A Toast to the Halfway Point (Long Island Ice Tea at Clarke Quay)
February 05, 2010
Learning Moment: Singapore
Today, we reached the halfway point of our two-month journey through Asia. As great as the past four weeks have been (and they have been...), some of the best is yet to come.
- We'll be vacationing in Bali for the next seven days
- We'll get to see the first of on Hong Bao (the riverside Chinese New Year festival) in Singapore
- We'll eat a kaiseki dinner for Valentine's Day in Japan
- I'll hook up with Garr Reynolds for a presentation workshop in Yokohama - slide:ology + Presentation Zen
- And then, two weeks in Seoul, Korea
Today, I led another slide:ology session. There are two 'best known methods' that we've developed over the past 6 months of teaching slide:ology. They are not 'rules', but I practice them religiously. I'll share them with you, but - as always - your mileage may vary.
- Never (ever) share slides with someone who isn't going to present them.
If you're asked to share your slide deck, email it, or store it on a server - say no. What you should do is convert it to a pdf file and then send it.
This method has three advantages. First, it shrinks the file size dramatically. Second, viewers cannot 'click' into your embedded files and read the data behind the data. Third, they cannot easily present your deck. Finally, they cannot cannibalize your slides to create a 'Frankendeck'. - Never (ever) use sub-bullets.
A single layer of bullets is fine for creating a list. The next level of bullets, however, indicates one of two things. One - you're typing in words that you're going to say anyway. These can be pushed into notes view and you can just say them. Two - if you really have important text in the sub-bullets, I would argue that the bullet and sub-bullets have enough meaning for one new slide. The bullet becomes the title and the sub-bullets become the text (or are changed to an image).
The use of sub-bullets is mostly laziness. Since I imposed this rule on myself, I have not found a case where I needed to keep them. There is almost always a better way.
Give it a try!
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