Perspective
Have a look at this image (I did not buy it, so cannot embed it). The tilted but aligned rows of numbers in different font sizes give an instant depth effect. You can easily replicate this in PowerPoint or Keynote.
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Have a look at this image (I did not buy it, so cannot embed it). The tilted but aligned rows of numbers in different font sizes give an instant depth effect. You can easily replicate this in PowerPoint or Keynote.
The Twitter IPO presentation is posted online. Overall it looks good and very professional, here are my thoughts on how it could have been even better (comments in random order):
UPDATE: The official presentation has been taken down, it is still out there on YouTube:
When you invite people over in your office and you run a pitch presentation on a 10 year old screen with a stretched aspect ratio, pixelated images, and burned in colours you are not leaving a very good impression.
LCD screens are not very expensive today, and the right cables plus a bit of tweaking with screen and laptop settings will give a razor sharp picture. Maybe it is time for a meeting room upgrade.
Other quick wins: removing used coffee cups, empty cookie boxes, de-greasing the screen remote, eliminating chewed-on pens and used stationary, open the windows.
First impressions count.
Waiting with the preparation for your presentation until the last minute is not a good idea. At 3AM at night before the 9AM meeting, you are not the most creative person in the world.
The other extreme is useless as well. Preparing for a big presentation months ahead will not help you get better results. When the content is not ready, none of your colleagues are focused on it, you are simply freewheeling and wasting your time.
Sometimes I see the long lead time in big companies that prepare for a big investor day. Work starts 3 months before the deadline, but people only start to focus for real 4 weeks in advance.
And yes, the best option is somewhere in the middle: start a few weeks (up to 6) before with thinking about what you want to say. Put it aside, get back to it, maybe design one slide all the way to the end in the look and feel you want, and slowly iterate your way to presentation day.
Now you hear it from VC Fred Wilson himself: personal chemistry is hugely important in the VC pitch process. What does it mean for your presentation? That your body language and interaction in the meeting are as important (maybe even more important) than the actual content of the slides.
A pitch meeting is an excuse for a venture capitalist to figure you out. How are you to work with?
After my quick review of Keynote and its new web app version, I went back to check out the Microsoft PowerPoint web app, which is free to use for anyone with a Microsoft Sky Drive account.
Overall the look and feel of the app is similar to the desktop version, interactions are reasonably snappy, but there are a few very simple roadblocks towards making this a credible alternative to the desktop version. I did not bother to go into a more detailed review at this stage:
We are heading in the right direction, but are not there yet.
Most business meetings are about getting to some sort of decision or agreement on next steps. So why not focus your presentation completely on that?
Take out or put in the appendix:
Instead:
A business school professor would not agree to this violation of providing an academic argument, but you ensured that your meeting will be as short and to the point as possible.
Everyone will agree that this image by Christian Xavier is beautiful and grabs the attention. Why? It is because the implied position of the photographer is impossible, it should be in the middle of the air. We are not used to seeing pictures of the Chrysler building from this perspective. Most pictures of the skyline of New York are taken from the same viewpoint (the roof of the Rockefeller Center for example).

How was this image created? He took a regular New York skyline picture with a good camera and zoomed in, cropping out areas of the picture he does not need.
Two lessons here. The theoretical one of using unexpected perspectives. And two, you can actually use this zoom/crop technique with high resolution stock images to make them more interesting.
Yeah, yeah, we know that our audience matters and we should take it into account, but in practice, most of us dive straight into designing the slides.
Thinking of your audience is especially important for sales presentations. I have had a few clients situations where I was asked to help design decks that are used by a sales force that targets small business owners.
In those cases I actually imagine the actual/real owner of a restaurant or pharmacy who I have seen recently and wonder what it would take to convince her.
Together with a whole range of other product updates, Apple released a new version of iWorks (including Keynote) last night. I installed the Mac OS X Mavericks (warning, this will take your computer down for an hour) and played around with the new software. Observations in random order.
All iWorks apps are now free for people buying new Macs. iWorks was already a lot cheaper than Microsoft Office, but now the economic argument against enterprise adoption has been removed completely. Still, the huge installed base of both Windows hardware and PowerPoint with its familiar user interface will make it hard for Apple to make an inroad here.
What could help them is the cross platform compatibility. As of today, there is one file format both for desktop and mobile versions of keynote. I still do not fully understand iCloud, where my files are, where things get saved or not, but the duplication of a file when opening it on your mobile phone is gone. A step in the right direction, but not all the confusion has been removed.
Apple has also launched their suite of iWorks web apps. You can now edit and present Keynote presentations right from your browser. You can simply share a link to the presentation with your co-workers, rather than sharing heavy email attachments. More than one person can edit the live presentation. Many other services offer this feature, but personally I find it a bit scary when I loose control of how makes what edits (including deletions) in the master document. Anyway, that the feature is available does not mean that you have to use it.