24 Awesome Infographic Ideas to Inspire Your Next Beautiful CreationPiktochart
Infographics are awesome, simply because they can capture and hold our attention so well - if done right. The best part is, there are so many great examples out there that we can draw inspiration from. Here are 24 infographic ideas that you can use to create your next beautiful creation.
Hi! We're the creative team behind Hypothesis's reports, presentations, and infographics, and we're sharing out our best tips. Please share with someone you think would enjoy this slideshow.
www.hypothesisgroup.com
www.linkedin.com/companies/hypothesis-group
www.instagram.com/hypothesisgroup
This document contains slides from a presentation by Andre Woolery on designing effective presentations by making slides visually appealing. The presentation covers various design elements like fonts, color, composition, shapes, and images that can be manipulated to grab audiences' attention and keep them engaged. It provides examples and tips for using these elements like using bold text or different font sizes to create emphasis, leveraging color to attract the eye or accentuate points, and guiding the viewer's eye through slide composition and alignment.
The document discusses prototyping and provides examples of different types of prototypes including paper prototypes, digital prototypes, storyboards, role plays, and space prototypes. It explains that prototyping is used to make ideas tangible and test reactions from users in order to gain insights. Prototypes should be iterated on and fail early to push ideas further and save time and money. Both low and high fidelity prototypes are mentioned as ways to test ideas at different stages of the design process.
Having a cool PowerPoint template is CRITICAL if you want to have slides that will WOW an audience. The benefits of purchasing a professional presentation template include:
Save Time – With a purchased template you can focus more on honing your message and less on building a template framework.
Elegant Design – The presentation templates are clean, minimal, and look professional.
Customizable – All the templates are easy to customize. Simply add your text and swap out any images/graphics you don’t want.
Customer Support – If you ever have any questions about the PowerPoint template you can leave a comment and the person who designed the template will get back to you fairly quickly.
Designed for PowerPoint – The templates are designed to be edited in PowerPoint. No additional software needed.
Animations Included – For many of the PowerPoint templates offered, there are custom animations built into the template. If you don’t want the animations you can always remove them.
An immersive workshop at General Assembly, SF. I typically teach this workshop at General Assembly, San Francisco. To see a list of my upcoming classes, visit https://generalassemb.ly/instructors/seth-familian/4813
I also teach this workshop as a private lunch-and-learn or half-day immersive session for corporate clients. To learn more about pricing and availability, please contact me at http://familian1.com
24 Awesome Infographic Ideas to Inspire Your Next Beautiful CreationPiktochart
Infographics are awesome, simply because they can capture and hold our attention so well - if done right. The best part is, there are so many great examples out there that we can draw inspiration from. Here are 24 infographic ideas that you can use to create your next beautiful creation.
Hi! We're the creative team behind Hypothesis's reports, presentations, and infographics, and we're sharing out our best tips. Please share with someone you think would enjoy this slideshow.
www.hypothesisgroup.com
www.linkedin.com/companies/hypothesis-group
www.instagram.com/hypothesisgroup
This document contains slides from a presentation by Andre Woolery on designing effective presentations by making slides visually appealing. The presentation covers various design elements like fonts, color, composition, shapes, and images that can be manipulated to grab audiences' attention and keep them engaged. It provides examples and tips for using these elements like using bold text or different font sizes to create emphasis, leveraging color to attract the eye or accentuate points, and guiding the viewer's eye through slide composition and alignment.
The document discusses prototyping and provides examples of different types of prototypes including paper prototypes, digital prototypes, storyboards, role plays, and space prototypes. It explains that prototyping is used to make ideas tangible and test reactions from users in order to gain insights. Prototypes should be iterated on and fail early to push ideas further and save time and money. Both low and high fidelity prototypes are mentioned as ways to test ideas at different stages of the design process.
Having a cool PowerPoint template is CRITICAL if you want to have slides that will WOW an audience. The benefits of purchasing a professional presentation template include:
Save Time – With a purchased template you can focus more on honing your message and less on building a template framework.
Elegant Design – The presentation templates are clean, minimal, and look professional.
Customizable – All the templates are easy to customize. Simply add your text and swap out any images/graphics you don’t want.
Customer Support – If you ever have any questions about the PowerPoint template you can leave a comment and the person who designed the template will get back to you fairly quickly.
Designed for PowerPoint – The templates are designed to be edited in PowerPoint. No additional software needed.
Animations Included – For many of the PowerPoint templates offered, there are custom animations built into the template. If you don’t want the animations you can always remove them.
An immersive workshop at General Assembly, SF. I typically teach this workshop at General Assembly, San Francisco. To see a list of my upcoming classes, visit https://generalassemb.ly/instructors/seth-familian/4813
I also teach this workshop as a private lunch-and-learn or half-day immersive session for corporate clients. To learn more about pricing and availability, please contact me at http://familian1.com
Here are 13 alternative ways to design and display content in presentations versus using bullet points. This will work in PowerPoint and other presentation authoring tools.
10 Killer Tips for an Amazing Presentation - Way Before You Actually Give OneSlide Studio
This document provides 10 tips for preparing an effective presentation before actually giving it. The tips include knowing your audience and purpose, outlining your content, avoiding templates, reducing text, using simple fonts and layouts, limiting content to 1 point per slide, keeping it simple, and being aware of any presentation guidelines. It emphasizes starting preparation offline without technology, letting visuals support the presenter rather than replace them, and always having a backup plan in case of technical issues. The overall message is to focus on clearly communicating the most important messages to the audience above all other presentation elements.
How I got 2.5 Million views on Slideshare (by @nickdemey - Board of Innovation)Board of Innovation
This document provides tips for creating engaging slide decks on SlideShare that garner many views. It recommends focusing on quality over quantity when creating each slide, using compelling images and headlines, and including calls to action throughout. It also suggests experimenting with sharing techniques and doing so in waves to build momentum. The goal is to create decks that are optimized for sharing and spread across multiple channels over time.
Today we all live and work in the Internet Century, where technology is roiling the business landscape, and the pace of change is only accelerating.
In their new book How Google Works, Google Executive Chairman and ex-CEO Eric Schmidt and former SVP of Products Jonathan Rosenberg share the lessons they learned over the course of a decade running Google.
Covering topics including corporate culture, strategy, talent, decision-making, communication, innovation, and dealing with disruption, the authors illustrate management maxims with numerous insider anecdotes from Google’s history.
In an era when everything is speeding up, the best way for businesses to succeed is to attract smart-creative people and give them an environment where they can thrive at scale. How Google Works is a new book that explains how to do just that.
This is a visual preview of How Google Works. You can pick up a copy of the book at www.howgoogleworks.net
5 Point Checklist to Create Powerful Cover Slides24Slides
Does your cover slide pop or flop? Once you have an awesome looking cover slide, you’re off to a great start and so long as you have consistently good design and quality throughout, can more easily sustain this momentum through your entire deck. Still stuck? Let us help do or re-do your cover slide for FREE! https://24slides.com/#openModal
The Science of Story: How Brands Can Use Storytelling To Get More CustomersDigital Surgeons
Storytelling is not only an entertaining source for information, but a way to engage and humanize our messages that helps them stick. Our brains are wired for stories. Like a drug, we seek them out. Good stories create lasting emotional connections that persuade, educate, entertain, and convert consumers into brand loyalists.
Here’s another good reason to believe in the power of stories: You don't have a goddamn choice. We spend a third of our waking hours crafting stories, and the rest of the time consuming them. Our brains are always searching for stories. You need stories. You live your life around stories. Your life itself is a story. So, now find out how you can use them to better understand how brands and businesses can use storytelling to increase engagement and sales.
Secrets to impactful presentations volume 2 - 8 toolsHavain
What tools do experts use to create and deliver powerful presentations? We set out to find the answer by interviewing the people we have worked and people we think have interesting views to presentations.
Here´s eight tools to replace or complement PowerPoint in your next presentation.
If you want to discuss presentation creation or design.
Contact: timo@havain.fi / @Timo_Havain (Twitter) / linkedin.com/in/timosorri -
10 Things CEOs Need to Know About Design Jason Putorti
Presentation first delivered at the 2010 Bessemer Cloud Conference introducing design concepts for non-designers, simple tactics to improve existing products, and strategies for success in product/experience design moving forward.
Thank you Dustin Curtis, Kim Goodwin, Jared Spool, Marc Gobé, Indi Young, Steve Krug, Robert Hoekman, Jr., Seth Godin, and Jesse James Garrett for content and inspiration.
Boring to Bold: Presentation Design Ideas for Non-DesignersMichael Gowin
This document provides presentation design ideas for non-designers to make their presentations more engaging. It recommends having a clear plan and purpose, telling a story with three acts, minimizing text, using powerful images, choosing fonts and slide layouts wisely, rehearsing, and delivering with confidence. Presenters should know their audience, brainstorm their key message, and make slides beautiful yet simple while focusing on one idea per slide. Rehearsing and dressing professionally can also boost delivery, and providing handouts reinforces the content. The overall goal is to make audiences feel something rather than just informing them.
Incorporating photos and videos into your PowerPoint decks can greatly enhance a presentation. Learn how illustrating concepts with meaningful imagery can make your presentation great.
Learn more: http://www.lynda.com/Photography-training-tutorials/70-0.html
SEO has changed a lot over the last two decades. We all know about Google Panda & Penguin, but did you know there was a time when search engine results were returned by humans? Crazy right? We take a trip down memory lane to chart some of the biggest events in SEO that have helped shape the industry today.
One Point Per Slide – Why It’s Important and How to Do ItStinson
PowerPoint presentations have come a long way from bullet points and ClipArt. Presentations have evolved with not only the presenter and the audience, but also our preference to be moved and not sold to. One of the biggest presentation trends is having only one point per slide. Check out our presentation to see why having only one point per slide is important!
For more presentation help, visit stinsondesign.com/blog
Watch the video on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VM7r-7WrheY&feature=youtu.be
Watch the video on Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/188030855
Storytelling with Data - Approach | SkillsAmit Kapoor
The ever increasing computational capacity has enabled us to acquire, process and analyze larger data-sets and information. However, the human memory and attention required to use this data is more limited and has remained relatively constant. Data visualization can enable us to compress data and encode it visually in ways that allows us to aid perceptual and cognitive understanding.
However, data visualisation alone is not enough and often we need to try to tell stories through data. Storytelling with data can enable us to move from analysis to synthesis, from numbers to visuals, and from an argument to a story. Operating at this intersection of data, visual and story can help persuade not only through logos (logic) but also through pathos (empathy) and ethos (credibility). In trying to tell compelling data stories, we can empower our selves to engage, communicate and persuade a large and diverse audience.
In this talk, I discuss ‘why’ stories work and what we can learn about the art of storytelling from other mediums like oral storytelling, written stories, pictures, comics and movies. I will summarise basic principles that can help us in our crafting journey, as we take the data through the layers of abstraction. The focus would be on unpacking the seven dimensions of creating an engaging data story - Abstraction (data patterns), Representation (visual encoding), Framing & Transition (perspective, focus), Messaging (verbal, text annotation), Flow (arrangement) and Interactivity.
Further, creating data stories is a cross disciplinary activity that requires us to operate at the intersection of a visual designer, data scientist and storyteller. It is both a science and an art. So how does one realistically learn these multitude of skills needed to get good at it. I will also discuss ideas about the possible path that practitioners could adopt to learn this craft through sustained practice.
## About the Speaker
Amit Kapoor is interested in learning and teaching the craft of telling visual stories with data. He uses storytelling and data visualization as tools for improving communication, persuasion and leadership. He conducts workshops and trainings for corporates, non-profits, colleges, and individuals at narrativeVIZ Consulting. He also teaches storytelling with data as invited guest faculty in academia, both in management context at IIM Bangalore and IIM Ahmedabad and in design context at NID, Bangalore.
His background is in strategy consulting in using data-driven stories to drive change across organizations and businesses. He has 15 years of management consulting experience, first with AT Kearney in India, then with Booz & Company in Europe and more recently with startups in Bangalore. He did his B.Tech in Mechanical Engineering from IIT, Delhi and PGDM (MBA) from IIM, Ahmedabad. You can find more about him at amitkaps.com and tweet him at @amitkaps
Building an enduring, multi-billion dollar consumer technology company is hard. As an investor, knowing which startups have the potential to be massive and long-lasting is also hard. From both perspectives, identifying companies with this potential is a combination of “art” and “science” — the art is understanding how products work, and the science is knowing how to measure it. At the earliest stages of a company, it comes down to understanding how a product is built to maximize and leverage user engagement.
In this presentation, Sarah Tavel shares her "Hierarchy of Engagement" framework she uses to evaluate non-transactional consumer companies she is looking to invest in.
Storytelling fundamentals (from Propp to Andrea Fontana) and examples. Marketing perspectives on storytelling. Storytelling with data techniques. Hints and examples
Wild Slides: 20 tips to improve your PowerPoint presentationsMake Great
This document provides 20 tips for creating effective presentation slides. Some key tips include focusing on content over slides design, telling a story with your slides, choosing a sans-serif font, keeping text brief and using high resolution images. The tips encourage consistency, minimalism and breaking rules judiciously to create polished, visually engaging slides.
Things That Don't Matter in Your Presentation!Ayman Sadiq
We often spend hours together on stuffs that don’t really matter in your next presentation. You need to unclutter, focus, provide insight and yes, tell a story to convey the big idea. When you stop wasting time on the things that don’t really add any value to you presentation, we finally start adding proper value to the message and objective of your presentation. So here goes a list of things on which you should not even spend a minute. Cheers!
This document discusses emotional intelligence and its importance. It defines emotional intelligence as the ability to understand one's own and other people's feelings and to manage emotions appropriately. The document outlines that emotional intelligence is 4 times more important for success than IQ. It identifies 4 key competencies of emotional intelligence: self-awareness, social awareness, self-management, and relationship management. The document notes advantages like improved relationships and decision-making, and disadvantages like some aspects being difficult to learn. It provides general advice such as accepting feedback and using emotions appropriately.
Apresentação realizada na Universidade Municipal de São Caetano do Sul (SP) em 2016. O estudo aborda os conceitos de varejo e promoção de vendas.
Talita Vasconcelos | email: talita.avasconcelos@gmail.com
Here are 13 alternative ways to design and display content in presentations versus using bullet points. This will work in PowerPoint and other presentation authoring tools.
10 Killer Tips for an Amazing Presentation - Way Before You Actually Give OneSlide Studio
This document provides 10 tips for preparing an effective presentation before actually giving it. The tips include knowing your audience and purpose, outlining your content, avoiding templates, reducing text, using simple fonts and layouts, limiting content to 1 point per slide, keeping it simple, and being aware of any presentation guidelines. It emphasizes starting preparation offline without technology, letting visuals support the presenter rather than replace them, and always having a backup plan in case of technical issues. The overall message is to focus on clearly communicating the most important messages to the audience above all other presentation elements.
How I got 2.5 Million views on Slideshare (by @nickdemey - Board of Innovation)Board of Innovation
This document provides tips for creating engaging slide decks on SlideShare that garner many views. It recommends focusing on quality over quantity when creating each slide, using compelling images and headlines, and including calls to action throughout. It also suggests experimenting with sharing techniques and doing so in waves to build momentum. The goal is to create decks that are optimized for sharing and spread across multiple channels over time.
Today we all live and work in the Internet Century, where technology is roiling the business landscape, and the pace of change is only accelerating.
In their new book How Google Works, Google Executive Chairman and ex-CEO Eric Schmidt and former SVP of Products Jonathan Rosenberg share the lessons they learned over the course of a decade running Google.
Covering topics including corporate culture, strategy, talent, decision-making, communication, innovation, and dealing with disruption, the authors illustrate management maxims with numerous insider anecdotes from Google’s history.
In an era when everything is speeding up, the best way for businesses to succeed is to attract smart-creative people and give them an environment where they can thrive at scale. How Google Works is a new book that explains how to do just that.
This is a visual preview of How Google Works. You can pick up a copy of the book at www.howgoogleworks.net
5 Point Checklist to Create Powerful Cover Slides24Slides
Does your cover slide pop or flop? Once you have an awesome looking cover slide, you’re off to a great start and so long as you have consistently good design and quality throughout, can more easily sustain this momentum through your entire deck. Still stuck? Let us help do or re-do your cover slide for FREE! https://24slides.com/#openModal
The Science of Story: How Brands Can Use Storytelling To Get More CustomersDigital Surgeons
Storytelling is not only an entertaining source for information, but a way to engage and humanize our messages that helps them stick. Our brains are wired for stories. Like a drug, we seek them out. Good stories create lasting emotional connections that persuade, educate, entertain, and convert consumers into brand loyalists.
Here’s another good reason to believe in the power of stories: You don't have a goddamn choice. We spend a third of our waking hours crafting stories, and the rest of the time consuming them. Our brains are always searching for stories. You need stories. You live your life around stories. Your life itself is a story. So, now find out how you can use them to better understand how brands and businesses can use storytelling to increase engagement and sales.
Secrets to impactful presentations volume 2 - 8 toolsHavain
What tools do experts use to create and deliver powerful presentations? We set out to find the answer by interviewing the people we have worked and people we think have interesting views to presentations.
Here´s eight tools to replace or complement PowerPoint in your next presentation.
If you want to discuss presentation creation or design.
Contact: timo@havain.fi / @Timo_Havain (Twitter) / linkedin.com/in/timosorri -
10 Things CEOs Need to Know About Design Jason Putorti
Presentation first delivered at the 2010 Bessemer Cloud Conference introducing design concepts for non-designers, simple tactics to improve existing products, and strategies for success in product/experience design moving forward.
Thank you Dustin Curtis, Kim Goodwin, Jared Spool, Marc Gobé, Indi Young, Steve Krug, Robert Hoekman, Jr., Seth Godin, and Jesse James Garrett for content and inspiration.
Boring to Bold: Presentation Design Ideas for Non-DesignersMichael Gowin
This document provides presentation design ideas for non-designers to make their presentations more engaging. It recommends having a clear plan and purpose, telling a story with three acts, minimizing text, using powerful images, choosing fonts and slide layouts wisely, rehearsing, and delivering with confidence. Presenters should know their audience, brainstorm their key message, and make slides beautiful yet simple while focusing on one idea per slide. Rehearsing and dressing professionally can also boost delivery, and providing handouts reinforces the content. The overall goal is to make audiences feel something rather than just informing them.
Incorporating photos and videos into your PowerPoint decks can greatly enhance a presentation. Learn how illustrating concepts with meaningful imagery can make your presentation great.
Learn more: http://www.lynda.com/Photography-training-tutorials/70-0.html
SEO has changed a lot over the last two decades. We all know about Google Panda & Penguin, but did you know there was a time when search engine results were returned by humans? Crazy right? We take a trip down memory lane to chart some of the biggest events in SEO that have helped shape the industry today.
One Point Per Slide – Why It’s Important and How to Do ItStinson
PowerPoint presentations have come a long way from bullet points and ClipArt. Presentations have evolved with not only the presenter and the audience, but also our preference to be moved and not sold to. One of the biggest presentation trends is having only one point per slide. Check out our presentation to see why having only one point per slide is important!
For more presentation help, visit stinsondesign.com/blog
Watch the video on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VM7r-7WrheY&feature=youtu.be
Watch the video on Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/188030855
Storytelling with Data - Approach | SkillsAmit Kapoor
The ever increasing computational capacity has enabled us to acquire, process and analyze larger data-sets and information. However, the human memory and attention required to use this data is more limited and has remained relatively constant. Data visualization can enable us to compress data and encode it visually in ways that allows us to aid perceptual and cognitive understanding.
However, data visualisation alone is not enough and often we need to try to tell stories through data. Storytelling with data can enable us to move from analysis to synthesis, from numbers to visuals, and from an argument to a story. Operating at this intersection of data, visual and story can help persuade not only through logos (logic) but also through pathos (empathy) and ethos (credibility). In trying to tell compelling data stories, we can empower our selves to engage, communicate and persuade a large and diverse audience.
In this talk, I discuss ‘why’ stories work and what we can learn about the art of storytelling from other mediums like oral storytelling, written stories, pictures, comics and movies. I will summarise basic principles that can help us in our crafting journey, as we take the data through the layers of abstraction. The focus would be on unpacking the seven dimensions of creating an engaging data story - Abstraction (data patterns), Representation (visual encoding), Framing & Transition (perspective, focus), Messaging (verbal, text annotation), Flow (arrangement) and Interactivity.
Further, creating data stories is a cross disciplinary activity that requires us to operate at the intersection of a visual designer, data scientist and storyteller. It is both a science and an art. So how does one realistically learn these multitude of skills needed to get good at it. I will also discuss ideas about the possible path that practitioners could adopt to learn this craft through sustained practice.
## About the Speaker
Amit Kapoor is interested in learning and teaching the craft of telling visual stories with data. He uses storytelling and data visualization as tools for improving communication, persuasion and leadership. He conducts workshops and trainings for corporates, non-profits, colleges, and individuals at narrativeVIZ Consulting. He also teaches storytelling with data as invited guest faculty in academia, both in management context at IIM Bangalore and IIM Ahmedabad and in design context at NID, Bangalore.
His background is in strategy consulting in using data-driven stories to drive change across organizations and businesses. He has 15 years of management consulting experience, first with AT Kearney in India, then with Booz & Company in Europe and more recently with startups in Bangalore. He did his B.Tech in Mechanical Engineering from IIT, Delhi and PGDM (MBA) from IIM, Ahmedabad. You can find more about him at amitkaps.com and tweet him at @amitkaps
Building an enduring, multi-billion dollar consumer technology company is hard. As an investor, knowing which startups have the potential to be massive and long-lasting is also hard. From both perspectives, identifying companies with this potential is a combination of “art” and “science” — the art is understanding how products work, and the science is knowing how to measure it. At the earliest stages of a company, it comes down to understanding how a product is built to maximize and leverage user engagement.
In this presentation, Sarah Tavel shares her "Hierarchy of Engagement" framework she uses to evaluate non-transactional consumer companies she is looking to invest in.
Storytelling fundamentals (from Propp to Andrea Fontana) and examples. Marketing perspectives on storytelling. Storytelling with data techniques. Hints and examples
Wild Slides: 20 tips to improve your PowerPoint presentationsMake Great
This document provides 20 tips for creating effective presentation slides. Some key tips include focusing on content over slides design, telling a story with your slides, choosing a sans-serif font, keeping text brief and using high resolution images. The tips encourage consistency, minimalism and breaking rules judiciously to create polished, visually engaging slides.
Things That Don't Matter in Your Presentation!Ayman Sadiq
We often spend hours together on stuffs that don’t really matter in your next presentation. You need to unclutter, focus, provide insight and yes, tell a story to convey the big idea. When you stop wasting time on the things that don’t really add any value to you presentation, we finally start adding proper value to the message and objective of your presentation. So here goes a list of things on which you should not even spend a minute. Cheers!
This document discusses emotional intelligence and its importance. It defines emotional intelligence as the ability to understand one's own and other people's feelings and to manage emotions appropriately. The document outlines that emotional intelligence is 4 times more important for success than IQ. It identifies 4 key competencies of emotional intelligence: self-awareness, social awareness, self-management, and relationship management. The document notes advantages like improved relationships and decision-making, and disadvantages like some aspects being difficult to learn. It provides general advice such as accepting feedback and using emotions appropriately.
Apresentação realizada na Universidade Municipal de São Caetano do Sul (SP) em 2016. O estudo aborda os conceitos de varejo e promoção de vendas.
Talita Vasconcelos | email: talita.avasconcelos@gmail.com
O documento discute a importância da experiência do consumidor para as empresas. Ele explica que as marcas pertencem aos consumidores e que as empresas precisam alinhar suas ações com a missão da marca segundo os consumidores. Também apresenta casos de sucesso de empresas que oferecem excelentes experiências aos clientes para fidelizá-los, como Amazon, Starbucks, Heineken e Netflix.
Download and watch on your computer for best view!
This deck covers five tips on how to improve the typography on your presentation slides.
This presentation was created 100% in PowerPoint by my presentation design agency Slides. We are based in Spain (Europe) but have clients worldwide.
Drop me an email and we will discuss your project.
What is Digital Strategy? presentation explains the role of digital strategy in easy to understand language.
This is a presentation from the online course 'Crash Course to Digital Strategy' that you can sign up to on Skillshare for $20 http://skl.sh/VOj2ol
Pay with a tweet to download - http://www.paywithatweet.com/pay/connect.php?id=3bc9bee2cfdc011872fc15e896cbd108
Looks at answering what the role of a Digital Strategist is in an Advertising Agency. A relative of the Communications Planner, Strategic Planner and Account Planner, Digital Strategy concentrates on understanding the digital consumer, brand, media and creativity.
Looking at the core skills of Insight Mining, Communication Planning and Digital Metrics for success.
Thanks to Mark Pollard, Ana Andjelic, Mike Arauz and the many other Digital Strategists who helped me work out this bloody hard question.
Digital Strategy, Consumer Insights & Target AudienceArdian Atmaka
The document provides an overview of digital strategy, insights, and target audiences. It defines a digital strategy as a plan to accomplish measurable objectives using digital tools. A digital strategist develops and oversees digital strategies by conducting research, synthesizing insights, monitoring brand health, and collaborating with others. Insights that fuel creativity come from examining category conventions, cultural tensions, and consumer motivations. Defining the target audience involves understanding people's social graphs, interest graphs, and digital communities that can spread messages and influence purchasing decisions.
You can now download the presentation directly from Slideshare.
Here are 17 of the best free online tools for Digital Strategists to help cultivate killer insights on consumers, competitors and the industry. In this toolbox we you will find how to use each tool with an example insight drawn for the client, as well as each of their benefits and limitations.
The tools helps to conduct Consumer Research, Category Research, Discourse Analysis and Environmental analysis.
You can now download the presentation directly from Slideshare.
*Disclaimer this is just my imaginary example of a Comms Plan for the Puma work and not the actual strategy that was created by Droga5 for Puma. I had nothing to do with that plan and am just a fan of their work.
What is Comms Planning? is a presentation that provides a clear answer of the role of the Comms Planner within an Advertising Agency. I use the example of the Puma Social campaign to prove the point.
7 Tips to Beautiful PowerPoint by @itseugenecEugene Cheng
Short talk about presentations given at Startup Dynamo, a workshop held by Startup@Singapore NUS using the Learn Startup Methodology.
My segment was on Presentation Design to make an impact on VCs. Many thanks to @ryanlou for the invite. And not to forget Emiland De Cubber for his amazing slide deck inspirations and invaluable advice. Disclaimer: this is a reimagination off some of Emiland's presentations. I do not make any money of this.
Download for just a tweet: http://goo.gl/fbM4j
Want something similar done for your next pitch? Contact me at my site: http://itseugene.me/contact/
The SlideShare 101 is a quick start guide if you want to walk through the main features that the platform offers. This will keep getting updated as new features are launched.
The SlideShare 101 replaces the earlier "SlideShare Quick Tour".
The document provides tips on how to improve presentation slides. It begins by noting the massive amount of data and information people deal with daily. It then encourages the reader not to overwhelm audiences with bad presentations. Several headings offer advice on creating good opening slides and examples. The document defines a presentation as the process of presenting a topic to an audience through demonstrations, lectures, speeches meant to inform, persuade or build goodwill. It can also be a formal introduction, and involves considering details to make an overall impression.
This presentation was delivered as part of incubation program training to the Digital Incubation Center (DIC), Ministry of Information & Communication in Qatar. The attendees learned to design an engaging presentation, create an effective pitch and prepare to answer Q & A from the competition judges.
This document discusses the importance and benefits of public speaking. It notes that public speaking helps improve personality and is a skill that will be useful in many careers. It provides tips for overcoming the fear of public speaking, including practicing and focusing on the audience rather than yourself. The document also gives advice for delivering a good speech, such as using an attention-grabbing opening, being energetic, having a clear structure, and making eye contact with the audience.
The document discusses tips for reducing anxiety when giving presentations. It emphasizes the importance of thorough preparation, including rehearsing your presentation, understanding your audience, and customizing your message. Proper preparation helps ensure you feel confident and your audience understands your key points. The document also provides advice on delivery techniques like maintaining eye contact, varying vocal tones, and avoiding distracting mannerisms.
The document discusses tips for preparing and delivering effective presentations to alleviate fears of public speaking. It emphasizes the importance of preparation, rehearsal, customizing the presentation based on the audience, and conveying confidence even if nervous. The key is to prepare the content, structure, delivery, and use of visual aids, know the audience, and practice to feel at ease when presenting.
The document discusses tips for reducing anxiety when giving presentations. It emphasizes the importance of thorough preparation, including rehearsing your presentation, understanding your audience, and customizing your message. Proper preparation helps ensure you perform well and avoid common fears like appearing unconfident or disorganized in front of others. The document also provides additional advice like maintaining eye contact with your audience, speaking animatedly, and avoiding distracting mannerisms.
The document provides information about a group project presentation on presentation skills. It lists the group members and then discusses different types of presentations, including informative, instructional, persuasive, and motivational presentations. It also provides tips for delivering effective presentations, such as speaking clearly, using eye contact and gestures, practicing beforehand, keeping within the time limit, and varying the presentation to keep the audience's attention.
1. The document provides guidance on how to deliver an effective presentation by turning it into an imaginative public performance. It discusses six key steps: practicing your presentation, asserting yourself through posture and presence, making contact with your audience through eye contact, gestures, spoken contact and language, using your voice effectively by varying volume, pace and pitch, remembering to breathe steadily, and staying hydrated.
2. The document emphasizes practicing your presentation thoroughly, being confident in your delivery, and actively engaging your audience through eye contact, body language, questions and language choice to maintain their interest and understanding.
3. Effective use of voice, breathing and hydration are also covered to help speakers deliver presentations in a lively, flexible and
This document provides tips and recommendations for delivering powerful presentations. It emphasizes that the key elements of a successful presentation are having a clear main message, knowing your audience, and using techniques like storytelling, repetition, quotes, and engaging body language. It recommends spending time preparing, rehearsing, and ensuring technical aspects are addressed before the presentation. Things to avoid include reading slides, avoiding eye contact, inappropriate attire, and not rehearsing. Inspiration can come from sources like TED talks, books, and stock image websites. The overall message is that preparation, structure, and audience awareness are crucial for effective presentations.
The document provides information on public speaking including different types of speeches, how to develop confidence and self-assurance, and tips for effective public speaking. It discusses researching topics, organizing presentations, understanding audiences, having platform presence, practicing, and reducing fears. The document also includes surveys on audiences' public speaking experiences and opinions.
This is a presentation I put together for the public speaking class - Comm 110 - I'm teaching at UW - Whitewater. Hope some of these tips will be of use to you.
This document provides guidance on how to create and deliver effective presentations. It discusses determining the purpose of the presentation, planning the content and structure, using visual aids, practicing delivery techniques, and gaining audience attention. The key points covered are determining the main objective, following an outline with an introduction, body, and conclusion, using the inverted pyramid structure to organize information from most to least important, and employing vocal variation, eye contact, and body language to engage the audience.
This document provides an overview of public speaking and strategies for effective delivery. It discusses the different types of public speeches, including informative, persuasive, and argumentative. Guidelines are offered for public speaking, along with warnings and how to manage stage fright. Easy to implement techniques are suggested to reduce anxiety before and during presentations. The importance of gestures and body language to engage audiences is also covered. The overall document aims to give a thorough understanding of public speaking.
Presentation skills involve effectively communicating information to an audience through speech. There are three main purposes of presentations: to inform, persuade, or build good will. Presentations can be categorized as informative, analytical, persuasive, instructional, arousing, or for decision making. It is important to understand the audience being presented to, as they can be captives, pragmatists, socially motivated, or committed. Using visual aids makes presentations more effective by reducing meeting times, and making presenters seem more professional and credible to audiences.
The document introduces the School of Talk program which aims to help people improve their communication and public speaking skills. The curriculum includes modules on self-introduction, understanding audiences, overcoming stage fright, pitching concepts and ideas, and what makes a great talk. It also covers how to be a great host, developing talks from drafts, and rehearsal standards. The goal is to provide practical skills for pitching, presentations, speeches and more.
This document provides guidance on developing effective presentation skills. It discusses key elements of presentations such as preparation, delivery, structure, and visual aids. Some best practices include practicing the presentation, keeping content concise and simple, maintaining good posture and eye contact, and engaging the audience. Nervousness during presentations is also addressed, with tips like mental visualization, relaxation techniques, and using nerves as positive energy. The document emphasizes the importance of preparation, customizing the presentation for the audience, and soliciting feedback to improve skills.
The document provides tips to motivate young people to pursue a career in public speaking. It suggests putting the concept of public speaking into practice early in their lives through pretend play roles. It also recommends giving positive feedback when children practice speaking and recording practice sessions to help identify areas for improvement. Fostering confidence throughout their daily lives by modeling it is also important for nurturing public speaking skills from a young age.
This document discusses seminar presentations and trends. It defines what a presentation is, as well as the basic purposes of presentations which are to inform, persuade, and build good will. Presentations come in many forms for different situations and audiences. When giving a presentation, it is important to consider the audience which can be classified into four categories: captives, pragmatists, socially motivated, and committed. Visual aids are effective tools that can reduce meeting times and make presenters seem more professional and credible. The best ways to present include using visual aids or notes rather than completely memorizing or reading a speech, in order to have natural eye contact and engagement with the audience.
How to speak confidently in front of publicOsama Qaiser
The document provides tips for speaking confidently in front of others. It discusses how public speaking anxiety is very common and offers strategies to help manage nerves. These include knowing your material well through practice, understanding the audience and setting, visualizing success, and gaining experience over time. The tips emphasize preparation, focusing on the message rather than anxiety, and demonstrating confidence in both the delivery and conclusion of the speech.
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4. BEFOREThis is a
document!
A presentation is the process of presenting a topic to an audience. It is
typically a demonstration, lecture, or speech meant to inform, persuade, or
build good will. The term can also be used for a formal or ritualized
introduction or offering, as with the presentation of a debutante. The
process of offering for consideration or display. It’s a social introduction, as
of a person at court, a demonstration, lecture, or welcoming speech, a
manner or style of speaking, instructing or putting oneself forward, the
manner of presenting, especially the organization of visual details to create
an overall impression, the formal introduction of a person, as into society or
at court; debut
5. AFTER
A presentation is the process of presenting a topic to an audience. It is
typically a demonstration, lecture, or speech meant to inform, persuade, or
build good will. The term can also be used for a formal or ritualized
introduction or offering, as with the presentation of a debutante. The
process of offering for consideration or display. It’s a social introduction, as
of a person at court, a demonstration, lecture, or welcoming speech, a
manner or style of speaking, instructing or putting oneself forward, the
manner of presenting, especially the organization of visual details to create
an overall impression, the formal introduction of a person, as into society or
at court; debut
Cut some
to make a
slide !