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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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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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.