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PowerPoint Presentations

PowerPoint presentations should enhance audience understanding of a speech, not distract from it. Some key tips include using bullet points instead of full sentences, having a backbone slide outlining the presentation structure, using animations sparingly, ensuring text is visible to all audiences, focusing audience attention on relevant slides only, citing sources properly, and being prepared to present without technology in case of technical difficulties. The goal is for PowerPoint to support the speaker, not replace them, through visual aids that reinforce rather than replace the oral presentation.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
110 views3 pages

PowerPoint Presentations

PowerPoint presentations should enhance audience understanding of a speech, not distract from it. Some key tips include using bullet points instead of full sentences, having a backbone slide outlining the presentation structure, using animations sparingly, ensuring text is visible to all audiences, focusing audience attention on relevant slides only, citing sources properly, and being prepared to present without technology in case of technical difficulties. The goal is for PowerPoint to support the speaker, not replace them, through visual aids that reinforce rather than replace the oral presentation.

Uploaded by

Brandon Sanjur
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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PowerPoint Presentations

PowerPoint and presentations are meant to serve as visual aids that can enhance audience
engagement and their understanding of your speech. These 10 tips will set you on the path to
presentation success.

BEST PRACTICES

1. Only use bullet points. You should not have full sentences on PowerPoint because they
distract from your speech and you want your audience to listen, not read. Use short fragments
or keywords to keep your presentation organized.

2. Have a backbone slide. Have a slide that demonstrates the direction your presentation will
have by outlining the major elements of your speech.

3. Use Animations VERY carefully. It may look nice, but it can also be a distraction. Only use
them if they play an essential role in your presentation (such as concealing a bullet point for a
later point in the presentation).

4. Make sure the text is visible. Your text should be large enough to be visible from the back of
the room for someone with average eye sight. Sometimes, the text may get lost in the
background of the slide (especially if the background includes a picture) or the text color is too
close to the background color. Be sure to avoid red/green and blue/yellow color schemes as
people with colorblindness may not be able to differentiate the text from the background.

5. Keep the focus where you want it. If you are going to incorporate a graph or a quote into your
presentation, be sure to have a slide with only the graph or quote, allowing you to speak about
it to your audience and to use it as a reference. If you use an image, you should generally limit
yourself to one image per slide.

6. Cite your sources. For many of your presentations, you will be using outside sources. If so, be
sure to cite them in the proper format on the last slide or throughout your presentation. For
pictures, include an indication of the source next to the image. Be sure the pictures you chose
are freely available for use. See creativecommons.org for great searching tools.

7. Show a slide when it’s relevant. Use black screen or a blank slide to hide slides you’re not
ready to show the audience. If you are going to speak for any length of time without a relevant
slide, add a slide to your presentation that is simply black. You can keep your audience’s focus
on you rather than on the slides.

8. Provide a warning when necessary. If you are using graphic images that may seem unsettling
to members of your audience, be sure to let them know before revealing the image(s).
9. Have a backup. Sometimes you lose wifi access and sometimes your USB drive suddenly stops
working. Be prepared by being able to access the presentation in multiple ways (e.g., have a
copy in your email and on your laptop that you bring with you).

10. Do not depend on the PowerPoint. Technical difficulties occur all the time, so you may have
to deliver your presentation without a PowerPoint. Also, you should not have to read off the
PowerPoint or Prezi. Remember: you are the expert on the subject!

Taken from: https://www.hamilton.edu/academics/centers/oralcommunication/guides/using-


powerpoint-effectively-in-an-oral-presentation

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