Jun 242007
 

When I was chair­ing the XML Con­fer­ence, one of the things I tried very hard to con­vince speak­ers to do was to write up their talks as pro­ceed­ings, and not just use slides. The main reas­on for that was that 6 months after giv­ing a talk, often­times the speak­ers can­’t fig­ure out what they meant with those slides, let alone people try­ing to make sense of them on their own. A writ­ten paper is much bet­ter at giv­ing people the inform­a­tion they’re look­ing for.

So I was inter­ested to see that Present­a­tion Zen recently wrote on the same top­ic. As the author says:

Power­Point is not the cause of bad busi­ness present­a­tions, but lazi­ness and poor writ­ing skills may be. The point is not to place more text with­in tiny slides inten­ded for images and visu­al dis­plays of data. The point is to first (usu­ally) cre­ate a well-writ­ten, detailed doc­u­ment. Do busi­ness people still know how to write?

Recently I’ve star­ted try­ing a dif­fer­ent way of cre­at­ing slide decks. I pull togeth­er a few slides with pic­tures or bul­lets, then write a doc­u­ment with gram­mat­ic­al Eng­lish, pic­tur­ing myself actu­ally giv­ing the talk, writ­ing what I plan to say. This leads to addi­tions and changes in the slides, and makes them more into the sup­port­ing visu­als that I think they should be. In the ideal case, I’d have time after the actu­al present­a­tion to edit the writ­ten-out talk to reflect what I really did say and pub­lish that togeth­er with the slides. I real­ise that the slides on their own often aren’t much use to any­one who was­n’t at the talk, or 6 months after­wards for any­one who was; that’s not always a prob­lem depend­ing on the audi­ence and the actu­al pur­pose of the talk. 

I do know of people who put a lot of work into mak­ing their slide decks suit­able for teach­ing pur­poses on their own without sup­port­ing doc­u­ments; those people who are good at that often use extens­ive speak­er­’s notes. And they’re usu­ally also good at writ­ing those full-length papers. Which leads me to sus­pect that there is some­thing to the slide-deck style that is appeal­ing — maybe it’s the sense that you get the import­ant inform­a­tion in the bul­lets? Maybe it’s respond­ing to people’s lazi­ness in reading? 

  3 Responses to “Papers and Slides”

  1. I write my slide decks as head­lines (com­plete sen­tences, each of which tells a story) and then impro­vise each talk around them. I’ve been told that people have learned the mater­i­al from the slide decks just fine.

  2. I agree with your approach Lauren. Used power­point is a bit like a used con­dom — alright if you happened to be there.

    I work on an open source pub­lish­ing sys­tem where we have integ­rated slide present­a­tions with doc­u­ments, not suit­able for all situ­ations but it lets you write in a word pro­cessor and embed simple slides in a doc­u­ment by wrap­ping bul­let lists and images in a simple table microformat.

    You can see it in action on this page on the ICE site. Click on the slide icon top-right to see a present­a­tion view using pure HTML driv­en by Slideous, a deriv­at­ive of Slidy.

  3. I use a web browser to give present­a­tions. There was a time, in 2006, when Fire­fox would let me drive one win­dow from anoth­er. That is, I got two par­al­lel sets of pages, one of speak­er notes and the oth­er of slides, and arranged so that I could pro­ject one win­dow and read the oth­er on the LCD. Advan­cing to the next page in the speak­er notes also advanced the presen­ted slide in the oth­er window.

    That arrange­ment worked won­der­fully. And the set of speak­er notes was eas­ily turned into an essay that stands alone and is pos­sibly use­ful (my slides usu­ally aren’t as I tend to use them only for high­light­ing key points).

    If I could get fire­fox to do that again, I’d def­in­itely use that tech­nique. Alas, my JavaS­cript stopped work­ing at some point and I’ve nev­er been able to rein­vent any that did the right thing 🙁

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