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These days I try to put lots of pictures in my presentations and I even did a Google Earth fly over of all the locations where people attending my web conference where located, while I talked global team working. I feel I have to try and keep things interesting, if only to give myself more enthusiasm in the presentations.
Good presentations are hard to do, remembering the content and stringing together an interesting story. I need lots of work beyond just my slides.
Thanks for the kind words about my presentation. I consciously try to minimize the number of bullet points. But even in this presentation, there was some information that had to be conveyed in bullet points. Sometimes they are unavoidable.
But the main thing I try to do is make sure my presentations have a story. The slides have to have a narrative arc.
I also believe passion and enthusiasm are important. If you're passionate about your topic, your audience will become engaged in what you are saying.
Friday night I got the opportunity to thank Jeffrey Veen for inspiring me with his presentation from five years ago at Web Visions. Since then, I've been trying to be half as good of a presenter as he is. He wrote about his thoughts on presentations here:
http://www.veen.com/jeff/archives/000483.html
Thank you again for attending the session. I'm glad you enjoyed it.
But since our wireless networks have lagged so much, the promise of mobile web has been like a unicorn. Pictures like this one that Puneet took in India bring the point home.
We don't have running water, but we have cell service.
Jensine Larsen's session brought that point home too, i.e. mobile web is everywhere, albeit in a different context.
Thanks for the presentation tips. Although even with some work, I pity people who choose to torture themselves with my content.
Would you come to my place of work? We use PowerPoint as a database, i.e. all of our metrics are in there and the executive staff spend an inordinate amount of time updating for each meeting. It's kind of funny to see IT people using PP (that's funny) as a database.
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