ellen finkelstein logo

Ellen Finkelstein.com
AutoCAD PowerPoint About Links

Over 145 PowerPoint tips and tutorials!

PowerPoint Tips
PowerPoint Tips Blog
Portfolio/Backgrounds

Get free tips!
Sign up for our monthly tips newsletter. Free, bonus e-booklet!


RSS: What is it? Why do I want it? How do I get it?

Add to My Yahoo!
Subscribe with Bloglines

Buy a Book!

E-mail This Page 
to a Friend

Send me a PowerPoint tip and if you include your name and I post your tip, I'll give you credit.

PowerPoint Tips & Tutorials

Create a looping introduction


It's often helpful to have some animation showing when an audience files into the room, just to elicit some interest. When you're ready, you can stop it and start the main part of your presentation.

I'm going to tell you about two techniques to accomplish this.

Use a looping presentation and link to a later "first" slide

This technique uses a looped presentation in which all the slides except your introductory animation are hidden. Because of this, you only see the introduction. Then you use a button to link to the slide that acts as the first slide of your main presentation. Even though that slide is hidden, PowerPoint displays it, as well as the rest of the hidden slides.

  1. Create some slides with a welcoming message before your main presentation.

  1. Save the presentation.
  2. Select all the slides in the Slides pane (click the first, press and hold Shift, and click the last). Choose Slide Show> Slide Transition. (In PowerPoint 2007, click the Animations tab.)

In the Advance Slide section of the Slide Transition task pane, check Automatically After and enter a number of seconds. (In PowerPoint 2007, do this on the Animations tab.) I found that 3 seconds worked for the above slides. Uncheck On Mouse Click. If you want, you can add a transition effect.

Choose Slide Show> Set Up Show. (In PowerPoint 2007, click the Slide Show tab, and click the Set Up Slide Show button.) In the Show Options section of the Set Up Show dialog box, check the Loop Continuously Until 'Esc' check box. The Advance Slides section should have the Use Timings, If Present option checked. This loops the entire presentation. Click OK.

To create a button to link to your main presentation, you can use an Action Button. (From the Drawing toolbar, choose AutoShapes> Action Buttons. In PowerPoint 2007, choose Shapes on the Insert tab and choose an Action Button) But I chose to create an invisible button. To do so, drag a rectangle at the lower-right corner of the first slide.

With the button selected, choose Slide Show> Action Settings. (In PowerPoint 2007, choose Action on the Insert tab.)

In the Action Settings dialog box, choose the Hyperlink To option. From the drop-down list, choose Slide. (Be sure not to choose Next Slide, because that will bring you to the next slide in the looping introduction!) In the Hyperlink to Slide dialog box, navigate to the first slide of your main presentation (in this example, the 4th slide), and click OK twice.

Double-click the rectangle on the first slide. (In PowerPoint 2007, click the Format tab, and click the dialog box launcher button in the Shape Styles group.) In the Format AutoShape dialog box, in the Fill section of the Color and Lines tab, drag the Transparency slider to 100%. (In PowerPoint 2007, click the Fill category to do this.) In the Line section, set the Line Color to No Line. (In PowerPoint 2007, do this in the Line Color pane.) This makes the rectangle invisible. (This method of using transparency also ensures that you can copy and paste the button without losing the hyperlink.)

You want to be able to move to your main presentation at any slide of the intro, so copy the button to the Clipboard and paste it into the other two slides of your introduction.

If you tried out your presentation now, it wouldn't loop. Why? Because the rest of the slides (your main presentation) are probably set to advance On Mouse Click (which they should be). So the presentation advances to the first slide of your main presentation and just sits there, waiting for a click. To get the looping effect, you need to hide the rest of the slides. In the Slides pane, select them and choose Slide Show> Hide Slide. (In PowerPoint 2007, click Hide Slide on the Slide Show tab.)

Make sure rest of slides are set up to advance On Mouse Click. To do so, with them all still selected, choose Slide Show> Slide Transition. In the Advance Slide section, the On Mouse Click checkbox should be checked and the Automatically After check box should be empty. (In PowerPoint 2007, click the Animations tab and look under Advance Slide.)

Save again and try out your presentation. The first 3 slides will loop over and over because all the other slides are hidden. When you're ready to start, click the lower-right corner of any of the slides in the introduction to move to the first slide of the main presentation.

When you get to the last slide, you may click and realize that you've gone back to the first slide of the introduction! That's because the slide is looped, but you don't want that to happen. A looped slide doesn't have a black warning slide at the end, so you should create one. Add a new slide at the end and make its background black. When you get to that slide, after the audience leaves, just press Esc to return to Normal view.

Download the sample presentation, Looped_intro_1.ppt

Loop a motion path animation on one slide

Click here to go to Page 2 and learn the second technique.

 

back to main tips menu for more tips

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

 

Books by Ellen

101 Tips Every PowerPoint User Should Know
Invaluable tips professionals use will get you up to speed fast!


7 Steps to Great Images.
Learn how to format images for highest impact and a professional look.


How to Do Everything with PowerPoint 2007

All new for PowerPoint 2007. Not only how to use all the new features, but when and why.


How to Do Everything with PowerPoint 2003
Comprehensive coverage. Updated for PowerPoint 2003

How to Do Everything with PowerPoint 2002
Thoroughly covers PowerPoint 2002
Books by Others
presentation zen
An excellent resource for improving your presentations


Beyond Bullet Points
Cliff Atkinson's famous system for meaningful, effective presentations without bullets or even a background. Well thought out and researched.

                             Home |  AutoCAD | PowerPoint | E-StoreAbout | Links |  Contact Us | Site Map
Copyright5Ellen Finkelstein, Inc.
Microsoft product screen shots reprinted with permission from Microsoft Corporation.