Corporate Templates Can Undermine a Slide Presentation

Many companies unwittingly hinder the effectiveness of their employees’ presentations because of policies that mandate the use of corporate slide templates on every PowerPoint or Keynote slide. Without question, a well-designed template can make a slide presentation look professional and polished. And, it is understandable that companies want to display their brand name and logo […]
Hilarious PowerPoint Wisdom

Hilarious PowerPoint wisdom from Don McMillan.
The Empire Strikes Back

United States Army Colonel kicked out of Afghanistan for criticizing PowerPoint.
Quotes for Public Speakers (No. 50) – John Zimmer

Are we up to 50 quotes already? Time flies. When I began this series, I decided to limit the quotes to those that were directly related to public speaking (as opposed to quotes on general topics that are often used in a speech). Soon afterwards, I began to wonder whether I would run out of […]
We Have Met the Enemy

And he is PowerPoint. A recent article in the New York Times by Elisabeth Bumiller is worth discussing. It examines the degree to which PowerPoint pervades the US military. And the degree to which it is spinning out of control. What do I mean by “out of control”? Check out the slide below that was […]
PowerPoint Math: PP does not equal TP

Here is a simple PowerPoint math equation: PowerPoint ≠ Teleprompter A PowerPoint presentation is not a teleprompter. You read a teleprompter; that’s what it’s for. If you’re reading your PowerPoint presentation, you’re doing it wrong! Reduce your text and learn your material. Photo courtesy of Steve Jurvetson Now, in fairness to the fellow in the […]
PowerPoint Math: The 10-20-30 Rule

An analysis of Guy Kawasaki’s 10-20-30 Rule of PowerPoint.
PowerPoint: The Tipping Point

The tipping point. In this truly horrific PowerPoint slide, we reached the tipping point in the first line. Please don’t do this with your presentations.
PowerPoint Math: The 1-6-6 Rule

Today I want to discuss the 1-6-6 Rule. Quite simply, this “rule” says that each PowerPoint slide should have one main idea, a maximum of six bullet points, and a maximum of six words per bullet point. Two caveats: I have also seen this rule called the 1-5-5 Rule and the 1-7-7 Rule, with necessary […]
Tagged 1-6-6 Rulebullet pointsPowerPointpublic speakingSlide Presentation