Font Size
Here is the most
important tip of all.....font size.....make it BIG!!!! Your text can
not be
too large! For projected presentations, a good rule of thumb is to stand
about 5 feet from
your computer monitor. If your presentation is not easily read, your
font size is too
small. Make an extra slide if you have to. It doesn't cost anything.
The quickest way to
lose an audience is to make them strain to hear or to see a presentation.
The size of
this text is 14 points. A good starting point would be 35 points or
larger for a title and 25
points or larger for text. Remember, your text can not be too large!
Graphs and Charts
Use a thick brightly colored line for your graphs and charts. Use no
more than three
lines in a graph or chart. More than three lines will result in using
colors that do not
contrast and instead, run together. Red, blue and yellow are excellent
color choices for
lines on a graph.
Graphs and Charts
Some graphs and charts will have too much information for them to be
easily read on a
large screen. If they contain important information that your audience
needs to know,
you might consider providing them with a hardcopy or handout.
Small or large audience?
A presentation that you showed to six people sitting around a table
in a small office is
not necessarily going to make a good transition to large screen projection.
Go back and
edit. Enlarge what needs to be enlarged, delete what needs to be deleted
and update
what needs to be updated.
Slides are free!
Use as many as you need to create an easy to read and easy to understand
presentation.
Font color
Use contrasting colors for background and text. That green background
and blue text
may look pretty on your computer monitor but it will not make a good
transition to large
screen projection. It will be difficult to read and you will lose your
audience.
Simple fonts
Stay away from fancy scrolled and scripted fonts. Today's video projectors
are good, but
still have limitations. You will be better served using fonts that are
blocked. Like arial or
a font similar to the one used on this page.
Italicize only for emphasis
This goes back to avoiding fancy fonts. They are too hard to read on
the large screen.
However, italicizing a word, phrase, or a quote is not going to slow
your audience down
that much. Just use it sparingly. Also, some fonts make the transition
to large screen
better than others. Try different fonts.
Bullet or outline only your high points
Don't put your entire speech on your presentation slides. An entire
speech on
presentation slides is not only boring, (you know what the presenter
is getting ready to
say), it is hard to read.
Video playback
When giving a computer presentation, don't use your computer as a video
playback
deck. It is growing popular to insert an AVI, MPG, or video clip into
presentations. What
you usually end up with is a choppy piece of footage the size of a postage
stamp that is
not in sync with the audio. If your video is important enough to be
a part of your
presentation, use the proper playback medium. (Beta, VHS, Mini DV, etc.)