Tuesday, June 4, 2013 0 comments

Powerpoint Check: Do You Walk The Talk?

Having to participate in as many powerpoint presentations as you could remember, you are assumed to have an idea as to how it is to be an audience. For starters, it’s for you to sit, stay quiet, focus as much as you can, and engage if need be.

On the other hand, as someone who have seated in numerous talks and slideshows, you are more straightforward as to what you really want. If you have no grasp as to what is going to be discussed, to be in for some surprise is already golden.

But if you know the topic or theme, you’d probably wonder what about it will render your stay and time valuable. You’d like for the powerpoint slides to educate you well about something. And you’d equally love it if the presenter successfully makes you buy their idea, or concept.
However, you may appreciate if data is wrapped under a very different package – probably, those new infographics. Or, you may have been impressed if the slides were cut back, as well as, the scope of the whole talk. And another thing: the message could have been easily absorbed if it were introduced, and then reiterated whilst being fused with the rest of the contents – and not saved for the latter.

Evidently, you have countless tirades for the next powerpoint talk you are invited to attend. Now, you do realise the difficulty of hitting all of your demands, which is why lecturers are advised to stick to the basics and work on the details bit by bit. 

Moreover, with these demands in mind, have you considered incorporating them in your own slides? If not – then you’re fairly good at critiquing, but not that good in executing. In this case, you will have to carefully look at your own preparations. You will have to focus in making you’re slides as perfect as you yourself conceive them to be.

Perhaps, you can use this information to make better powerpoint lectures. Consider this a testing ground for knowing if your specifics or qualms do matter in your own audience’s eyes.
 
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