1 / 18

Little Red Schoolhouse Supporting Presentations with Written Slides Greg Colomb The University of Virginia

Little Red Schoolhouse Supporting Presentations with Written Slides Greg Colomb The University of Virginia. AGENDA The Role of Slides in a Presentation The Structure of Effective Presentations The Structure of Effective Slides The Language of Effective Slides. AGENDA

kachina
Download Presentation

Little Red Schoolhouse Supporting Presentations with Written Slides Greg Colomb The University of Virginia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Little Red Schoolhouse Supporting Presentations with Written Slides Greg Colomb The University of Virginia

  2. AGENDA • The Role of Slides in a Presentation • The Structure of Effective Presentations • The Structure of Effective Slides • The Language of Effective Slides

  3. AGENDA • The Role of Slides in a Presentation • The Structure of Effective Presentations • The Structure of Effective Slides • The Language of Effective Slides

  4. AGENDA • The Role of Slides in a Presentation • The Structure of Effective Presentations • The Structure of Effective Slides • The Language of Effective Slides

  5. Listeners Need a Framework Even More than Readers • Focuses them on the “So What?” • What’s my role here? • Why should I care? • What will I get from this? • Structures listening • Keeps audience focused on the story line • Identifies priorities, organizing principles • Helps them ask informed questions • Defines deliverables • What do you want me to do or think? • What’s worth remembering here?

  6. Tell Listeners What to Expect • • Effective Presentations Tell a Story • So . . . Effective Introductions Announce Main Characters • • Effective Presentations Make an Argument • So . . . Effective Introductions Announce Key Concepts • • Effective Presentations Lead to an Outcome • So . . . Effective Introductions Announce What’s At Stake

  7. Most of All, Listeners Need to Know What’s at Stake • •Listeners understand better and remember more when they have a • specific motivation for following you. Moreover, what they understand • and remember depends on what motivates them to listen. • •You can use several methods to ensure that your audience is motivated • to read in a way that serves your purposes, but the easiest and most • effective is to frame your deck as a solution to a problem that your • audience has and needs to solve.

  8. AGENDA • The Role of Slides in a Presentation • The Structure of Effective Presentations • The Structure of Effective Slides • The Language of Effective Slides

  9. MANUFACTURING CONFIGURATION • Differences in plant capability & capacity between Zorax and Abco • Lower portion of plant production than Zorax • Scale and technology leadership advantage to Zorax plants, which are typically located in low-cost sourcing regions • Current distributed manufacturing network hampered by specialized functions that require extensive shipping of product and raw materials, at a raw product cost disadvantage in West and East • Significant problems with proposed strategic plan • Lack of best demonstrated practice/technology in plants means lower productivity levels than benchmark competitors • Result is significant manufacturing cost disadvantage vs. Zorax

  10. ABCO MANUFACTURING DISADVANTAGESLow Capacity, Overspecialized Functions, Flawed Plan Abco has less production capability and capacity than Zorax • Commits less to own plant production • Locates plants in higher-cost sourcing regions • Yields scale and technology leadership to Zorax Its plant network is hampered by specialized functions • Requires extensive shipping of product and raw materials • Results in higher costs for raw products in West and East Its proposed strategic plan has significant shortcomings • Fails to establish best demonstrated practice/technology • Sets lower productivity levels than benchmark competitors

  11. Take-away Box:Draws a concluding inference or sets up next slide Slides Have A Rhetorical GeographyEach Part Has a Distinct Function Title: Makes the Point Sub-title: Tells Readers What to Look for Main Body Point • body sub-point • supporting detail • body sub-point Main Body Point • body sub-point Main Body Point • body sub-point • body sub-point • supporting detail

  12. The Title Makes The Point Of The Slide • Do use it to • make the point of the slide, your value-added • anticipate the body of the slide • - words predict concepts in each main sub-point • - words at end of the title most emphatic • connect that slide to the previous one • - begin it with words that connect it to the previous slide • Don’t use it to • name a general topic

  13. THE SUB-TITLE INTERPRETS THE BODY • Do use it to: • tell readers what to look for in the body of the slide, particularly complex visual or quantitative data • predict key concepts in the body of the slide • Don't use it to • make the point of the slide • draw an inference to be developed in next slide

  14. THE TAKE-AWAY BOX ANSWERS “SO WHAT?” AND “WHAT NEXT?” • Do use it to • draw an inference or conclusion • make a transition to the next slide • Don't use it to • fit in what doesn't fit elsewhere • add an afterthought

  15. AGENDA • The Role of Slides in a Presentation • The Structure of Effective Presentations • The Structure of Effective Slides • The Language of Effective Slides

  16. Apply LRS Principles to Slides • 1. The fewer the abstract nouns the better • 2. The more characters down the left hand side of the slide, the better • 3. When the character is the same, the more verbs down the left hand side of the slide, the better • 4. Be sure to make the RIGHT character the subjects of verbs • 5. Familiar units of information to the left — usually characters or their actions, unfamiliar information to the right

More Related