Poer Point presentation
Let's continue to discuss organization with a presentation by reviewing a few principles. Slide Show Design PrinciplesSlide Show Design Principles are a few delivery tips to help you with setting up your presentation. Remember to choose design elements appropriate for the audience because you don't want to give a presentation that the audience can't understand. Keep the design neat and clean by not having a lot of clutter on the slide. The presentation is supposed to assist you because if all you are doing is reading what is on the presentation, then why does the audience actually need you to be physically present? You could have just added Rehearse Timings to the presentation and let it play by itself. I actually cringe when I see someone give a presentation and they are just reading what is on the slide.
The presenter should have more in depth information to add to each bulleted item or slide. Create a focal point that leads the viewer's eyes to the critical information on the slide. Use unified design element for a professional look. I like a presentation that looks neat and looks like the presenter put some effort into it. Choose fonts appropriate for the output of your presentation. Do not underline text is another great tip to follow because it is generally assumed that underlined text is a hyperlink. Avoid using all capital letters because it comes across as yelling. Use italics and bold sparingly because it should only be used for what is important. Avoid creating lines of text that leave a single word hanging on a line of its own because the placeholder can be resized. Use just one space after punctuation in text blocks to avoid extra gaps between words. Also, be certain to make text readable so the audience can follow the flow of the presentation. It is a general rule that title case should be 36 pt. or higher and bulleted text should be 28 pt. or higher.
PowerPoint PresentationsPowerPoint Presentations CPS 1032 Unit 2