tons of data on every visual. Specification sheets, detailed charts, advertisements, articles, even free samples are just some of the support items that you can provide to tout your message long after you're gone.

A Pattern to Remember

Hand out more than you say ”say more than you show ”show it simply!

To hand out more than you say is to provide more material for later review than you verbally cover during the presentation.

To say more than you show means more words are always coming out of your mouth than people are reading on the screen. Remember that the visuals are speaker support, not the speaker. Do not read the visuals to the audience unless you plan to use a white bouncing ball over the text to help people follow along!

To show it simply is self-explanatory. No one ever complains about a business presentation that is clear and easy to understand. Simple visuals force the audience to listen to the presenter's explanation of the intended message.

Timing of Handouts

A lot of people ask me, "When is the best time to distribute handouts ”before or after the presentation?" I pause, look away for a second, and answer, "Yes." That's not an answer because there is no definite answer, one way or the other. It depends on your objective and your ability to keep the attention span of the group.

I start with a very simple question. Do you think the handouts will distract the audience from your presentation? If the answer is yes, distribute handouts at the end. If the answer is no, you can give them out at the beginning or the end.

For example, one of my seminars , "Presenting Made Easy," is a full-day workshop covering eight different topics. The audience receives a "kit" containing a book, a CD-ROM, additional handouts, and other information about technology discussed during the seminar. Although the handouts are not required to follow along through the topics, the information is provided at the beginning so that the audience can have a reference available during the workshop day. In addition, the scope of the material helps the audience decide how much note-taking is necessary. The more depth to the handouts, the less notes to take. Yes, there is a risk of distraction, but that makes the presenter (in this case, me) work that much harder to keep attention focused on the issue at hand.

Check out the opposite scenario: If I give a two-hour lecture as a keynote speaker, I only provide handouts after the session. I prefer to limit the distraction of people reading ahead and maintain the highest attention for the event. Because my handouts are not copies of each visual, the audience would not be able to "follow along" anyway, so why give them out ahead of time?

You have to examine the handout materials and judge how critical a role they play in the presentation. Can the audience respond to your "call to action" without the handouts in front of them?

Regardless of when you distribute handouts, always announce them at the beginning of the presentation. Let people know what you have, what it covers, and when they can expect to receive it.



Special Edition Using Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2003
Special Edition Using Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2003
ISBN: 0789729571
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 261

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