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> <channel><title>Six Minutes &#187; Suicide by PowerPoint</title> <atom:link href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/tag/suicide-by-powerpoint/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><link>http://sixminutes.dlugan.com</link> <description>A Public Speaking and Presentations blog</description> <lastBuildDate>Mon, 06 Feb 2012 15:04:47 +0000</lastBuildDate> <language>en</language> <sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod> <sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency> <generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.3.1</generator> <item><title>PowerPoint Design Wish List: 8 Modest Proposals</title><link>http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/powerpoint-design-wish-list/</link> <comments>http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/powerpoint-design-wish-list/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Mon, 12 Jan 2009 06:05:05 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Andrew Dlugan</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Visual Aids]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Nancy Duarte]]></category> <category><![CDATA[PowerPoint]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Suicide by PowerPoint]]></category> <category><![CDATA[speech outline]]></category> <category><![CDATA[visuals]]></category> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/?p=1452</guid> <description><![CDATA[An open letter to the PowerPoint programming team with public speaking inspired ideas for future PowerPoint features&#8230; Dear PowerPoint Programmers: Thank you for creating such a wonderful presentation aid. PowerPoint is like a Swiss Army knife in a presenter&#8217;s visual aid toolbox. It is a tool with tremendous power. Unfortunately, the vast majority of people [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em><img
class="alignright size-full wp-image-1458" style="border: 0pt none; margin: 7px; float: right;" title="Cherry Cake" src="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/cherry-cake.jpg" alt="Cherry Cake" width="300" height="375" />An open letter to the PowerPoint programming team with public speaking inspired ideas for future PowerPoint features&#8230;</em></p><p><strong>Dear PowerPoint Programmers</strong>:</p><p>Thank you for creating such a wonderful presentation aid. <strong>PowerPoint is like a Swiss Army knife</strong> in a presenter&#8217;s visual aid toolbox. It is a tool with tremendous power.</p><p>Unfortunately, the vast majority of people cannot control this power. Hour after hour, dreaded presentation after dreaded presentation, <strong>I continue to be amazed at the horrible presentations</strong> that speakers are able to create with PowerPoint at the core.</p><p>I teach a course titled Powerful PowerPoint Presentations. You&#8217;ll be happy to know that this course is always oversubscribed. Everyone is eager to tap into the <em>power</em> of PowerPoint.</p><p>I wish these people were motivated to become great PowerPoint artisans because their peers were giving fantastic PowerPoint presentations. Unfortunately, they are quite happy to become &#8220;adequate&#8221; users, because they know that any skill at all will put them in the top echelon.</p><p>Are PowerPoint users all morons? No, I don&#8217;t think so.</p><p>Is the tool itself crappy? Certainly not!</p><p>Perhaps the power of PowerPoint is just too great for the majority of users to handle by themselves. Like a jackhammer in the hands of a child, perhaps.</p><p>So, please consider the following suggestions to help tame the power of future PowerPoint versions.</p><h2>1. Eliminate Slide Transitions</h2><p>The verdict is in&#8230; users cannot handle the responsibility. If I had a dime for every random gratuitous slide transition that I&#8217;ve seen, I would have been grossly underpaid for suffering through these presentations.</p><p>Speaking of dimes, if you cannot eliminate the slide transition feature, consider making a user pay 10 cents for every slide transition used beyond 2 (a clear sign they are being overused). Donate the money to <a
href="http://kiva.org/">kiva.org</a>. Here&#8217;s your ad slogan:</p><blockquote><p>Microtaxing for Microlending&#8230; <em>by Microsoft</em></p></blockquote><h2>2. Rewrite Your Documentation</h2><p>From PowerPoint 2007, <strong>I searched for help</strong> to change the font. To my horror, I was presented with instructions to change the font in Access, InfoPath, OneNote, Outlook, Project, Publisher, and (hurray!) PowerPoint.</p><p>Why am I bombarded with all these <strong>non-relevant details</strong>? If this were a speech critique, I would be pointing out how reams of irrelevant details makes it more difficult for your message to reach your audience. But, I digress&#8230;</p><p>Instead of just spewing mechanical details, (e.g. &#8220;<em>On the <span
class="ui">Home</span> tab, in the <span
class="ui">Font</span> box</em> <em>group, type or  click a font in the</em> <em>Font</em> <em>group</em>&#8220;), why not provide them with a <strong>virtual speech coach</strong> with useful advice like:</p><ul><li>Using fonts consistently makes your slides look more professional.</li><li>When using different fonts on a slide, do so with purpose (e.g. one font for titles, one for labels), not to make things &#8220;look interesting&#8221;.</li></ul><h2>3. Partner with the Best</h2><p>If you cannot rewrite your documentation, consider a <strong>marketing deal</strong> with <a
href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/interview-with-nancy-duarte-author-of-slideology/">Nancy Duarte</a> to bundle a copy of <em><a
title="Book review of Slide:ology by Nancy Duarte" href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/presentation-skills-book-review-slideology-by-nancy-duarte/">Slide:ology</a></em> with every license of PowerPoint. Seriously.</p><h2>4. Prevent Suicide by PowerPoint</h2><p>Atrocities are committed hourly with bullets, font choices, and colors, but you can&#8217;t exactly eliminate bullets, fonts, and colors from PowerPoint.</p><p>However, you can perform up-to-the-second analysis of the slide deck, and put up warnings when the user is making bad design decisions.</p><p>Some of these are trivial to implement:</p><ul><li>Count the number of words on a slide, and display it in the status bar. As the count rises, put up progressively stern warnings. (<em>&#8220;Red alert: 100 words is a great start to a novel, but a lousy visual aid&#8221;</em>)</li><li>If the slide deck consists entirely of text, suggest that the user create a report in Word instead. (Better yet, just automatically launch Word after the 13th text-only slide.)</li><li>Count the number of font variants in use in a slide deck. Caution users that their colleagues will laugh at them if every slide is something new. Better yet, give us an automatic way to apply a consistent font face throughout an entire slide deck. This would be especially helpful when cobbling together a presentation from multiple sources using cut-and-paste.</li><li>Compute contrast ratios for all adjacent colors, and warn the user when something is hard to read. (&#8220;<em>Pink text on yellow background may be hard for your audience to read.</em>&#8220;)</li></ul><h2>5. Provide Better Support for Outlines</h2><p>Presentations need to have a <a
title="Speech Preparation #3: Don’t Skip the Speech Outline" href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/speech-preparation-3-outline-examples/">clear speech outline</a>.</p><p>PowerPoint&#8217;s <strong>outlining support is awful</strong>. Both <em>Outline Mode</em> and <em>Slide Sorter Mode</em> give presenters only a <strong>one-dimensional stream</strong> view of their slides. The resulting slide deck is too often a sequence of individually designed slides that have no flow or macro-organization.</p><p>Make it possible to <strong>arrange groups of slides into units</strong> (e.g. these four slides are &#8220;background&#8221;, these eight are the &#8220;technical summary&#8221;).</p><ul><li>Let us apply <strong>formatting to entire units</strong> (e.g. a different background color to each section of the presentation as a visual cue to the audience).</li><li>Let us create <strong>hierarchies among groups</strong>.</li><li>Provide support for doing <em>more</em> presentation-level design.</li></ul><h2>6. Remember the Room</h2><p>Some PowerPoint slides are designed entirely to be viewed at a computer where 10 point font is acceptable, even if not recommended. However, presenters are often oblivious to <strong>how their slides will look in a larger room</strong>. This isn&#8217;t your fault, but&#8230;</p><p>When a new slide deck is created, ask the user to specify the presentation setting, in general terms (e.g. small meeting room, lecture hall, etc.) or approximate dimensions. Use this to <strong>provide guidance on readable font sizes</strong>, diagram detail, etc. For example, I recently took an audience survey in a room with only six rows of chairs. Users at the back could not comfortably read fonts below 28 point font.</p><h2>7. Enable Users to Insert Good Visuals</h2><p>Please, end the clip art insanity.</p><p>Instead, allow us to search through <strong>stock photography website catalogues</strong> <em>from within PowerPoint</em>. (You can even take a cut of any purchased photos!) Once images are selected, make it easy for us to crop, resize, and optimize these photos (<em>within PowerPoint</em>) for embedding into slides. Why do I need yet another application open to do this?</p><h2>8. Help Users Manage Slide Libraries</h2><p>Don&#8217;t make us use third-party tools to organize, catalog, and search through slide libraries built up over time (particularly in corporate contexts). Provide this functionality in PowerPoint itself.</p><ul><li>Let me easily find all slides I&#8217;ve created with the words &#8220;Web 2.0&#8243; in them, and then choose among them to insert into a new presentation.</li><li>Create a Super Slide Sorter that provides a slide desktop where I can sift through slides from dozens of presentations at a time, selecting what I need, and then easily combining them into a new presentation.</li></ul><p>Sincerely,</p><p>Andrew Dlugan<br
/> <a
href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/">Six Minutes Public Speaking and Presentation Skills</a></p><p>p.s. <a
href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/contact/">Contact me</a> if you&#8217;d like to discuss more ideas.</p><hr
/><h2>Your Wish List?</h2><p>What features do <strong>you</strong> want the PowerPoint team to add/delete/change in future versions? Let me know in the comments.</p><table
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href='http://twitter.com/6minutes' title='@6minutes on Twitter'>@6minutes</a><br/><a
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style="background: #D4D2C3; padding: 12px; width: 500px; border: 1px solid #999999; clear: both;" class="post-author"><a
name="author"></a><div
style="float: left; margin-right: 20px;"><img
src="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/10/andrew.dlugan.editor.jpg" alt="Andrew Dlugan" /></div><div
style="margin-right: 2em;"><b><a
href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/author/andrew/">Andrew Dlugan</a></b> is the editor and founder of <i><a
href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/">Six Minutes</a></i>. He teaches courses, leads seminars, coaches speakers, and strives to avoid Suicide by PowerPoint. He is an award-winning public speaker and speech evaluator. Andrew is a father and husband who resides in British Columbia, Canada.</div><br
style="clear:both;" /></div><div
style="margin-top: 0.5em; border: 1px solid #990000; padding: 0 0.5em 0 0.5em; background: #EEEEEE;"> <small> Author of this article: Andrew Dlugan<br/> Category: <a
href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/category/visual-aids/" title="View all posts in Visual Aids" rel="category tag">Visual Aids</a><br/> Article tags: <a
href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/tag/nancy-duarte/" rel="tag">Nancy Duarte</a>, <a
href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/tag/powerpoint/" rel="tag">PowerPoint</a>, <a
href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/tag/suicide-by-powerpoint/" rel="tag">Suicide by PowerPoint</a>, <a
href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/tag/speech-outline/" rel="tag">speech outline</a>, <a
href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/tag/visuals/" rel="tag">visuals</a><br/> © <a
href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com">Six Minutes</a>, 2009. | <a
href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/powerpoint-design-wish-list/">Permalink</a> | <a
href="http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/powerpoint-design-wish-list/#comments">35 comments so far</a> <br/> </small></div>]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://sixminutes.dlugan.com/powerpoint-design-wish-list/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>35</slash:comments> </item> </channel> </rss>
