Guidelines for presentations
The following is a set of guidelines for preparing slides for
presentations. A good presentation has several important components
apart from the content itself. If these are missed, then even if the
technical content is good, the audience will not appreciate your work.
So it is important to spend time just in preparing the presentation.
Specifically, pay attention to the following points. These are based
on the common mistakes/shortcomings I have noticed in student
presentations at IITK (and sometimes at other venues too).
- Use a font-size of at least size 16; each slide's title should
typically be of size 40, and the first level bullets should
start at least at 28
- Do not use too much text per slide, use pictures instead where
possible. The thumb rule is that there should not be more than
8-9 lines max per slide.
- If a slide does need to have as much text as 8-9 lines, it is
typically a good idea to also put a picture, even if only
peripherally related to that particular slide. This helps in
holding the attention of the audience, who would otherwise be
put off on seeing a lot of text.
- Another idea to hold the attention of the audience when showing
a slide with a lot of text, is to highlight important words in
the text (as is done in this set of bullets!).
- Yet another approach is to have a single highlighted
take-away bullet at the end of the slide. If the
audience has lost you during the slide, they know exactly what
to remember for the future slides.
- Do not use full sentences, or worse, paragraphs. Such uses
should be rare, perhaps for important quotations. Use bullets
to convey ideas.
- Never read text from the slide as you are
presenting. The text in the slide is for the audience to read,
as you explain the content. Again, an exception to this can
be when you are showing a significant quotation from some
source.
- If an idea can be conveyed using a picture/figure instead of a
slide, use it. This may mean that you would have to spend 15
minutes drawing the figure, instead of just 2 minutes typing
some text. But this extra time is well worth it!
- For graphs, be sure to make it clear and visible for the
audience sitting in the rearmost rows. If you do a screenshot
of your paper PDF, it typically does not show well at all
on screen. If the audience cannot see the graph, you might as
well not show the slide! For a graph, the various plots as well
as the title/labels/legend have to be clearly visible. Again,
if you spend a few extra minutes in generating a graph in a
different format specifically for your presentation, it is well
worth it.
- Practice, practice, practice. In my experience, there is
no magic to a good presentation. Even the best and most
experienced of orators do have to practice. Practicing means
you should speak aloud, preferably in front of someone
else. For my presentations, I typically practice multiple times.
- Revise, revise, revise. You usually never get a presentation
right the first time. After you practice once, you will notice that
several things are unclear, or can be presented better. Incorporate
these changes in the next revision. For my presentations, I typically
have to revise 3-4 times before it hits a point of diminishing
returns.
Bhaskaran Raman
Last modified: Tue Nov 1 19:49:12 IST 2005