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Part 1: Seven reasons you could do better without slidesJim Nelson, a man who served as a translator between the American and Russian troops in Bosnia, tells a story about the Russians watching with bemused fascination as their unlikely allies designed their slides. One nonplussed Russian famously said, "If we ever had a war, while you are working on your PowerPoint, we would be killing you." Ouch! 'Death by PowerPoint.' That's the commonly used term. Yet Mr Gates' programme itself is not inherently evil. Nor, for that matter, is the atomic bomb, poison gas or timeshare salespeople. It is simply how they are inflicted upon society that does it, and through no fault of its own, PowerPoint has been used to visit more pain on professional people, in a shorter space of time, than global recession and multilevel marketing combined. Wikipedia estimates that PP is used around 350 times per second globally. In other words, blink, and nearly five hundred audiences have been exposed to it. As self-propagating systems go, PowerPoint looks at ISIS and sneers, 'Amateurs!' Brigadier-General Herbert McMaster, of the United States Army, famously banned the use of PowerPoint in briefings, saying that they negatively affected the decision-making process by misrepresenting ideas, essentially because the way in which ideas are arranged in slides 'forces' a certain kind of thinking and perception. NASA did something similar. One of PowerPoint's great downfalls is that, no matter how well you use its myriad neat tricks, everyone else is using it too. And so even the most trained and effective PowerPoint devotees are merely marginally more developed sheep. As a professional speaker, I've spotted a few distinct advantages to presenting without slides. In this article, I'd like to share them with you. In the next two to follow, I'll propose some truly nifty replacements, because my goal is not just to rob you of a tool, but to replace it with much more effective ones. 1. By not using it, you'll stand out from the crowd 2. Slide-free speech enhances the level of connection with your audience 3. It changes your voice The sample applies when we use rigid PowerPoint guidelines. Our patterns of speech become boxed in by the restraints of the format and we rob ourselves of the very fire and conviction that is the heart and soul of public speaking. Speaking is much more an auditory art than a visual one. The best speakers make it visual through their storytelling skills, not by showing an object, or worse, 'words', on a screen. 4. It makes you more agile Moreover, you won't be forced to go overtime as a result of having too many slides. Because you are able to edit on the fly, you can chop out whole swathes of irrelevant info, get to the heart of your message, and speak to time-constraints. People love speakers who keep to time. They buy flowers for them, write songs about them, fling panties and immortalise their busts in stone. 5. It reduces your stress Also, consider this: If you arrive late for a presentation, and have to set up your PowerPoint show, you have added a dimension of stress to the introduction, and a significant one at that. You have complicated the logistics. Also, it's not uncommon for the equipment to 'fight back,' refusing to cooperate and rendering you PowerPoint-less anyway. If you had intended to use PowerPoint, and then for some reason discovered that you were not able to, you would be worse off than if you had simply prepared not to use it at all. The PowerPoint-free speaker enjoys a wonderful level of freedom and simplicity. She can simply arrive, stroll to the front of the room and begin. 6. You will enjoy your presentations more Yes, they provide a guideline. But they provide the guideline at the cost of oratory form. It's like giving an audience a set, steady drum-beat, because that's easy to remember and follow, rather than giving them Beethoven, which is infinitely more free, infinitely more inspiring. 7. You'll get to see your family at night It's just not a get-stuff-done-quickly sort of programme. And sadly, our society has begun to attach disproportionate importance to the very act of creating PowerPoint slides, as though this somehow equated to productivity. It does not. Preparing slides is a distraction. In the next article, I will provide a number of presentation structures that negate the need for slides. In the final instalment, I'll give you some nifty visual alternatives that are as flattering to the audience as they are novel and memorable. Meanwhile, jump the gun by downloading the full, 4-hour audio programme, 50 Ways to Make Your Point Without PowerPoint. About Douglas KrugerDouglas Kruger is the bestselling author of nine business books with Penguin, including the global release: Virus-Proof Your Small Business. Meet him at www.douglaskruger.com, or email info@douglaskrugerspeaker.com. View my profile and articles... |