Recommended Book: Slideology by Nancy Duarte
Title: Slideology: The Art and Science of Creating Great Presentations (Author: Nancy Duarte)
First edition, Sep 2008
Highly impressed by how Al Gore presented his "An Inconvenient Truth" (which landed him Nobel Prize and Academy Award), I am interested in finding lessons on how to create good presentation slides and non-boring charts/diagrams. I tried to find samples/templates on the net to no avail.
Then I found this book (I decided to buy it because I saw it featured Al Gore in one of its case studies). I think this book gives valuable insights on how to create great presentations, excerpts are as follows:
1. We humans are visual communicators; presentations should be delivered more in forms of images/diagrams as visual aids. Slides should be simple, text should be reduced, avoid bullet points (use images/diagrams instead). The audience is there to hear the presenter giving ideas/message, not to read slides. Slides are there to enhance the story, to help the audience see what the presenter is saying so that ideas/messages are easily transmitted.
2. To give powerful presentation, one should prepare highly on knowing the audience in order to prepare for effective materials and delivery.
3. Think like a designer to create effective slides. 3 things should be handled creatively in a consistent way to avoid noise or confusion:
a. Arrangement elements: contrast (to help audience see main points), hierarchy, unity, space, proximity and flow
b. Visual elements: background, color (proper color palette), text, images
c. Movement: timing, pace, distance, direction and eye flow
5. Corporations should pay more attention (and more investment) on creating great presentations as in many instances presentations are the last impression a customer has of a company before closing a deal. It's useful to get expert help on building an organized and effective system so that all messages/slides transmitted outside are consistent with company/branding philosophy.
6. How many slides to present? It depends, but one good rule to follow is the 10/20/30 rule from the venture capitalist Guy Kawasaki (10 slides, 20 minutes, no font smaller than 30).
Link to Amazon.com:
slide:ology: The Art and Science of Creating Great Presentations
First edition, Sep 2008
Highly impressed by how Al Gore presented his "An Inconvenient Truth" (which landed him Nobel Prize and Academy Award), I am interested in finding lessons on how to create good presentation slides and non-boring charts/diagrams. I tried to find samples/templates on the net to no avail.
Then I found this book (I decided to buy it because I saw it featured Al Gore in one of its case studies). I think this book gives valuable insights on how to create great presentations, excerpts are as follows:
1. We humans are visual communicators; presentations should be delivered more in forms of images/diagrams as visual aids. Slides should be simple, text should be reduced, avoid bullet points (use images/diagrams instead). The audience is there to hear the presenter giving ideas/message, not to read slides. Slides are there to enhance the story, to help the audience see what the presenter is saying so that ideas/messages are easily transmitted.
2. To give powerful presentation, one should prepare highly on knowing the audience in order to prepare for effective materials and delivery.
3. Think like a designer to create effective slides. 3 things should be handled creatively in a consistent way to avoid noise or confusion:
a. Arrangement elements: contrast (to help audience see main points), hierarchy, unity, space, proximity and flow
b. Visual elements: background, color (proper color palette), text, images
c. Movement: timing, pace, distance, direction and eye flow
5. Corporations should pay more attention (and more investment) on creating great presentations as in many instances presentations are the last impression a customer has of a company before closing a deal. It's useful to get expert help on building an organized and effective system so that all messages/slides transmitted outside are consistent with company/branding philosophy.
6. How many slides to present? It depends, but one good rule to follow is the 10/20/30 rule from the venture capitalist Guy Kawasaki (10 slides, 20 minutes, no font smaller than 30).
Link to Amazon.com:
slide:ology: The Art and Science of Creating Great Presentations






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