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故事讲述

  • Every presentation should drive action
  • Address your audience’s problem and offer a solution
  • Gather background information to make a presentation your audience needs
  • Provide a reason to believe in what you are presenting
  • Understand how open or resistant your audience maybe
  • Give your audience the gift of radical simplification
  • Engage your audience’s attention in intentional and thoughtful ways
  • Use examples, analogies and metaphors often
  • Place visuals in intentional, predictable and consistent locations on your slides

Style and design

  • Be consistent in your slide design
  • Don’t confuse design for decoration
  • Consult Adobe templates to start your design in Creative Cloud Express, Illustrator, Xd, or InDesign
  • Follow the 6 design principles when creating your slide: contrast, flow, visual hierarchy, unity, proximity and whitespace.

Colours and Fonts

  • No more than 2 fonts
  • Choose fonts that can be associated with your topic
  • No more than 5 colours
  • Keep all titles in one colour and the body text in another (save additional colours for graphics!)
  • Choose colours that have high contrast against your slide background

Images in your presentation

  • Images and videos convey ideas and feelings, while graphics and icons share information
  • Use abstract images to reinforce your metaphors
  • Use high-quality images that feel natural and relatable

Illustrations in your presentation

  • Your audience will remember information paired with visuals better than text alone
  • Match the style of illustration to both your topic and audience
  • Similar to picture books, use illustrations in your presentation to help your audience comprehend complex information

Diagrams in your presentation

  • Diagrams organise information visually when it’s too complicated for words alone
  • Flow charts show direction like a process or events
  • Structure charts show hierarchy or layered relationships
  • Cluster charts show ideas that have something in common
  • Radial diagrams bursts of information fan from the core idea

Data in your presentations

  • Use colour and graphics to paint your main idea
  • Layer #1 Background: includes tick marks, scales, legends and provides context, scale and reference
  • Layer #2 Data: use contrast to distinguish information clearly
  • Layer #3: Emphasis: shows the “so what?” of your data and tells why the data is important
  • Make data slides more about the conclusions than about the data

Tips for presenting

  • Do not read from your slides
  • Practice your transitions
  • Plan for interruptions, questions, and comments
  • Manage the clock
  • React to the room
  • Affirm means to validate the questioner and create a space for safe interaction
  • Restate means to confirm your understanding and confirm the question’s importance
  • Think means not rush or faking an answer