128 Improve your Communication Skills
Audiences’ expectations of slides are changing. We all know that
it’s quite easy to produce slides with flashy animation. Many
people are becoming bored with endless slide shows filled with
more or less poorly designed slides. Confound your audience’s
expectations. Use the technology by all means – and then leap
away from it, galvanising your audience
with your own passion
for your subject. Or be really daring, and work without any slides
at all.
Rehearsing
There is a world of difference between thinking your
presentation through and doing it. You may think you know what
you want to say, but until you say it you don’t really know. Only
by uttering it aloud can you test
whether you understand what
you are saying. Rehearsal is the reality check.
Rehearsal is also a time check. Time acts oddly in
presentations. It can seem to stop, to drag and – more often than
not – to race away. The most common time problem I encounter
with trainees who are rehearsing their
presentations is that they
run out of time. They are astounded when I tell them that time is
up and they have hardly finished introducing themselves! You
must
rehearse to see how long it all takes. Be aware that it will
6 × 6 × 6
If you
must
put words on your slides, they should obey this
design principle.
No more than six lines of text on any slide.
No more than six words on any one line.
The
text should be visible
on a laptop screen
from a
distance of six metres. (For most fonts, this means a
minimum size of about 24pt.)
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