Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Presenting a Recommendation of a Strategy using Powerpoint

Presenting a Recommendation of a Strategy using Powerpoint would be more effective when you are opening the overall structure in the beginning of your presentation. It is most likely substitute the content page.

The message of its own idea as explained by some communication concepts can be directly received by audience brain when we use color, symbol, connected line, etc. This is how Mind Map works and for most any cases will fit for your presentation, especially in presenting recommendation of a strategy.

Let us adapt the outline of presentation template taken from wizard of Open Office product. When we use only a flat paragraph from this template, then can be guessed that the audience getting bored. If we translate the original outline into Mind Map format, roughly we will have below picture.


Hence, our presentation will be easier to be explained and it’s quite effective for any presentation type. You don’t have to use Mind Map products like Mind Manager to build such diagram. With PowerPoint objects, we can construct easily – with some efforts of course.



Monday, October 27, 2008

PowerPoint Tip: PowerPoint Tips & Tutorials Match the end of a motion path animation to the beginning of another

To show movement or a process, you may want to animate an object using a motion path. Sometimes, you can't fit the entire animation on one slide because it has several steps. In this case, you can break it up onto multiple slides. The problem is that it's hard to match on the second slide the exact location where the object will end up on the first slide. This makes the object appear to jump.

Follow these steps to achieve this effect:

1. Place the object that you want to animate in its final position on the first slide. This means that it'll be at the end of the motion path.

2. Choose Slide Show> Custom Animation to open the Custom Animation task pane. (In 2007, choose Animations tab>Custom Animation.)

3. Select the object that you're animating. For accuracy, you're going to need to find the center of the object. To do so, Choose View> Grids and Guides. (In 2007, click the Format tab that appeared when you selected the object, then go to the Arrange group, click the Align drop-down arrow, and choose Grid Settings.) In the resulting dialog box, check the Display Drawing Guides on Screen check box, and click OK.

4. Drag the vertical and horizontal gridlines so that they match the center handles of the object. (I learned this technique from Julie Terberg of Terberg Design, at PowerPoint Live, the annual PowerPoint conference.)

5. Choose Add Effect>Motion Paths. From there you can choose one of the default paths, or choose Draw Custom Path and then the type of path.

6. Draw the motion path from its end to its beginning, starting at the center of the object. The center is at the intersection of the guides.

7. Right-click the motion path itself and choose Reverse Path Direction. You've now reversed the animation.

8. In the Custom Animation task pane, click the Path drop-down list, and choose Locked. By locking the path, you can move the object without moving the path.

9. Select the animated object. Place the cursor at the intersection of the guides, and drag it to the desired start point, which is the green arrow at the start of the motion path. If you don't get this right, the object may jump during the animation.

10. Now go to slide 2, where the object is already in its correct starting position. You can now create a new animation from that position.

About the Author

Ellen Finkelstein is the best-selling author of How to Do Everything with PowerPoint 2007 (and previous editions for PowerPoint 2002 and PowerPoint 2003). Other books include PowerPoint for Teachers: Dynamic Presentations and Interactive Classroom Projects and 101 Tips Every PowerPoint User Should Know.

Public Speaking Training on Presentation Skills - A Beginner's Guide

To show movement or a process, you may want to animate an object using a motion path. Sometimes, you can't fit the entire animation on one slide because it has several steps. In this case, you can break it up onto multiple slides. The problem is that it's hard to match on the second slide the exact location where the object will end up on the first slide. This makes the object appear to jump.

Follow these steps to achieve this effect:

1. Place the object that you want to animate in its final position on the first slide. This means that it'll be at the end of the motion path.

2. Choose Slide Show> Custom Animation to open the Custom Animation task pane. (In 2007, choose Animations tab>Custom Animation.)

3. Select the object that you're animating. For accuracy, you're going to need to find the center of the object. To do so, Choose View> Grids and Guides. (In 2007, click the Format tab that appeared when you selected the object, then go to the Arrange group, click the Align drop-down arrow, and choose Grid Settings.) In the resulting dialog box, check the Display Drawing Guides on Screen check box, and click OK.

4. Drag the vertical and horizontal gridlines so that they match the center handles of the object. (I learned this technique from Julie Terberg of Terberg Design, at PowerPoint Live, the annual PowerPoint conference.)

5. Choose Add Effect>Motion Paths. From there you can choose one of the default paths, or choose Draw Custom Path and then the type of path.

6. Draw the motion path from its end to its beginning, starting at the center of the object. The center is at the intersection of the guides.

7. Right-click the motion path itself and choose Reverse Path Direction. You've now reversed the animation.

8. In the Custom Animation task pane, click the Path drop-down list, and choose Locked. By locking the path, you can move the object without moving the path.

9. Select the animated object. Place the cursor at the intersection of the guides, and drag it to the desired start point, which is the green arrow at the start of the motion path. If you don't get this right, the object may jump during the animation.

10. Now go to slide 2, where the object is already in its correct starting position. You can now create a new animation from that position.


About the Author

Ellen Finkelstein is the best-selling author of How to Do Everything with PowerPoint 2007 (and previous editions for PowerPoint 2002 and PowerPoint 2003). Other books include PowerPoint for Teachers: Dynamic Presentations and Interactive Classroom Projects and 101 Tips Every PowerPoint User Should Know.