{"id":86801,"date":"2021-08-01t15:15:48","date_gmt":"2021-08-01t19:15:48","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/www.g005e.com\/?p=86801"},"modified":"2021-10-09t12:50:05","modified_gmt":"2021-10-09t16:50:05","slug":"five-rules-for-powerpoint-presentations","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.g005e.com\/2021\/08\/01\/five-rules-for-powerpoint-presentations\/","title":{"rendered":"the five big rules for powerpoint presentations"},"content":{"rendered":"
keep the focus where it belongs: on you.<\/strong><\/p>\n by steven e. sacks have you ever attended a conference where the presenter plans to supplement his or her key topics by showing an illustration of what is being currently said?<\/p>\n do i look at the speaker or do i look at the slides? will the slides be available later or should i take notes now? should i move up 50 rows so the microscopic wording improves to barely readable? can i ask the speaker to back up a couple of slides? more: <\/b>how aging boomers impact the accounting profession<\/a> | accounting is a profession, not an industry<\/a> whenever i give presentations i try to put myself in the shoes of the listeners and create a presentation in a way that relies on them briefly glancing at the slide transition and then redirecting their full attention back on me. but what we see today is too many speakers just reading what appears on the slides. they should simply begin their session by saying, \u201ci\u2019ll read out loud and you\u2019ll follow along silently.\u201d thank goodness there was never a request made for responsive reading.
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