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Creating Great Presentations

We’ve all fallen into that ‘ground hog day’ trap of preparing a 100 slide presentation full of facts, data and charts that we’ve spent days preparing. Because we’ve sat there and mulled over it for so long, we’ve had time to absorb it. If we’re really honest though, do we really expect our audience to remember it all?

You’ve been there, admit it, when the first data filled slide pops up on screen and the presenters mono tone voice begins to read out the facts, you find yourself slip into an almost catatonic stare. How many wasted presentation hours do you think there are in Australia every day?

It’s quite ironic that PowerPoint can sometimes be ‘PowerLess’ if not used effectively. Some say to abandon it all together. However, for most of us it is a necessary evil and it would be nearly impossible to do our job without it. That doesn’t mean we should just settle for doing our presentations the way we always have just because it’s easy, safe and comfortable. Don’t you want to make an impact? Make a change? Win a client? Motivate your team for that next big project? Not waste yours and others time?

In an effort to change how the team at Marketing.com.au go about presenting, we’ve reviewed some very cool articles, including blog posts from Clay Johnson and Seth Godin. We also came across one particularly interesting book you may have heard of by Nancy Duarte called ‘Resonate‘. There is a hard copy version but we’re loving the interactive version for the iPad with touch animation, videos etc. a very entertaining read!

If you don’t have time to do a little reading yourself, we’ve summarised below some of the top tips we came across for a GREAT presentation:

PREPARE

PRACTICE

PRESENT

Before you go, we thought we’d share this great quote by Henri René Albert Guy De Maupassant that is referenced in Nancy Duarte’s book ‘Resonate’:

“The public is composed of numerous groups that cry out to us: ‘Comfort me.’ ‘Amuse me.’ ‘Touch my sympathies.’ ‘Make me sad.’ ‘Make me dream.’ ‘Make me laugh.’ ‘Make me shiver.’ ‘Make me weep.’ ‘Make me think.'”

Here’s a quick clip where Nancy Duarte introduces her book ‘Resonate’:
http://youtu.be/H-VLi3R4DmY

Do you have any other tips you can share? We’d love to hear from you below.

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