Collapse into 1 slide

I get this suggestion a lot from clients who are concerned with the amount of slides in their decks. I usually push back, collapsing two messages into one (more busy) slide does not shorten the presentation.

When writing (without tinkering font size or margins): time = page count, when presenting: time = story.

He is just not lucky

Investors are not always 100% rational people. The other day an investor shared one of his criteria with me. If an entrepreneur has been hit by 14 cases of pure bad luck he is convinced that it will happen again for attempt 15. “Some guys are just not lucky.”

A compelling pitch deck?

I was asked to answer the question “What makes a compelling pitch deck?” on Quora, and here is what I replied:
You can write books about this, so without giving a table of contents (Google it) here are some thoughts:
  • Something that explains what you actually do (yes, some decks don't)
  • Something that intrigues a potential investor enough to have another meeting with you
  • Something that answers the big obvious elephant in the room questions ("What, that sounds like a page rank search engine")
  • Something that shows through language/visuals/style/in-between-the-lines that you are a decent, honest, professional person to work with

Dry run guinea pigs

Before taking your pitch to your target investors it is important to practice your story for real. There are different guinea pigs available, recognise their strengths and weaknesses:
  1. Your co-founder is blinded by the idea, just like you
  2. Your parents probably do not really understand the concept but love everything you do
  3. The speech coach really understands articulation, stance, and story flow, but will not spot that huge gaping hole in the business model
  4. The friend of a friend of a friend who is an angel investor will suggest that you should make a comparison to that company featured in TechCrunch 2 months ago
  5. The friend of a friend who owes a favor and is a VC does not really have time to go into the idea and will suggest to beef up the competitive analysis a bit, unfortunately he does not invest in businesses that are this early, come back in 6 months...
  6. The casual friend who wants to be friendly but does not know you very well, does not have the courage to say what she really thinks
  7. The management consultant sees problems everywhere and will suggest more analysis and risk mitigation
Still, each of the above has valuable input, just put it in context.

Harmonising headshots

Unfortunately, not many teams get together in one room for a team picture. The alternative team slide is a collage of headshots that are taken by different photographers at different times. How to make something decent out of it?
  1. Make sure all images have exactly the same size
  2. Crop all images so that the size of the head is more or less the same
  3. Line up the eyes 1/3 from the top of each image
  4. Go for a close up, losing some of the top of the face if required
  5. Make the images black and white
  6. Increase the brightness of selected images if require
From the archives: a 2008 post on the same subject.

Lots of them

If that is your message, you can write the sentence “There are 45 applications” with a cutely formated 45 on a background of a stunning image. The other solution is to write out the applications in 45 boxes that are nicely spaced out over the page. The latter solution is more cluttered, but actually makes the point in a more convincing way.

Data chart surgery

Related to Monday‘s post, there is another way to use a poor quality data chart image in your slide. Crop out all text elements (axis labels, footers, titles, etc.) until you are just left with the lines/bars/columns themselves. Set the background color of your slide to the same color as the image and manually recreate the text labels (if necessary, many graph images contain huge footers and duplicate titles that you do not need).

Pretty versus effective

This Tweet is spot on:
Making pretty slides (beautiful picture, nice font) is not the same as making effective slides.

Extracting data from a poor graph

Sometimes the image quality of a graph is low, and/or the color scheme does not match yours, that you may want to recreate the data chart in PowerPoint. If there are proper labels, it is no problem. If not, here is a fix:
  1. To measure the values of a column or bar chart accurately, you need an image that is as big as possible. I usually make a physical printout of a stretched chart image on an A4 paper.
  2. Measure the bars/columns in millimeters
  3. Decide the real value for your biggest bar/column, and using its millimeter value determine the value for all the other bars/columns
  4. Now you can recreate the data chart. Since your values are not 100% accurate, do not use data labels, but simply put a value axis on the side of the graph (like it was the case in the source image).

Make the point on every page?

If there is a very important message in your story, there is no need to make it on every page in your presentation. Fifteen half-baked bullet points are not as powerful as one carefully crafted slide that drives your message home. Added side benefit: you can make your presentation even shorter!

Where do all the posts come from?

I get this question sometimes. Almost all content on this blog are disguised client examples. Every morning I sit down, reflect on what happened yesterday, and extract from it a small piece of advice that could make you a better designer. The advantage of being in the trenches of presentation design day to day.