MasterView Creating and Managing Effective PowerPoint Presentations for International Audiences ___________________________________________ MasterView by IKONOS New Media August 13th, 2001 Issue #3 "IMPROVING THE LOOK OF YOUR PRESENTATION" ........................................... MasterView is a free monthly newsletter focusing on designing and managing effective PowerPoint presentations for international audiences. Directed to communicators, managers, trainers, presenters and lecturers, it provides selected solutions, how-to techniques and resources on effective presentation-making. ******************************************* This issue's theme: "IMPROVING THE LOOK OF YOUR PRESENTATION" =========================================== Our third issue of MasterView focuses on improving the look of your presentations. After you have organized the content of your presentation, and it has been put into PowerPoint using the Outline View mode, it's time to decide what you can do in order to make your presentation more effective, original, consistent and readable. Probably most of you already know the power of ready- made templates, the ones that come installed with PowerPoint. But not all of you are aware of the possibility to customize those templates and make them more original, by modifying colors, the position of text or the elements of the design. We will see in detail how this is possible. On the topic of template customization, I am going to share some easy steps to modify and personalize Clip Art, to make it look different and unique and fit to your specific presentation's needs. Further on, since we have dedicated this issue to the "look" of your presentation, we will see together what basic changes can be made to any image you want to insert as a background for your slides. Also, how you can insert any Web image as a background of your presentation. Finally, I am providing you with a review of few selected Web sites where you can freely download presentation templates. =========================================== 1) * HOW CAN I CUSTOMIZE THE ORIGINAL MICROSOFT POWERPOINT TEMPLATES? * =========================================== Let's start assuming that you have already created the content of your presentation by typing it into PowerPoint, preferably using the Outline View mode. What should your next step be? Deciding a consistent and effective look to apply to all of your slides. You have usually two ways to do it: 1) You can create your own design, by using the Slide Master (View >> Master >> Slide Master): here you can apply a background color, use the drawing tools to create the layout. Draw boxes, rectangles, lines and fill them with the appropriate colors. You can then modify the position of all titles and text boxes, and format the font style, size and color. But to do this you need fantasy and some kind of "designer disposition", this is why a lot of people don't even try to create a look on their own. 2) The second solution, easier but not less effective, is to use the templates that you can find both in PowerPoint itself or on the Web (see the last article further on) and customize them, by adding your "personal touch". Let's see the steps you should follow to achieve this result: A) From any View mode you are in, click the icon on the top right corner in the Standard toolbar that says: "Apply Design" (you can obtain the same by clicking on Format >> Apply Design Template). Microsoft uses two different words (design and template) to mean the same concept: a uniform "look" that you can apply to all of your slides, a visual dress that you can use to give your presentation a uniform appearance. B) In the "Apply Design" dialog box, you will see on the left half of the window the different templates you can choose, while on the right hand side you see a small preview of the selected template. C) Select one of the proposed templates and click "Apply". In a few seconds, all your slides will have the same background, the same font style, size and color and the same overall layout design. What information are stored in a template? The following settings are stored in each template (a file with a .pot extension): - Slide size and orientation - Color Scheme (including color for default fill, line, shadow, text etc.) - Text Styles (e.g. Title and Body Text placeholder formatting) - Defaults for text and AutoShapes objects (Fill and Line color and styles, shadows etc.) - Printer settings for slides, notes, handouts - Initial View (Slides, Notes Page, Slide Sorter, etc.) Actually, I am going to take a minute to share with you a problem that happened to my friend Jason in Dublin. After he had tried out and applied several templates, he decided he did not like them and wanted to go back to his original blank presentation, getting rid of all the changes he had done. He realized that he couldn't, so he had to use the "Undo" icon and go back a few steps, but he could not reach the point where he had not applied any template yet. What I suggested him to do, for the future, was: since there's no default "blank" template that you can just apply in case you want to give up using one of the ready-made templates you have already applied, create one by doing the following: 1) Open a blank presentation 2) Go to: File >> Save As... 3) Give a name to this file and call it "Blank" 4) Where it says: "Type of files", on the bottom of the "Save As..." dialog box, select "Presentation template" 5) Be sure to save it in the right folder (in order to find it easily in the future): I suggest to save it in C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Templates\Presentation Designs, so that you can find it together with all the other "official" templates 6) Click "Save" and it's done. Next time you will apply some templates to test their effect on your slides and you want to go back to a blank template (that is no template at all), all you have to do is click again on the "Apply Design" icon (or click on Format >> Apply Design Template), scroll down the list and select the "Blank.pot" template that you have created before. In one shot you will get rid of any previously applied template and it will be like you first created it. Now that you know something more about templates and how they work, it's easy to see how we can modify them to create our personal template. This is what we need to do, once we have applied the template that we would like to modify: 1) Go to View >> Master >> Slide Master until the Slide Master is displayed 2) From here, make all the possible changes you can do: - Click on the text boxes, select them and modify the font size, style and color - Move or increase/decrease the space assigned to the title or the bulleted list - Change the background color - Insert your logo, pictures or Clip Art - Change the color of the elements used to create the design by clicking on them and using the Fill Color icon (on the Drawing toolbar). Once you have modified your Slide Master, you can go back to the Slide View mode and check the result. In case you notice there's something you still need to change, go back to the Slide Master and do it. It sounds easy, and actually it is. But there's something more you need to know. You may realize that once you are in the Slide Master and you try to change some colors to the objects or move something, you might not be able to select anything. You click, and the only thing that gets selected is the entire slide. What does it mean? When you see this behavior, it means that the designer who created that template by adding different shapes, lines, rectangles and colors finally decided to "group" together all those elements, so they would have acted as a whole, unique object. The "grouping" function allows you to join two or more "objects" (lines, shapes, images, text boxes) so they cannot be modified unless you "ungroup" them first. This option is useful when you want to resize or move a complex object made up by different small elements. Any time you create a template or a complex image using drawing tools, you are strongly advised to select all of its elements and group them. To group objects, follow these two easy steps: a) Select all the objects you want to group (holding down the Shift key when you click) b) Go to Draw >> Group. It's done. Back to your template, what you can do to ungroup any template is: a) Select what can be selected (most of the times the entire slide) b) Go to Draw >> Ungroup, so all the elements will be separated each other c) Click first outside the slide to deselect all the objects d) Select the individual object you want to modify This way you can take advantage of the professional job that someone else did before you and customize it according to your presentation's needs and your personal taste. But the way of adding our personal touch to a "standard" and ready-made presentation does not finish here. There's still something we can do by working with Clip Art. Clip Art is made up of those nice and sometimes fancy images you can insert in any presentation to enhance your content, to get the audience's attention or to better "visualize" a topic you are discussing. Let's see how. =========================================== 2) * CLIP ART - IS IT POSSIBLE TO CUSTOMIZE CLIP ART? * =========================================== Have you ever played around with Clip Art? Clip Art are color images that you can insert into any slide to enhance the content of your presentation, to visually explain a concept or to add more colors to your slides. Do you have any idea about how many million people in the world have been using Clip Art in their presentations? I don't, but I bet they are millions... Have you noticed that most of the times your colleagues use the same typical Clip Art images in their slides? If you still want to use Clip Art, but you want it to be more unique and give it your "personal touch", there are two ways you can do it. Follow these easy steps, and no one will be able to recognize your Clip Art! Method A - If you only want to change the colors of any Clip Art image, do the following: 1) Place the desired Clip Art into your slide by clicking Insert >> Picture >> Clip Art... 2) Ensure the Clip Art is selected (if it's not, click on it once) 3) Right-click on the Clip Art image and choose "Format Picture..." 4) Go in the "Picture" tab and click on "Recolor" At this point you have an easy way to modify, one by one, all the colors used in the original Clip Art. You can put a tick mark on the color you want to modify, and choose from a drop-down list under "New" the new color you want to apply. As soon as you change the colors, you will preview, on the miniature on the right, how the Clip Art image will look like. Do all the necessary changes, then click "OK" on the two little windows to close them. Does your new Clip Art image look different? It does, and this way you can change the colors of all the Clip Art in the gallery. Method B - In case changing the colors is not enough to personalize a Clip Art, you can even modify its shape, remove some elements, add new ones, and mix two or three different images together. Let's see how you can do this: 1) Insert the Clip Art (see previous paragraph) 2) Ensure it is selected otherwise select it by clicking on it 3) Go to Draw >> Ungroup Your Clip Art will be ungrouped, and you will now be able to click outside the slide to deselect all the elements, and then select only the ones you want to modify. What's the purpose of ungrouping a Clip Art? What can I do now? Well, it's up to your fantasy, but there are plenty of changes you can now make: a) You can increase or decrease the size of some elements inside the Clip Art b) You can modify the single colors c) You can remove some elements or even add new ones, by making copies of the other elements d) You can even modify the shape of all the objects, by using an advanced drawing feature we will see later on (at the end of this paragraph). Once you have personalized your Clip Art, I recommend selecting all the elements and group them again, so you will be able to resize and move them as a whole. *Remember that most Clip Art images have been grouped several times, so if you want to be able to access all individual elements of an illustration, try to ungroup them several times. I explain: once you have ungrouped it the first time, there might still be some elements grouped, so go back to Draw >> Ungroup, and try again. You will know that the "nested" groupings are ended when finally the "Ungroup" option will be grayed out. *Tip: if you find several Clip Art that may fit your needs, you can mix them together and then group them as a whole. **Advanced Tip (as promised under point "d"): you can modify the shape of some objects that make up a Clip Art (useful when correcting maps borders or facial expressions) by: 1) Selecting the ungrouped object inside the Clip Art 2) Going to Draw >> Edit Points (you can access this manu choice only if you have previously ungrouped all the elements of a Clip Art) 3) You will see that the usual little white squares called "control points" become now black squared dots 4) Clicking on them and dragging them to modify the shape of the selected object 5) Clicking on the lines and dragging, and this will create a new black dot that you can edit. This way you can modify any shape that has been created under PowerPoint. Once you are done with the editing, go back to Draw >> Edit Points and deselect this feature to turn it off. =========================================== 3) * HOW TO USE AN IMAGE AS A BACKGROUND * =========================================== Did you ever want to utilize a cool picture that you had as a background for you slides? You tried to insert it, but then you realized that the strong color contrast did not allow you to type any text on top of the image, and you did not know what font color to use to have it displayed in a readable way. There is something we can do to have a picture as a background and still be able to read the text we place on top of it. Before explaining in detail what you have to do, I'd like to remind you a few tricks to insert images into your slides. - If you have your picture on your hard disk, in a floppy or on a network drive, the best way is to: 1) go to Insert >> Picture >> From File... and then browse your folders to locate and select the picture you want to insert 2) click "Insert" and it's done - If you find a nice photo on the Internet and you want to use it for your presentation, you can do one the following: a) right-click on the image and choose "Save Picture As". This way you are going to store the picture and you can insert it at any time using the classical method seen above b) right-click and choose "Copy" (option available only if you have Internet Explorer). Doing this, you can then paste this image on your slide right away, just pressing "Ctrl+V" or choosing Edit >> Paste c) press the "Print Screen" key on the top right of your keyboard and then go back to the slide and press "Ctrl+V" to paste the image. This is called "screenshot", and it allows you to paste into PowerPoint anything that you have displayed on your screen. By doing any of the previous steps, you will be able to insert a picture on any slide. In case you want the image to appear on all the slides, as a background, you have to insert it on the Slide Master (View >> Master >> Slide Master). Here's the trick to resolve the issue of readability of the text on top of a picture. Once you have pasted your image either on a single slide or on the Master Slide, follow these steps: a) click on the picture to select it b) go to View >> Toolbars >> Picture, and be sure to display the Picture toolbar c) here click on the second icon from the left, "Image Control" d) choose the last option in the drop-down menu, "Watermark". Your picture will be set as watermark, that is, you will still be able to see the shapes on the image but all the colors will be muted and lightened, so you will be able to use any dark color (blue, brown, black, green) to type text on top of the image. If you want to obtain a perfect watermarked picture, after having applied the "watermark" effect try to increase or decrease the Color Contrast and the Color Brightness (using the apposite icons on the Picture toolbar) until you find the right combination. In this paragraph we have seen so far how we can use images that we find on the Web. What about nice backgrounds? When browsing the Web, have you ever found a Web site with a nice background? Maybe you have also thought that it would have been nice to be able to use that exact background in your presentation. It is definitely possible, and I will explain you the proper way to do it. First of all, let me remind you the difference between a picture you can find on a Web page and the background itself of the Web page: you can be sure that what you are right-clicking on is a picture if you see the option "Save Picture As...". Otherwise, if the image is a background, as you right-click on it you will see the option: "Save Background As..." The main difference is that an image can be inserted into PowerPoint and then manually stretched to cover the entire slide; a background needs to be inserted using a different way, since the image used as the background can be difficulty stretched manually. Moreover, remember that some images or backgrounds may be copyright-protected. In any case, if you want to be honest and respectful, find the email of the Webmaster -usually at the bottom of the page- and write him/her an email asking permission to reproduce the image for non-commercial use. Most of the times he/she won't even waste his/her time to answer you, but at least you won't be liable for anything). Once you find a Web site whose background you like (I can suggest you to try with these ones: http://www.usal.es - the Home Page of the University of Salamanca, in Spain, and http://www.vatican.va - the official Home Page of Vatican State) do the following: a) right-click on the background (be sure you are not clicking on a single image, you need to right-click exactly on a portion of background) b) choose "Save Background As..." c) save it anywhere you like (e.g. in your preferred folder) Now, open your PowerPoint and: a) select Format >> Background b) click on the little down arrow in the "Background Fill" c) select "Fill Effects" d) click on the last tab, "Picture" e) click where it says: "Select Picture..." f) browse your folders to locate the background you have previously saved g) once you find it, select it and click "Insert" h) click "OK" on the Picture tab i) click "Apply to all" on the Background box and it's done. The nice background you found on the Internet is now displayed in all your slides. =========================================== 4) * WHERE CAN I FIND USEFUL AND EFFECTIVE PRESENTATION DESIGN RESOURCES ON THE WEB? * =========================================== by Antonella Pastore The Web is an inexhaustible source of inspiration for your presentation designs. But it'll do more, actually: there is plenty of Web sites that offer free presentation templates for you to download. Some are nothing more than backgrounds, but very often you'll find fully-fledged templates, with fonts, graphics, sounds and chart styles. In any case, you're going to find them extremely useful if, for example, you're in a rush and still want something nice and new, or if you want to add a different touch to your existing presentations. I have put together and reviewed a number of selected Web sites offering free templates (even content outlines, if you've run short of ideas), pictures and images to jazz-up your presentations. I've looked into the range of designs, ease of download and format of templates, so that you know exactly what to look for and where. Some of the sites also offer templates for sale, so you've got the option to buy some beautiful designs for that special occasion. *Digital Studio* http://www.soniacoleman.com/Templates.htm Professionally designed templates and agreeable range of colors and designs. 21 sets of templates are available, and each one contains 8 templates, which can be downloaded both in bundle and individually, always in zipped version. The site is rich in instructions on how to download and install the templates, but you'll have to browse through all the sets to find the best one that suits you, since the templates are not classified by theme or else. *How To Conquer the World - PowerPoint Template Store* http://www.howtoconquertheworld.com/powerpoi.htm Scroll down the page patiently, because it's only down there that you'll find some free templates to download and the links to the next pages. Most templates are on sale. Though modest in size, you'll find a good range of clean, simple but effective designs. The store offers a free newsletter through which you can get to know about special free offers. *Web Site Estates - Free PowerPoint Templates* http://www.websiteestates.com/ppoint.html All free and oh-so elegant with their minimalist graphical tinge. You can get the templates by email by subscribing to their "PowerPoint Templates Delivered to Your Inbox!" service. The downloads are free because the site is ad-supported. This also means that after downloading your favorite template, it will open up in your browser to be saved, but you will see an advertisement on the first slide. However, save it securely, since you'll be able to remove the ad image when you open the template in PowerPoint. Files can be downloaded individually for free or in bulk by donating a $10 contribution to the designer through Amazon Honor System. *Graphicsland* http://www.graphicsland.com/powerpoint-templates.htm Wide choice of simple templates, mostly characterized by color rather than pictures or clip arts. Scroll down the long page to see the previews of the templates and to get to the link from which you can download them all in a handy zip file. *Microsoft Office Template Gallery* http://officeupdate.microsoft.com/templategallery/ On the official Microsoft site, you'll find an area devoted to free updates to your MS Office that cover all sorts of MS Office files (Word, Excel), PowerPoint files included. Templates, here, are mostly content samples for multiple purposes. The template, beside providing the layout and style, offers tips on what you want to write in a certain type of document. Document samples for download are: resumes, cover letters, sales and marketing documents, collection letters, legal documents, complaint letters. Templates are ordered by category (Marketing, Financing, etc.). Click on the one that interests you and find there another subset of document types. Presentations consist in textual presentation outlines with tips on how to structure the content of your presentation. Download is no easy job, however, unless you've got Office 2000 installed onto your system. *3M Presentation Corner* http://www.3m.com/meetingnetwork/presentations/download able_templates_download.jhtml?_DARGS=%2Fmeetingnetwo rk%2Fpresentations%2Fdownloadable_templates_register. jhtml.38 Well... there's only one template for you to download here, vaguely inspired to a high-tech theme. Worth getting it, however, because the template includes a slide template, fonts, sounds, images that you can easily recycle for your presentation purposes. *FreeFoto* http://www.freefoto.com Over 18,000 images with new pictures being added on a weekly basis on this extensive and easy-to-navigate Web site. Photographs can be used freely just by saving them from your browser window. High-resolution images and prints can be purchased. On this fast, extensive site, images are grouped by categories that range from Business to Food and Drink. The pictures are beautiful and very professionally converted to jpg format. This collection will give you lots of ideas for your backgrounds and individual slides. Read in this very issue (article #3) how you put up a picture as a watermarked background for your slides. *The Freebie Directory: Free Graphics* http://www.freebiedirectory.com/Free_Graphics/ An accurate selection of Web sites that offer plenty of free graphics and Clip Art. Web sites are rated by users, and so you see quickly which one is worth a visit. *Presenters' University* http://www.presentersonline.com/resources/templates/ This site deserves a special mention because it's a high-quality resource for presenters: articles on presentation techniques, new products, files... Not only is it varied but definitely very focused on the best for presenters. Templates are grouped by category, and the designs are really elegant and contemporary in style. Each .ppt file actually contains 3 sample slides: title, text and chart, including font style and color, just ready to use. *PowerPointed Free Templates by Indezine.com* http://www.indezine.com PowerPointed is a series of templates promoted by Indezine, Indian Web designer Geetesh Bajaj's presentation resource site with loads of tips and free PowerPoint graphics for download. Beside the free templates, you may want to have a look at the Background Archive at http://www.indezine.com/back/index.html Here you'll find a whole collection of "tiles", small squares of graphic patterns, ordered by color, that you can tile, i.e. juxtapose in order to fill the whole available space of your presentation, desktop or Web page background. The designs are impressive and complex, so check out the final effect you're going to get. You can preview it by clicking on your favorite ones: sometimes, they might not be just the best choice if you're going to put text on them. However, I am sure you can find lots of applications for them, for example as background sections of a title or picture, or as fancy bullets for your lists. As far as the PowerPoint templates are concerned check the links below. The files are ppt/pot and usually contain just one slide with the background. There's a whole host to choose from, and the designs are quite cool, I'd say. Simple but effective. Just pay attention to the font style and color that you will select to go with these templates. Fonts are left on their default settings, so they might not be just the ideal ones for the design you'll choose. There are six series of free templates that you can find at: PowerPointed 01 http://powerpointed.freeservers.com/index.html PowerPointed 02 http://www.angelfire.com/indie/powerpointed/ PowerPointed 03 http://powerpointed.virtualave.net/ PowerPointed 04 http://powerpointed.50megs.com/ PowerPointed 05 http://powerpointed.20m.com/ PowerPointed 06 http://members.fortunecity.com/powerpointed/ And now a final word of wisdom: although I always kept an eye on good design criteria, I got overly excited at the fancy graphics and backgrounds I found during my Web wanderings. I bet you'll easily get carried away by the range of colors, patterns, designs, fonts you're going to find (I changed my desktop background a dozen times while researching this article!) The fact is that your focus of attention should always be on your audience. To keep your template search on track, stick to these three reminders: a) Always check out that the colors contrast well with your text content b) Choose colors that are not distracting from the ideas you're presenting c) Always test how readable your text is against the beautiful graphics you are using. Contributed by Antonella Pastore Chief Information Architect IKONOS New Media (antonella.pastore#ikonosnewmedia.com) ========================================== * THE 12 DESIGN COMMANDMENTS TO A PROFESSIONALLY- LOOKING PRESENTATION * ========================================== by Luigi Canali De Rossi No matter what you have to communicate, or in which corner of the world you are going to do it, the way your presentation looks makes a lasting and influential impression on your audience. Across different cultures and continents the basic rules of good design and high legibility are the same. Knowing them, and using them consistently finally brings to the power of your visuals the professional- looking credibility of your true know-how. 1) Work with pale, muted colors. While you can have fixed colored sections in blue, red, green or other strong colors, you should generally place your body content on a pale, muted background. The lightest tint of gray will do better than white, saving many of your audience contrast-strained eyes. Pastel, soft colors, like Siena-tints work wonderfully in all situations as they provide with good contrast with your text, and a soothing, relaxing feeling on the eyes of the viewers. 2) Leave ample margins. Presentation elements in every slide need sufficient margins around them to "breathe". This is a design principle that you can see applied to any visual communication media. Do not stick your organization logo in a corner letting it touch the borders of your slide. Do not let titles or text come too close to Clip Art elements, photographs or other graphic elements present on the slide. Leave always a discrete but perceptible amount of margin between any two elements (including in this your slide margins). 3) Be consistent. Invest the extra time and effort required to make your presentation look professionally done by making sure that everything is very consistent. Titles should all be not only in the same font, color and style but also in the same position. If you decide to utilize a visual transition between slides use always the same one. Keep your color theme constant throughout as well as the basic layout of all of your presentation slides. 4) Be readable. Make sure your slides are all highly readable. To test this thoroughly without needing to go and rent ahead of time your conference room do the following while sitting in front of your presentation at the computer: a) Display the presentation full screen, as if you were rehearsing it b) Move your chair back and away from the monitor about half a meter c) Squeeze your eyes while keeping the minimum aperture needed to see what is on your screen and try to read If you can read comfortably what is on the screen, it means that you have selected a good font at an appropriate size. If you cannot read properly, or you have to strain yourself to read the content of your slides you had better go back to your presentation editor tool and improve on font size, and font/background contrast. 5) Strike only when necessary. Use animation and slide-transition effects sparingly. Although the temptation to use them everywhere is high you should resist this strongly. Think of visual animated transitions as a visual punctuation language of its own. Would you put exclamation marks at every word? Strike the audience by effectively using visual effects in key areas of your presentation: the opening, the key point, the closing. 6) Use color to communicate. Utilize color to enhance legibility of your content items and to signify special circumstances. For example it is a good idea to emphasize or surround with "strong" colors areas or items that you want your audience to pay attention to. Different elements in the page can also be colored differently to signal different communication purposes in your presentation (e.g.: problems may be listed in red, while solution may be displayed in blue). 7) Select your fonts scientifically. Serif fonts like Times New Roman, Garamond, Book Antiqua are effective for long stretches of text. Use them sparingly in presentation slides, as text content should always be short and to the point. Sans-serif fonts work very effectively in presentations. For example Arial is an optimum font for titling, while Verdana is particularly apt at displaying small text as captions, callouts and figures even when set at small sizes. 8) Follow the "rule of seven". Do not add excessive content to your slides. The popular "rule of seven" can also be applied here and it suggest you not to have bulleted lists with more than 7 elements, not to have tables larger than 7 columns by 7 rows, and not to have lines of texts with more than seven words. 9) Provide reference. Enrich and make more accessible your presentations by providing clear reference info on the title of the presentation, visible at all times during the presentation. If you can add discretely to this, by using a small font in the lower horizontal area of your slide layout, consider also the provision of your name, company/org, date and slide number/total number of slides. 10) Use quality images. The selection of your presentation images is essential in giving to viewer an immediate idea of the quality of your work. Do not rely on Microsoft or other free Clip Art or photo libraries. Too many people use them, and the connotation of the images available on those catalogs is "cheap". Get access to a professional CD library or online service from which you can select hundreds of quality images that share at least the same style and quality of execution. 11) Open and close in memorable ways. Like for real movies, the very opening and closing parts of your presentation are unique opportunities to make a lasting and memorable impression on your audience. By adopting the same techniques utilized in classical old-time movies and cartoons (opening from black with a "box out" or "split horizontal out" animation) you can be certain to impress your audience while projecting a professional image. 12) Balance your layout. A good presentation design should take into consideration the individual layout of each slide. As a general approach it is wise to look at each slide as if it were a rectangular tray in equilibrium atop a thin pole. By imagining to be looking at the empty slide from the top, you can start to "see" graphic and text elements as weights you are placing onto the slide tray. In this fashion you should gradually develop a sense of what it takes not to have the tray fall off the pole because there is a large image on one side but not a corresponding and counter-balancing "visual" weight on the other side. Contributed by Luigi Canali De Rossi MasterView Editor-in-Chief ========================================== Next Issue Theme: RUNNING YOUR PRESENTATION LIKE A PRO * Problems: * 1) HOW CAN I MAKE MY PRESENTATION RUN BY ITSELF UNATTENDED? 2) HOW CAN I EASILY CONTROL MY PRESENTATION WITH THE KEYBOARD WHILE RUNNING THE SHOW? 3) WHAT CAN I DO TO CREATE A MEMORABLE OPENING AND CLOSING FOR MY PRESENTATION? 4) IS IT POSSIBLE TO LINK MY PRESENTATION SLIDES TO OTHER PRESENTATIONS OR TO OTHER APPLICATION FILES? 5) HOW CAN I MIX WITHIN THE SAME PRESENTATION, SLIDES WITH DIFFERENT PAGE LAYOUTS (PORTRAIT/LANDSCAPE)? 6) WHICH IS THE WAY TO CREATE OPTIONAL SLIDES, THAT NEED TO BE SHOWN ONLY IN SPECIAL, UNPLANNED SITUATIONS? * Solutions: * 1) Learn how to record all of your presentation settings and timing so that it can be run unattended 2) Find out all of the secret and advanced keyboard commands that allow you to do near-magical tasks while running your show 3) Discover the experts approach to open and close your presentations in a memorable way. Learn from films and theatre how this has been culturally developed and why therefore some visual solutions are better than others 4) Master in this mini-tutorial how you can link any web page, Word document or other application file to any slide in your presentation 5) Learn how to get around this fastidious limitation, by saving your individual slides to a standard file format. 6) Discover the "hidden slide" PowerPoint functionality which can help you take out your magic slide, just when you need it __________________________________________ To read MasterView past issues, go to http://masterview.ikonosnewmedia.com __________________________________________ ------------------------------------------------ Send your presentation questions in: ------------------------------------------------ MasterView is an open discussion forum for many of you having specific questions about making presentations. These can be addressed to: ask-masterview@yahoogroups.com. I and everybody at IKONOS New Media will be happy to provide you with best advice, tools and resources. Who am I? I am the Executive Editor of this electronic publication, my name is Simone Luchini and I am a presentation specialist and trainer for IKONOS New Media (http://www.ikonosnewmedia.com) We specialize in empowering international organizations, grow and prosper online through the effective use of new media and ICT (Information & Communication Technologies). Founded in 1988, IKONOS New Media is an electronic publishing and distance learning company serving education, research and development organizations. If you would like to know something more about me, come and check out my page at: http://www.ikonosnewmedia.com/people/simone.htm Sincerely, Simone Luchini - Executive Editor Presentations Specialist, Trainer IKONOS New Media Rome | Washington (Simone.Luchini#ikonosnewmedia.com) * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Feedback Direct feedback: simone.luchini@ikonosnewmedia.com IKONOS New Media Via P. Giannone 10 - 00195 Rome, Italy ......................................... MasterView Editorial Staff Luigi Canali De Rossi - Editor-in-chief luigi.canali#ikonosnewmedia.com Simone Luchini - Executive Editor simone.luchini#ikonosnewmedia.com MasterView Expert Contributors Antonella Pastore antonella.pastore#ikonosnewmedia.com ........................................ Subscription Information To subscribe to request your free copy, simply go to the following URL: http://masterview.ikonosnewmedia.com, type your email in the box and click the "Subscribe" button ........................................ (c) 2001, Simone Luchini IKONOS New Media http://www.ikonosnewmedia.com
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