From the Pivotal Personal Best Blog

What do Cliffs Have to do with confidence?

From the Pivotal Public Speaking blog

5 Ways to Make Your PowerPoint Presentation Stand Out

From the Pivotal Kids books blog

Out now – the latest in the Hunger games trilogy

When making a presentation, it's all too easy to fall into the trap of relying on your PowerPoint slides to help get your message across. Although PowerPoint may be a great tool to help you present your information in a creative and interesting way, it's dangerous to rely on it fully as this will just turn your audience off from what you're saying.

Here are 5 tips to help make your presentation stand out from the crowd.

1. Be Compelling

PowerPoint is a great tool to put together eye-catching presentations, but remember that your audience has come to hear you, not look at a slide. So by all means make your PowerPoint presentation look professional and engaging but don't forget that your speech needs to be compelling too. Remember, your slides are there to support your spoken presentation, not the other way round!

2. Keep it simple

Don't overwhelm your audience with a mass of data, graphics and animations. The most effective PowerPoint presentations are simple - charts that are easy to understand, and graphics that reflect what the speaker is saying. It's been suggested that there should be no more than five words per line and no more than five lines per individual slide. Any images, graphs and animations need to back up the information, not confuse the audience.

3. Be Engaging

Many of us have sat through a presentation where we have spent the whole time looking at the back of the speaker's head! They have spent so much time reading off the slides, they don't engage with the audience. PowerPoint works best with a speech that augments what's on the screen rather than just reading off the slide. Remember, you need to interact with the audience in order for them to engage and listen to you.

4. Don't use PowerPoint!

There's a time and place for PowerPoint. It should only be used as an accompaniment to the presenter's script so let the screen go blank if you need to. This gives your audience a break, but also helps to focus their attention on what the presenter is saying, especially during the question and answer session.

5. Rehearse and edit

Once you've drafted your speech and slides then rehearse your presentation. Do this preferably in front of someone else to ensure that what you are saying and presenting can be easily understood. If something comes across as distracting or confusing then get rid of it. Remember to keep the needs of the audience in your mind at all times as they are the ones who will be the ultimate judge of how successful your presentation has been.

Valerie Eaton is the owner of Smart VA Ltd, providers of virtual assistant support to small businesses and self-employed professionals. They specialise in providing a wide range of general administration support, as well as email marketing, website updates, document and presentation design and event administration. Find more information about our services on our website http://www.smartva.co.uk, and if you want to discover some great tips for small businesses then check out our free guides on the Free Resources page.

After 10 years, it was time.  We could not sit through another bullet-ridden, brain-numbing student presentation.  We interviewed the kids.  For them it was just as bad.


They dreaded each others' PowerPoints.
Though we've been using other tools for communication, sometimes the slideshow really seems the best choice.
We knew that presentation styles had changed.  At conferences and on websites we'd seen so many effective examples.
But we knew that breaking 10 years of bad habits was going to be a process.  And with PowerPoint so ingrained in our culture, we also expected a fight.
So, with Senior Seminar research presentations looming, about two months ago we began our focus on change.
Technology coach Ken Rodoff and I worked with classroom teachers to break bad habits. We worked with one English class preparing presentations on
Ethan Frome and four Senior Seminar classes.
What we shared:   http://bit.ly/a4K2Ct

and inside ....

Inspirational Story:  The Teddy

Article: The Power of Marketing - Charity Begins at Work

A link to an article on public speaking

A free ebook

This week’s “must-read”

Along with the usual quotations and computer corner

You can read it at http://www.pivotalpersonalbest.com/ppb_ezine.htm

and inside ....

Inspirational Story:  The Teddy

Article: The Power of Marketing - Charity Begins at Work

A link to an article on public speaking

A free ebook

This week’s “must-read”

Along with the usual quotations and computer corner

You can read it at http://www.pivotalpersonalbest.com/ppb_ezine.htm

I spend a lot of time playing devil's advocate, so this article appealed immediately.

Mike Smith writes

We’ve all heard how frightened nearly everyone is of public speaking. Maybe that’s understandable, but it creates the potential for lots of misinformed conventional wisdom spread by people who have to make presentations but haven’t had the opportunity to learn what really works.

To help correct some misperceptions about what creates better presenters and presentations, here are eleven public speaking paradoxes for reluctant presenters to accept, embrace, and follow:

and the first heading had me hooked ...

1. Minimize your public speaking nerves by looking for as big an audience as possible.

Catch up with the whole article here http://bit.ly/95tLwd

From the Pivotal Public Speaking blog

Thought for the Day

From the Pivotal personal Best blog

Factors to consider in deciding to have a meeting

THE latest issue of the Pivotal Public Speaking ezine went out today
It includes:
Article: Don’t let your public speaking nerves embarrass you.
Links to Speech writing article: Make Numbers Work for You
Fear of public speaking article - Help for Public Speaking anxiety
Book:  Boring to Bravo: Proven Presentation Techniques to Engage, Involve & Inspire Your Audience to Action
Guest article:  5 Ways to Make Your PowerPoint Presentation Stand Out
As well as our usual quotations and fun item.
You can download your copy at  http://bit.ly/cQBbVn