Inbound Internet Marketing Blog

SEO, Blogging, Social Media, Landing Pages, Lead Generation and Analytics

SUBSCRIBE

The HubSpot Inbound Internet Marketing blog covers all of inbound marketing - SEO, blogging, social media, lead generation, email marketing, lead nurturing & management, and analytics. Join 57,702 others and subscribe now!

Subscribe to RSS feed Add us on Facebook! Follow us on Twitter

Get Free Marketing Info!

Get the world's best marketing resources right to your inbox! Join more than 817,000 inbound marketers!

Subscribe by email

Your email:

HubSpot's Inbound Internet Marketing Blog

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

3 Secrets to AWESOME Presentations

 

.

presentations are amazingRaise your hand if you've ever been subjected to Death by Powerpoint.

Raise your hand if you've ever subjected an audience to Death by Powerpoint.

Let's stop killing each other with boring presentations, shall we?

Here are three simple, powerful things you can do to transform an average presentation into an awesome one:

1. Don't just share information; TELL A STORY.

Most presentations share a common goal: to persuade the audience to take action.

What's the best way to persuade someone? Get them to attach to your story emotionally.

What's the best way to get them to attach emotionally? Tell them a story with a likeable hero who encounters some roadblocks and then, [thanks to your product] emerges transformed.

Reframe your presentation like a great story: three acts with two turning points. Let your hero make your points for you. Have him show your audience "what is"—and contrast that with "what could be." 

Nobody likes being sold to, but who doesn't love a great story?

2. Go overboard.

Boring presentations are safe presentations. They take no risks. They state the obvious. And they're more likely to provoke napping than purchasing behavior.

Sometimes the best way to make a presentation more awesome is to go completely overboard. Make ridiculous claims. State the opposite view. Use ginormously humongoussive words. 

Polarizing slides engage audiences—they get people thinking and talking. So go ahead, BE EXTREME, and give them something to talk about.

3. Make your first slide and your last slide the AWESOMEST.

The first slide sets the audience's expectation. The last slide is the one thing they're most likely to remember. 

And the stuff in the middle? It really only matters if the first and last slides kick major butt. So make sure they do.

What exactly makes a slide "awesome"? 

Ask ten people that question and you will get ten different answers. But for me, it boils down to one simple thing: emotion.

Awesome slides make you feel something.

Love or hate.

Fear or desire.

Pain or pleasure. 

Comedy or tragedy.

So go ahead. Take off the safety gear, let your hair down, get crazy. Make your next presentation AWESOME and kiss Death by Powerpoint permanently goodbye.

Marketing Data: 100 AWESOME Marketing Stats, Charts, & Graphs

Marketing Data: 100 AWESOME Marketing Stats, Charts, & Graphs

HubSpot has compiled a brand new collection of 100 Awesome Marketing Stats, Charts & Graphs based on original research and data!

Download this awesome marketing data today!

Posted by Marta Kagan on Mon, Jun 27, 2011 @ 04:30 PM

COMMENTS

Telling a story is critical! It's a much more engaging way to learn something. 
 
And if you're using technology, make sure you follow this 3 step Guide To Avoiding Presentation #Fail!

posted on Monday, June 27, 2011 at 4:44 PM by Alysha Dominico


Thanks for these tips. I think that by having people participate at a certain point or multiple points during the presentation it could help. Moreover, I guess that the use of infographics could be advantageous.  
 
Could infographics replace powerpoint presentations?

posted on Monday, June 27, 2011 at 5:07 PM by tikyd


One suggestion I recall was to do away with PowerPoint altogether ... I think that came from Tufte, or perhaps that's just irony creeping in. 
 
I've never done a presentation in the business world where I felt comfortable doing that - perhaps it's because the information graphics were critical to understanding, or perhaps it's simply because I haven't quite overcome the fear of public speaking and the "shield" of a slide-show to give the audience somewhere to put their eyes other than on myself. 
 
I'm pretty sure that I delivered a few lectures in the academic world without them, though thinking back, I did rely pretty heavily on the chalkboard, perhaps for the same reason. 
 
So I'd be curious to hear from anyone who's tried that - just gotten up in front of an audience and spoke, without a crutch or a safety net. 
 

posted on Monday, June 27, 2011 at 8:02 PM by Jim Shamlin


Hi Jim - I've done it... but given that I train people in making presentations it would be pretty odd for me not to have! ;) 
 
Good points on the blog but don't forget that it's "horses for courses". Simple tips like this, useful though they may be for getting people thinking are just that - they are NOT mantras to live or die by. You can bore people to death with bit text slides just as easily as small text slides! 
 
This is the voice of experience, trust me on this! ;)

posted on Tuesday, June 28, 2011 at 2:03 AM by Simon Raybould


Beyond powerpoint and slides is the skill to tell a story that people relate to and embrace. It continues to be something that I have to practice especially when I don't want to leave important points out or show my nervousness.

posted on Tuesday, June 28, 2011 at 6:56 AM by Victoria Burke


I feel like I'm getting there… was this AWESOME? 
 
http://www.slideshare.net/Physiopedia/physiopedia-an-international-collaborative-project-for-the-physiotherapy-profession

posted on Tuesday, June 28, 2011 at 7:29 AM by Rachael Lowe


Rachel, 
 
Great presentation!

posted on Tuesday, June 28, 2011 at 9:23 AM by Kipp Bodnar


@Jim,  
I think it's definitely doable to get up and not rely on a PPT presentation. It's honestly so overdone, ppl really appreciate it when you can get up and be entertaining without taking their eyes over to some slides. 
 
I think there's at least a couple of reasons for this: 
1) People want to stare at you -- the very fact you're up there is interesting and engaging. If you have an air of confidence in the way you hold yourself and speak passionately--that in itself is intriguing to most audiences. 
2) There are many ways to engage people and you don't just have to do it visually with slides. Asking questions and even letting audience members discuss ideas together in your presentation is a great way to break up the pace (which is one of the things PPT are meant to do). 
 
Last year I stood up and gave a presentation with hand-held slides (emphasized words placed on construction paper) and the group feedback was that it was a) hilariously more entertaining and b) a great change of pace to the boring old 'slides treatment'. 
 
I sat in on at least 2 seminars last year where the speaker's script, stories, body language and enthusiasm made 8 hours pass like 5 minutes. 
 
It's doable, definitely. I'm sure you'd be great :) 
 
Alysha 

posted on Tuesday, June 28, 2011 at 9:39 AM by Alysha Dominico


*Sorry about the double posting everyone, I had a typo in the HTML. Hope the moderators fix it up. 
 
@Rachel, I agree with Kipp: your presentation is great. I love the way you sign-posted the different sections. It really helps audiences take in your information. You also had a story with Physiopedia's background/location in countries -- stellar job :)

posted on Tuesday, June 28, 2011 at 10:06 AM by Alysha Dominico


Great tips! I love presentations that now use more pictures than words. Bullets are the first step to snooze-ville for me!

posted on Tuesday, June 28, 2011 at 11:29 AM by Courtney


Tips are good but sometimes there may be exceptions.

posted on Tuesday, June 28, 2011 at 11:29 PM by Istiaque Ahmed


Hi Istaiaque - You're right, sometimes there may be expectations....  
 
As a professional speaker my advice is always "ignore them if you can": just because it's what people expect doesn't mean it's the right thing to do. Henry Ford commented that if he'd listened to his customers he would have ended up only with a faster horse! :)

posted on Wednesday, June 29, 2011 at 1:48 AM by Simon Raybould


Comments have been closed for this article.