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·Cartoons

Chart concept - Lucky Luke and low latency

Cartoons can enhance a presentation. You need to strike a fine balance though with inviting a laugh from the audience, and trying to get your point across. People do not have time to read through a cartoon plot. The idea behind a slide should be instantly recognizable. Using classical cartoons can help. People have seen them before. Here is one that can be used to describe the low latency of a technology product. Lucky Luke, the man who can shoot faster than his own shadow. That’s pretty low latency.

The extension of the cartoon with PowerPoint shapes is not perfect. I used the “oak” standard texture, and the “Playbill” font to give that nice Wild West feel.

·Design

Interior shadows can be a nice change

When people (ab)use shadows in PowerPoint, they mostly use the drop shadow, to make an object stand out from the canvas. The opposite, the interior shadow can give a beautiful effect as well. It makes the object, or letters fall back in the background.

See the example below of a slide taken from my presentation about fund raising presentations (explaining a bit about my personal and professional background).

Make sure the direction of the shadow is always vaguely similar to the lighting in the background, the Amsterdam street lights in this case. Use a character color that is similar to the tone of the image.

·Advertising

The blunt photo composition

Technology allows you to create almost any photo composition. Professional use PhotoShop, but you can get some pretty good results in PowerPoint as well. As with many technology tools, the fact that they are available does not mean you have to use them.

Photo compositions that are “blunt” are more likely to invite a laugh from your audience than help you make a serious point. My opinion. What do people think? (McCow taken from Ads of the World)

For some great Photoshop creative work check out FreakingNews.com

(This post-flood New York image by Mandrak)

·Animations

How into insert an Adobe Shockwave Flash animation into PowerPoint

Maybe because Flash files are not a Microsoft format, integrating them into PowerPoint is a bit tricky. Here is how to do it. Make sure that the .SWF file is in the same directory as the PowerPoint file. Click on the images for a larger picture.

When sending the presentation via email, it is best to ZIP the 2 files (PPTX and SWF) into one document. Still there is a high risk that the receiving party will not manage to see the Flash animation correctly. Do not use this for the critical slides in your deck. Thank you Karin Mazor for pointing this out to me.

·Concepts

Chart concept - Ahoy! Full steam ahead...

People are not using all the resources they have. Engines are running at half power. There is all this untapped potential out there. How to visualize this?

The engine room and a nice classical nautical engine control handle. You can use a standard PowerPoint “dougnut” chart (a pie chart but with a large hole in the middle) to create one.

Interesting, in the early days these handles would actually ring a bell in the engine room after which the people downstairs could adjust the power to the engine.

·Concepts

Chart concept - Fog! But I can see clearly now....

You have a great new business tool that makes everything and anything completely transparent instantly. How to put this in a PowerPoint slide? In comes the fog concept.

The secret:

  • Set a nice “Zen” image as the slide background (right-click the background, choose “Format Background” and select an image)
  • Create some clouds from the “Insert Shapes” menu. Give the clouds a gradient fill (“Format Shape”, “Fill”, “Gradient Fill”), set the gradient type to “Radial”, gradient stop 1 is 0% transparent white, stop 2 is 50% transparent
  • Draw a big rectangular shape (or any shape in fact) and - here comes the trick - set its fill to “Slide Background Fill”
·Design

Testing acrobat.com in the cloud presentation tool

Acrobat.com is Adobe’s software-as-a-service initiative and it went live recently. The presentation tool is still in beta but can be tested here.

I am making a (small) u-turn on all these in the cloud office tools. A recent shift to part-Mac/part-PC working has showed me that (unlike spreadsheets and databases) the learning curve for working with a new presentation is actually not that high. Let’s whether either Adobe or Google docs can take on Microsoft’s dominant position in office software. I am less optimistic about the changes of completely new startups trying to do the same thing. Especially given that Microsoft will come with its own in-the-cloud offering with a user interface that is very similar to the desk top version.

·Design

Do you think your mission statement is the best presentation opener?

I have rarely seen one that is. When people want to introduce themselves, they often feel an urge to justify their existence through a mission/vision statement. They think hard, carefully weigh every word, makes sure everything is in there (employees, customers, value, the environment) and out comes the all encompassing sentence.

Why are there so very few mission statements and tag lines that mean something, let alone people can remember (man on the moon by the end of the decade; 10,000 songs in your pocket, we try harder, crush Reebok, etc.)?

  • The curse of knowlege: the statements means a lot to the person who wrote it, but the boiled down summary sentence fails to convey the complex thoughts to a cold audience
  • Generic, hollow language, buzz words in a sentence that is far too long (the attached is an example generated by the hilarious Automated Dilbert Mission Statement Generator, but it seems that they took down the link).
  • Lack of credibility (a French bank claiming that it is the most customer service oriented institution on the planet will be greeted by laughter)

Mission statements can be great as a group exercise to think about your company, what you stand for and what you want to achieve. But unless you are working to put a man on the moon by the end of the decade, they are hardly ever worth putting up as a slide if you only have 20 minutes to get your audience excited about your idea.

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·Concepts

Chart concept - where do we go from here?

It is easy to make your own 3D road sign image, no need to buy a stock image, and you get the 3D text perfectly aligned. Click the image for a larger picture (with the settings in the “format shape” box).

·Design

VC pitch - don't skip the technology

Here is another slide from my “how to pitch to a VC” presentation explained in more detail. (The “Zen”-style slides do not stand on their own very well)

When people have limited time for a presentation they often start to cut “the meat” of the story. What’s left after the trimming is a set of generic “summary slides” at such a high level of abstraction that they don’t say very much anymore.

Venture capitalists do not have much time. Still, resist the temptation to skip the technology section when pitching your startup. This is the key asset you have. This is what makes you stand out from the competition. This is what makes VCs understand that there is a real business here, not just a set of PowerPoint slides.

How can you present a complex technology in very little time? Don’t spend time on exhaustive architecture diagrams with layers of details and boring process flows. Instead make people understand why your technology is so unique and so hard to copy.

The deep dive is a good technique to do this. Take a few very specific examples, and dive all the way down into the detail to make your point. Show the complex code, show how long it took you to solve the issue, and show how it will take the competition double this time to imitate it.

Remember, your audience is smart (and busy). Any scientist or engineer should be able to explain the technology solution to an intelligent layman in just a few words and a few images. There is no bigger offense to your audience (and a guaranteed VC turn-off) then to say “this might be a bit too complicated for you, I’ll just skip it in this executive summary”.