Friday, December 19, 2008

Post details: Don't Present Another Slide Until You Read This

Don't Present Another Slide Until You Read This

Sometimes you come across a work that expresses your thoughts so well you wish you had written them yourself. This Chris Brogan post from more than two years ago was just brought to my attention by a determined Google Alert. I read the article and thought it most appropriate to every Freepath user. May this be the inspiration for a 2009 resolution to make your digital storytelling the best ever.

Oh, one more thing… After reading this post, you may be wondering what to do next. If there’s still room on your Christmas budget, buy yourself a present. Nancy Duarte’s new book, “Slide:ology” is the best resource of 2008, in my opinion. (That link takes you to Nancy’s blog - a must RSS or bookmark. Buy the book through the Amazon link there.) Every page is an effort to move slide-jockeys out of their safe (read: “boring") zone of flat thinking.

May 16th, 2006 in Lifehack
My Best Presentation Tricks
Giving presentations can be a complete and utter thrill. Too bad attending them can be a complete and utter bore. If you are on the giving side, I want to offer you up a collection of my best presentation tricks to date. I’ve written on presentation and the storyteller’s promise before at my site. I’ve written what has oddly become my top-rated post of all time, Bring out your inner David Lee Roth. This will draw from these concepts and more.

Stories and Characters

With few exceptions, a presentation is an opportunity for you to tell a story to an audience. You have the conch shell. You are the wielder of the fire stick. And your audience enters into a relationship with you from the moment they choose to sit in your presence. (Here’s a hack- what if you gave a presentation and provided no chairs? What would a standing audience look and feel like?) As such, your audience is expecting a story.

A story has a beginning, a middle, and an end. You’ve heard this before, and you understand, but apply it to your presentation. And no, I don’t mean, “Here’s what we’ll talk about, talk-talk, that’s what we talked about.” Stories also have characters. So, start your story at the beginning with a character. If you’re describing a product, start with the user of the product. Or start with the person who moves your product from one business to the other. But put PEOPLE in your story.

At the beginning, your character should have a problem. Maybe she has too many spreadsheets and not enough linking, and people are starting to give her information in ways that her spreadsheets are overflowing their banks. In the middle, your character meets the new product, a database, and now she’s really excited because the database can do EVERYTHING the spreadsheets were lacking. By the end of the story, your character is poised on all the great new ways the database will save her in the future, and she’s looking forward to applying her new skills to a new challenge.

Ads are presentations. Watch TV for a few minutes and see the stories; think about them in terms of a story with a character, a structure, etc. Do you see it?

Touch Their Eyes

Presentations are not opportunities for people to read in a group setting. Your slides, if you choose to use them, should not be textual orgies. Use visual shorthand. Are you talking about budget numbers? How about a big picture of a cash register, with the numbers showing up as the register tape? If you can turn your information into a visual summation, even if you read actual statistics and numbers out over the presentation of the slide, that’s useful.

Remember that a slide deck doesn’t have to equal the handout provided after the presentation. You can send people off with a document containing all the textual support of your presentation. But truly, do you think people want to sit around the room and read complex graphs of numbers, huge text dumps regarding a new product, or anything else that requires an intense amount of leaning in and squinting? (Yes, exceptions to this concept exist in abundance, but please consider whether your presentation is the exception, or more likely, is a target for more imagery and fewer words).

There are all kinds of great sources for interesting graphics and images to add to your slide deck. Heck, even Flickr offers lots of material that’s licensed for use under Creative Commons. (I use them frequently)

A Presentation Doesn’t Equal a PowerPoint Side Deck

I was once in an argument with someone over the fact that I didn’t have slide deck materials to give her. She said I couldn’t present without slides. I said that slides were merely one tool. In the end, she wouldn’t relent, so I sent her a slide deck with 24 slides of all black background with orange title headers. I knew she would be printing (call me spiteful), and yes, when I got there to present, she’d dutifully depleted the earth of several ink catridges to be faithful to her documentation bent.

You can present without a slide deck. It’s scary, because you are the focus of the audience. They are all staring at you, and every point you make, either causes eyeballs to refocus on you, or every time you lose them, it causes eyeballs to drift away and examine the walls, the ceiling, their BlackBerrys. It becomes much more of a “live without a net” feeling to have a presentation without a slide deck to serve as backup.

Which is why it’s really powerful.

If you can pull off this kind of presentation, it’s often very memorable. People will hold on to the words you used to paint stories in their heads. It will keep their visual memory working, which is why great radio programs can often engage more of our senses than you’d expect. Try it once in a while. You might find it truly terrifying, but you might also see a reward.

You are an Entertainer

Presenting, even to your coworkers and colleagues, is an entertainment experience. If not, why are you standing there with a room full of people looking at you? You could just send an email, mail out a brochure. The presumption is that there’s something inherent in your presence that people can’t get from just browsing the brochure. Most people incorrectly assume that they ship a human along with the presentation merely for the Q&A session that follows.

Wrong.

This is your opportunity to breathe life into material that might not stand so well on its own. It’s a chance to give a face and a voice to something that might not be easily humanized. (What if you’re selling waste treatment engineering supplies? I’m doubting people can see the “story” in that easily). It’s a chance to connect with an audience and give them something that they’re never going to receive directly from the product or service or material you’re presenting about. Why present about your last quarter’s numbers? Because either you’re presenting the proud face of a group’s accomplishment, or you’re giving the story and the news behind why you didn’t measure up.

Entertainers are strong on giving their stories life, but they are also strong on reading the room. An entertainer will know whether the people in the audience are being bored by something you’re presenting, and perhaps they’ll mix it up a bit. This requires work. Again, if all you had to do was send an audio voiceover with the slides, you would. Entertainers, er, presenters, are there to make sure the audience is playing along at the same pace, and that everyone is connecting with the material. It goes back to the relationship I mentioned in the storytelling section.

Why Not You?

If you think your presentations can’t benefit from the above, why not? What line of work are you in that humans don’t want to be engaged? What serious business do you conduct that can’t be brought to riveting and rapt attention by giving your information a flair? Do you doubt for a moment that even the most grave information you see on the news isn’t built into a presentation? Even there, the aspect of storytelling and connection to the audience through a human character is the point that brings back great feedback and connection.

Humans want to connect. They are built to want to belong. A great presentation is a fire to gather around and share an experience. Use every opportunity you have to present to tell a story, and I guarantee that you will be sought out to present material of more and more importance. As a presenter, you have the opportunity to give a rockstar performance that gives people something to think about. Why not? Are you saving your performance for some other venue?

–Chris Brogan writes about self-improvement and creativity at [chrisbrogan.com]. He recently launched the Grasshopper Factory.

Friday, December 12, 2008

You Might be Surprised to Find That "Free" Means "Innovative"

Free is as free does, so we’re eating our own ice cream these days. Others eat their own dog food, we prefer the sweet confection of really great software tools. Two of our favorites are Jing and Weebly. Both of them are free.

You can get a lot done wiith a high-speed internet connection and a PC, In these belt-tightening days, perhaps a little “Free Advice” could be a welcome thing. As we look for ways to get the word out on Freepath (both the free download, and the 100mb of storage linked directly to the application), we are determined to make the most of this world of user-generated tools and content to do it. Weebly is a place where anybody can create their own website. Jing is a super easy tool for capturing images and “audio/video” (swf) of your desktop. Like myFreepath, Jing has free online storage for your captures.

We have created a microsite over there at weebly, (www.freebits.weebly.com) for dynamic display of new tools, Freepath tutorials and experimental interaction with our users. Go there to see some VERY short, easy-to-follow Jing tutorials from Dave Giusti, our Community Manager.

In the future, partly to prove a point, but more so because it’s a good idea and great business, we’ll be increasing our reach into other free web applications and client applications that help to create a better impression of your ideas and digital stories. In fact, because both of these (Jing and Weebly) host content, they both become content for Freepath playlists.

Jing even stores images and swf files locally on your hard drive if you like, so you can use them without an internet connection. (Hard to imagine Slide.com and others doing that. Oh, and…their stuff all plays in Freepath with an internet connection too.) We like what Chris Thomas, Chief Strategist at Intel says about client content and applications. Chris, who works with Intel’s World Ahead program sees lots of places that don’t have internet. These “extreme conditions” as he refers to them are where many web applications fall short. Freepath, on the other hand, thrives in an extreme setting.

In October, we supported Intel and the US Federal Government’s US-AID in teaching new technologies to ICT professionals from developing nations. Freepath was one of three companies invited to present.

As a result, in something like 15 developing countries, the idea of sharing content created by users with limited internet access is becoming standard. By comparison, we’ve seen US businesses and schools look at free solutions as though they had leprosy. Recently someone said, “If you charged a thousand bucks for Freepath, I might be able to convince my boss to use it…” Talk about tempting! I hope we will someday hear stories about a clever Mongolian presenter who changed her culture by incorporating visuals captured from the web with video shot in the field by a farmer and PowerPoint slides from a template created and shared by a Freepath user in Mississippi!

Don’t worry, we haven’t decided to charge a thousand bucks a seat. What you should worry about instead is whether or not you’re open to doing what it takes to make your point. Whether it’s your boss cutting your staff and budget, or telling you to be brilliant overnight, sometimes it takes extreme conditions to “force” us to do what is easy, quick, cost effective and smart.