4 ways to make your slides simple

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  • 8/13/2019 4 Ways to Make Your Slides Simple

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    M ake your Slides SimpleandMemorable

    sof india.com/Repositor y/getF iles.asp?Style=OliveXLib:LowLevelEntityToPrint_ETNEW&Typ

    Publication: The Economic Times Mumbai;Date: Dec 28, 2012;Section: Career & Business;Page: 8

    Make your Slides Simple and Memorable

    ABHIJIT BHADURI

    Slides have become the weapons of mass destruction in organisations. We need to make slides for every scenario: To explain your

    success or failure to others, and for customers, managers and team members.It is through persuasive presentations that we get to

    ask for funding of our ideas. The trick lies in making great slides that will tell the story. Here are some rules about making slides

    that I have learnt from the Zen masters.

    1. SLIDES ARE FOR AUDIENCE, NOT SPEAKER

    That means, slides are not meant to be used as a teleprompter. Do not read off the slides especially if they are heavy on text. The

    audience will always read them ahead and not focus on what you have to say for the first point on the slide. If you need to have

    speaker notes, make sure they are bullet points and not complete sentences or a paragraph of text. The slides should have two or

    three arguments the audience will need to remember when they are deciding to vote in your favour. If you need to refer to a

    document or a spreadsheet, print it out for the audience to refer to. Do not put that document or spreadsheet on to a slide. The

    slides are memory aides for the audience not for the speaker.

    2. LESS INFORMATION MAKES IT EASIER TO RECALL

    I once saw the head of one of the largest banks hold the audience spellbound with just three slides. She spoke for an hour about the

    evolution of private banking in India. Each slide had the name of a common bird pigeon, crow and eagle, which she used as

    metaphors. She got a standing ovation at the end of her presentation. Some speakers believe that every square inch of space on the

    slide can be used to add some more text or some graphs and data tables. When it comes to slides, less text makes a slide more

    memorable. Avoid having more than four to five words on a slide. Be miserly with the words you use on a slide. Telegraphic languag

    is better than writing full paragraphs.

    3. SAY IT VISUALLY THROUGH GRAPHICS

    Use graphics to create a visual summary of the idea on the s lide. I ask friends who are photography enthusiasts for permission to

    use their photos on my slides. Most friends are happy to help. Avoid using the standard clip art. They lead the audience to believethat your content is equally prosaic. Use graphics to help the audience remember the conclusion from data tables or pie charts. If

    you want people to remember that they can save 15% of their marketing budget by using your services, just write the number 15%

    on the slide as you explain to the audience how that would happen.

    4. TRY IT OUT

    After you have made the slides, have someone sit through your presentation and listen to you practise your presentation.At the end

    ask the person to describe the slides they remember. Those are the only slides you should retain. The human mind cannot

    remember more than seven pieces of information, says an oft-quoted piece of research. Each one of us sits through so many

    presentations that our senses have become dulled. In a world where there is so much of information, attention spans have reduced.

    So if you keep your message simple, it is more likely to be remembered.Remember: Slides are meant to be mnemonics for the

    audience to recall what you have spoken about. They are not speaker notes.Think about it .

    Abhijit Bhaduri is the chief learning officer of Wipro