![]() In other words, revisiting an agenda effectively can help prevent “not seeing the forest for the trees.”įor years, I’ve built slides manually that do this – but as you add and remove sections from your talk, it becomes a real pain to update. But additionally, I find that it helps solidify learning for your audience by repeatedly contextualizing details within the larger narrative structure. This has more than one benefit: first and foremost, it helps keep your audience from being too restless, because they understand more how much you’re going to cover. While I’m going through the material, I like to return to that agenda and show where we are in the talk. I like to give folks an outline of the narrative at the beginning of the talk in the agenda. I think it’s incredibly important to give your audience context for where you are in a presentation – especially in a talk longer than 5 minutes. ‘Zoom’ is about dynamic presentations (rather than ‘zooming in’) This describes one of those features: the new ‘Zoom’ functionality. Also, the PowerPoint team has added features that I believe help me deliver presentations more effectively. First, I’m more proficient with PowerPoint, so I can put together presentations quickly and my slides carry greater impact. I’ve become a PowerPoint fan for a couple of reasons. These days, my perspective has changed quite a bit. ![]() There was a time when I saw PowerPoint as a necessary evil - a way of conveying ideas that I wasn’t crazy about, but which worked. ![]()
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