Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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How to Write a PowerPoint Pitch

How to Write a PowerPoint Pitch | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

The surest way to stifle an idea is to write a long-winded presentation deck about it.  PowerPoint, Keynote, and Prezi are powerful tools, but the power comes in how they’re used.  A weighty presentation deck can get in the way of the idea itself.

 

The classic Mark Twain quote applies equally when writing a presentation — “I didn’t have time to write a short letter, so I wrote a long one instead.”

 

Born out venture capital work as a recipient of many of PowerPoint deck, Guy Kawasaki has been advocating the 10/20/30 Rule for a decade. 

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Don't let PowerPoint or Prezi squash your ideas and creativity reminds Tom Fishburne.

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15 Ways to Turn a Very Text-Heavy, Bullet-Ridden Slide into Amazing! [Presentation Hackathon Part 3]

15 Ways to Turn a Very Text-Heavy, Bullet-Ridden Slide into Amazing! [Presentation Hackathon Part 3] | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Beware if you are still creating slides full of bullet points!


Very soon, you will find audiences leave the hall in disgust or hold a placard in protest “No Bullet Points, Please.” Already you will find them moan in pain as soon as they see a bullet-ridden slide. That’s not surprising. The audiences are intelligent enough to know what will follow that boring slide on screen: a far boring talk with presenter reading the slides and audience figuring out whether to listen to the presenter or read the slides.


Such is the bullet-point terror in the presentation world that cognitive psychologist Chris Atherton writes, “Bullets don't kill, bullet points do.”


What are you supposed to do as a presenter then? All presentation experts will advise you to keep 1 message per slide. So if you have 6 bullet points on a slide, you can simply make 6 slides and save the audience a headache. But what if you do not want to follow this advice. What if you wish to keep those 6 bullet points on your slide.


Perhaps you are not presenting your slides on a stage. You want to send the presentation as an attachment to one of your prospective clients. You would therefore need descriptive slides in such instances. Or maybe you have a slide full of steps and you do not wish the break the process into multiple slides that’ll make it complicated for you as well as the reader. What to do then?...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Here's how bullet points are killers to effective presentations.

CCI VAL D'OISE's curator insight, May 13, 2017 12:58 PM

Here's how bullet points are killers to effective presentations.

rodrick rajive lal's curator insight, May 15, 2017 4:13 AM
People who make presentations often will appreciate the suggestions made by the author. Text heavy presentations with the typical bullet points could become boring and somehow difficult to stay awake with. 
 
Gianluca Pirraglia's curator insight, May 19, 2017 3:09 PM

Here's how bullet points are killers to effective presentations.

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To Persuade People, Trade PowerPoint for Papier-Mâché

To Persuade People, Trade PowerPoint for Papier-Mâché | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Someone once told me that most PowerPoint presentations have neither power nor a point. I cannot recollect, in 30 years of work, a single PowerPoint presentation I saw or gave that altered the course of anything. Yet in meeting after meeting around the world, PowerPoint is the medium of choice. In fact, according to Microsoft, there are over 30 million PowerPoint  presentations given every day.

When someone chooses to use PowerPoint or any other slide deck program, the choice has consequences. It establishes a power structure that is less relevant in today’s networked world, with the subject matter expert speaking at the front of the room and the audience passively receiving information. It keeps teams indoors, in closed rooms, in a seated position for prolonged periods which, as Mayo Clinic reports, increases the risk of cardiovascular disease and shortens life expectancy. And, most unfortunate, PowerPoint places technology at the center of the room with a heavy weight toward text, charts, sound bites, and bullet points.

When I helped start a social innovation organization called Civilla, in partnership with Adam and Lena Selzer, we gave ourselves an operating constraint: There would be no PowerPoint. None.

But saying no to something is easy. Figuring out what takes its place is harder....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Michael Brennan may be onto something when he says trade PowerPoint for papier-mache. Try it at your next presentation or new business pitch and see what happens.

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PowerPoint-itis | Tom Fishburne

PowerPoint-itis | Tom Fishburne | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

When James Thompson started his job as Diageo CMO, he tallied the number of presentation slides he was exposed to in his first two months of meetings. The final count — more than 12,000.

 

I read in AdAge that he started a PowerPoint ban in some Diageo meetings to “just talk to me please” and help convey that the team doesn’t have to be “totally buttoned-up all the time.”

 

“It stops conversation. It makes people feel secure the’ve communicated what they wanted to. But, in fact, it doesn’t move anything on … We just want people to be at their best, and that is usually when they are able to think and respond and build rather than sell.”

 

Marketers as a general rule suffer from PowerPoint-itis. We tend to use presentation slides as a crutch. As soon as we have a marketing idea, we rush to create a lengthy PowerPoint or Keynote or Prezi about it. Rarely do we have a meeting without a slide deck. As a result, business conversations turn into dueling sales pitches.

 

Of course, PowerPoint-itis is not the fault of the tool. It’s how we habitually use presentation software in a way that gets in the way of communicating ideas....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

It's not the PowerPoint, it's the person using, or misusing it. Ban the blah, blah, blah.

InsideOut's curator insight, November 21, 2016 11:10 AM
En la vida real no utilizamos Powerpoints como critica esta ilustración.
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Scientifically Speaking, Your PowerPoint Sucks

Scientifically Speaking, Your PowerPoint Sucks | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

A study from Harvard’s Decision Science Laboratory uses brain science to explain why we prefer certain types of presentations over others.


Via Ana Cristina Pratas
Jeff Domansky's insight:

Science can guide you to better presentations.

GwynethJones's curator insight, July 9, 2017 6:35 PM

It's not the powerpoint, it's you. OR Rather, your graphic design skillz.

rodrick rajive lal's curator insight, July 10, 2017 12:37 AM
PowerPoint has seen better days! It shouldn't be wrong to assume that info graphics and Prezi are better options! Gone are the days when we loved to experiment with sound effects, and yes those animations. Fact is, we need to get the information across as effectively and quickly as possible. Animations and special sound effects can only be a distraction and nothing else!
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40 Best PowerPoint Presentations You Can't Miss

40 Best PowerPoint Presentations You Can't Miss | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Lemme guess: you are looking for the best PowerPoint presentations to inspire you.


You know, the ones that’ll get your creative juices flowing and break out of your comfort zone.


The ones that will: Give you ass-kicking PowerPoint design ideas, tips and resourcesTeach you the fundamentals of marketing so you can bring more sales to your businessHelp you become smarter, or more productive, in just a few minutes...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Best PowerPoint presentations: 40+ inspiring slide decks that teach you things (about design, copy, sales, productivity and much more…)

David Swaddle's curator insight, March 28, 2017 6:40 PM
Some great tips and examples linked from here.

Let's face it, loads of training is still face-to-face, but we most slide decks still suck. Why?

I think there's no excuse. It's not a money thing, it's an effort thing. Here's somebody who's put together some great tips from design and marketing that we can all use in crafting great training.
 
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Presentation Template Designer Tips | Nancy Duarte

Presentation Template Designer Tips | Nancy Duarte | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Below are three quick PowerPoint tip videos for upleveling your presentation template.


How to Set Up a Grid System


Grid systems are often used in print and online media to provide a consistent structure to visual communications. Utilizing a grid system in a presentation can allow elements to be displayed in consistent locations, facilitating the absorption of information. In addition, a grid can serve as a guide for employees creating presentations, helping them to know where to place design elements. This helps a company achieve a higher level of consistency between presentations and slides, giving an overall organization to the company’s visual communication.


How to Set Up Color Chips in PowerPoint


Color is a crucial part of a brand’s visual expression. A consistent treatment of your brand’s colors will help to make sure that people are able to “lock” their positive experiences to your brand’s specific visual cues. While many companies have corporate colors selected for various pieces of collateral, it is imperative that those same colors find themselves into the presentations, as often those presentations are used in key decision making engagements. Rather than simply trying to encourage people to use the right colors, update your template’s color palette so that the company’s colors are within easy access of each user by placing the colors in the presentation’s default color chips.


How to Set Up Default Design Elements in PowerPoint


In order for your employees to create presentation graphics that are on-brand, you need to provide them with tools which will facilitate this process. Often, when presentation templates are created, there are lots of example shapes, lines and other elements which people can use as starting points. But one easy way to help people create graphics that align with your look and feel is to set the default shapes, lines and text box formatting so that on-brand elements will be produced whenever a person generates a new shape, line or text box....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Nancy Duarte creates presentations and offers training based on her unique VisualStory™ methodology, which applies storytelling and visual thinking to craft persuasive communications designed to shift audience beliefs and behaviors...

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