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Suggest You - Public Speaking: 3 Rules for PowerPoint Slides
7 Tips to Get More Mileage Out of Your Online or Offline Publicity .Color and contrast: Take into consideration the size of the room in which you’ll be speaking. Will everyone in that last row be able to read the information on your PowerPoint slides? In order to assist them in reading what’s on screen, choose soft “easy-on-the-eyes” background colors such as light blue or turquoise blue. For lettering, choose a contrasting color differing from your background such as white, black or navy. For examYou worked hard to get a story on your business in a popularwebsite or your local paper. Don't let your efforts ends there --here are seven tips to help you maximize your online and offlinepublicity: 1) Reprint, Reprint, Reprint! A favorable article on your company or products is marketing gold- it implies that the publication or website has given itsendorsement. The best part is that you How To Buy A Business Part 2 1. Bullets and phrases: When I conduct public speaking training, I always remind my audience to keep their PowerPoint slides easy to read. Pretend you're on the interstate where someone could read the information driving 55 miles per hour. Bullets work best as they are easier to read than sentences. Also, you are less likely to read the slides this way. The biggest rule with PowerPoint slides is to keep them big, bold, and simple. Your slides should resemble a billboard. No more than 6 bullets per slide and 6 to 8 words per line. Stick to three colors per PowerPoint slide, otherwise your audience will start focusing more on color and less on your content.In part 1 we covered the qualities you must possess to be a successful business owner, how to decide which business is right for you, and how to find businesses that might be for sale. In part 2 we will go into how to approach a current business owner about purchasing his or her business and how to negotiate the best deal for you.Once you have a solid list of potential businesses that you are interested in purchasing 2. Font choices: Often, people come up to me privately in my public speaking training seminars and confide that many of their colleagues use “print that is too small for anyone to read.” They secretly urge me to tell everyone attending that the print must be large enough to read the PowerPoint slide. In addition, I’m often told by the person who hires me that many of their employees put too much information on their slides. With public speaking and visual aids, less is more. Pick simple fonts, but make certain they’re large enough to read for people in the back rows. The print size should be at least a 28 font for titles and at least 22 point for other text. Simple fonts with clean lines are much easier to read. For instance, Times New Roman, Gothic and Verdana are good choices. Within those font families you have the ability to enhance a page using italics and bold, just go easy on the underlines. And never put letters in all capitals. Instead, use upper and lower case lettering. It is much easier to read, and doesn’t look like you’re shouting. 3.Color and contrast: Take into consideration the size of the room in which you’ll be speaking. Will everyone in that last row be able to read the information on your PowerPoint slides? In order to assist them in reading what’s on screen, choose soft “easy-on-the-eyes” background colors such as light blue or turquoise blue. For lettering, choose a contrasting color differing from your background such as white, black or navy. For examp What's Preventing You from Generating More Clients our slides should resemble a billboard. No more than 6 bullets per slide and 6 to 8 words per line. Stick to three colors per PowerPoint slide, otherwise your audience will start focusing more on color and less on your content.Ask yourself the following questions to glean some insight into what might be keeping you from generating the clients (and the cash) you desire! I am wasting billiable time doing tasks that I hate doing, I'm not very good at, and that other people could easily do. True/FalseI'd like to hire someone to help me, but financially it's just not possible right now! True/FalseI'm not 2. Font choices: Often, people come up to me privately in my public speaking training seminars and confide that many of their colleagues use “print that is too small for anyone to read.” They secretly urge me to tell everyone attending that the print must be large enough to read the PowerPoint slide. In addition, I’m often told by the person who hires me that many of their employees put too much information on their slides. With public speaking and visual aids, less is more. Pick simple fonts, but make certain they’re large enough to read for people in the back rows. The print size should be at least a 28 font for titles and at least 22 point for other text. Simple fonts with clean lines are much easier to read. For instance, Times New Roman, Gothic and Verdana are good choices. Within those font families you have the ability to enhance a page using italics and bold, just go easy on the underlines. And never put letters in all capitals. Instead, use upper and lower case lettering. It is much easier to read, and doesn’t look like you’re shouting. 3.Color and contrast: Take into consideration the size of the room in which you’ll be speaking. Will everyone in that last row be able to read the information on your PowerPoint slides? In order to assist them in reading what’s on screen, choose soft “easy-on-the-eyes” background colors such as light blue or turquoise blue. For lettering, choose a contrasting color differing from your background such as white, black or navy. For exam Who's To Blame If You Are Not Promoted? rge me to tell everyone attending that the print must be large enough to read the PowerPoint slide. In addition, I’m often told by the person who hires me that many of their employees put too much information on their slides. With public speaking and visual aids, less is more.Who or what is to blame if you are not getting the promotion you want and think you deserve?Many factors, in various combinations can be the cause, but one thing is almost certain. Like it or not, you and you alone must take most of the blame if your career is stuck on "hold."There is valuable insight into all of this in Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar." Cassius is advising Brutus as they consider their am Pick simple fonts, but make certain they’re large enough to read for people in the back rows. The print size should be at least a 28 font for titles and at least 22 point for other text. Simple fonts with clean lines are much easier to read. For instance, Times New Roman, Gothic and Verdana are good choices. Within those font families you have the ability to enhance a page using italics and bold, just go easy on the underlines. And never put letters in all capitals. Instead, use upper and lower case lettering. It is much easier to read, and doesn’t look like you’re shouting. 3.Color and contrast: Take into consideration the size of the room in which you’ll be speaking. Will everyone in that last row be able to read the information on your PowerPoint slides? In order to assist them in reading what’s on screen, choose soft “easy-on-the-eyes” background colors such as light blue or turquoise blue. For lettering, choose a contrasting color differing from your background such as white, black or navy. For exam Networking and Trade Shows at least 22 point for other text. Simple fonts with clean lines are much easier to read. For instance, Times New Roman, Gothic and Verdana are good choices. Within those font families you have the ability to enhance a page using italics and bold, just go easy on the underlines. And never put letters in all capitals. Instead, use upper and lower case lettering. It is much easier to read, and doesn’t look like you’re shouting.The most important reasons people exhibit at a trade show? To see what's new and to gather leads - information for future business.So, how do you that besides standing in the booth and walking the aisles? The word is "Networking". It is much more than a buzzword. Networking is a conscious, planned effort to get the most of quick encounters, in. brief time periods, and to develop a lasting mutual relations 3.Color and contrast: Take into consideration the size of the room in which you’ll be speaking. Will everyone in that last row be able to read the information on your PowerPoint slides? In order to assist them in reading what’s on screen, choose soft “easy-on-the-eyes” background colors such as light blue or turquoise blue. For lettering, choose a contrasting color differing from your background such as white, black or navy. For exam Unemployment Blues: Are We Pre-Programmed To Be Productive? .Color and contrast: Take into consideration the size of the room in which you’ll be speaking. Will everyone in that last row be able to read the information on your PowerPoint slides? In order to assist them in reading what’s on screen, choose soft “easy-on-the-eyes” background colors such as light blue or turquoise blue. For lettering, choose a contrasting color differing from your background such as white, black or navy. For example, use light lettering on a dark background, or dark lettering against a light background. Never use all sentences in black print against a plain white background. It is boring and no one will read it.Toiling away at our daily grind, we dream of running away to Hawaii or the South Pacific where we can lie on the beach and do absolutely nothing.Some of us are lucky enough to take a vacation there and temporarily cut ourselves off from the world of responsibilities and demands and worries. We breathe easier, sleep deeper, eat more heartily. It is truly paradise.It's wonderful because we have a life waiting to Public speaking and the cardinal rule: you never want to read what’s on the screen. After all, you are the presenter. Your audience assumes you’re the expert. Also, when you read what’s on your slides, mostly likely your back is to the audience. They won’t focus on you. They’ll just lose focus and start thinking about other things. Therefore, use bullets and phrases as opposed to sentences on your slides and in handouts. Think of what’s on your slides only as “fast food for the eyes.” In my public speaking training, I frequentlly see highly educated, knowledgeable people trying to cram too much information on a single slide. This is especially true when presenting technical material.Technical people have a propensity to put too many words, charts, colors and graphs on a single slide. Know your material, yet keep it simple. Practice. Rehearse with your PowerPoint slides. Get honest feedback from your friends, family members and colleagues. You can do it. Good luck! Copyright 2006 Colleen Kettenhofen
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