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We often forget to consider the technological enviironment of our presentations. For example, if we deliver a presentation live and then put it on the Web for people to view later, will it make any sense without our spoken words? Probably not. Then you need to record your lecture and add it to the presentation, change the presentation to make the text more complete, or offer Notes pages that include your spoken words rather than the presentation file itself. I recently read some interesting tips for creating presentations for Web seminars on the blog of Ken Molay, president and owner of Webinar Success, a consultant in the field of web conferencing. The article was called, "In The Eye Of The Beholder." PowerPoint presentations are almost uniquely used as the medium for presenting during web conferences. At least, I've never seen any other method. How do you design a PowerPoint presentation for a web conference? Of course, all the standard rules apply. Organized content. Legible text and relevant images. But some of the other tips were new to me, because I've never designed a presentation for a web conference. Here they are:
Jim Endicott’s article for Presentations Magazine (may it rest in peace–December was the last issue), “5 proven principles of Web presenting,” also offers some great advice. Some points:
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| Copyright5Ellen Finkelstein, Inc. Microsoft product screen shots reprinted with permission from Microsoft Corporation. |
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