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Obama’s Unwords Begone

July 27, 2009 by Jerry 

Barack Obama, whose smooth, articulate delivery style in his major speeches has been lauded by friend and foe alike, has also been derided by friend and foe alike for his tendency to sputter “unwords”—“ums” and “ahs”—throughout his extemporaneous press conferences. In my previous blog on the subject, you read a serious online commentary and saw a comic television mash-up of Obama’s sputtering. One of the major factors for the sharp differences in his cadence is his use of the teleprompter. Because of his diligent attention to policy as well as to rhetorical detail, Obama uses the teleprompter to read (Read More...)

Guest Blogger Rowan Manahan

July 24, 2009 by Jerry 

Meet Rowan Manahan, the Founder of Fortify Services, a Dublin-based consulting and career management firm. Rowan, the author of Where’s My Oasis?: The Essential Handbook For Everyone Wanting That Perfect Job, writes a blog called “Fortify Your Oasis” on which he chooses to use a clip art image to represent himself rather his own handsome Gaelic mug. Extending his modesty, he describes himself as a “speaker, trainer, husband, father, storyteller and dancing bear.” Earlier this year, Rowan wrote a post we thought you would appreciate as a closer to this series on presentation graphics. We reproduce his words here for (Read More...)

What Color is Your PowerPoint?

July 23, 2009 by Jerry 

Yesterday’s post about serif and sans serif font concluded with the Latin phrase, “de gustibus non est disputandum,” or, there is no argument about taste. The phrase is even more applicable, if not indisputable, when it comes to color choice. Well, almost indisputable, for there is a single unavoidable consideration that transcends the taste of any presenter or presenter’s designer, and that is the audience and its ability to understand the graphic. A simple one-word rule, applicable to every element of every graphic, will make it easy for every audience to understand your every slide. And, at the risk (Read More...)

A Case for Case II: Serif or Sans?

July 22, 2009 by Jerry 

Yesterday’s post posed a trick question: whether to use initial caps or all caps in presentation text. The trick was to get you to focus on your audience’s ability to perceive your text. The least common denominator in that post as well as this post, as it is in all my posts, and as it must be in all presentations, is to make it easy for your audience to follow you and your graphics. If you do, your audience will make it easy for you; the alternative is inconceivable. Let’s begin our consideration of serif and sans serif font (Read More...)

A Case for Case I: Initial Caps or All Caps?

July 21, 2009 by Jerry 

nitial caps or all caps, which should you use? An article in the New York Times reported on a trend among major corporations to update their brand logos, and that several of the companies have done so with “striking similarities” in their redesign. Below you’ll find the past and present versions of the Wal-Mart, Kraft, Stop & Shop, and Sysco logos. Please note that all of them have converted from all caps to initial caps. The Times article described this shift as “Toned-down type. Bold, block capital letters are out. Their replacements are mostly or entirely lower case, (Read More...)

I Can Read It Myself!

July 20, 2009 by Jerry 

In the course of the past twenty years, I have posed one question to every one of the thousands of participants who have taken the Power Presentations program:                   “How do you feel about presenters who read the words on their slides verbatim?” I have also posed the same question to the countless business men and women who have sat in the audiences of other people’s presentations. Not a single one of them has said that he or she likes the practice. Their responses, usually accompanied by expressions ranging from disdain (Read More...)

The Elevator Pitch in One Sentence

July 14, 2009 by Jerry 

Peggy Noonan, writing in the Wall Street Journal about the Herculean tasks facing Barack Obama—the economic crisis, the environment, health care reform, Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, North Korea—referenced Clare Boothe Luce, a noted 20th Century playwright, journalist, ambassador, and congresswoman. Ms. Luce “told about a conversation she had in 1962 in the White House with her old friend John F. Kennedy. She told him, she said, that ‘a great man is one sentence.’” Ms. Noonan then went on to define that one sentence as “leadership [that] can be so well summed up in a single sentence that you don’t have (Read More...)

Pixar Speaks Louder than Words

July 10, 2009 by Pearl 

A silent film is defined by Wikipedia as “a film with no synchronized recorded sound, especially spoken dialogue.” The great stars of the silent era, Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, Harold Lloyd, Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy, performed their stories without uttering a single word. Popular in the late 1800s and early 1900s, these black and white silent films were screened in theatres accompanied by live music providing the atmosphere. During recent years, a fresh and modern type of silent film has surfaced. Unlike those classic silent films, this new generation is created with vibrant colors and three-dimensional imagery. Many (Read More...)

“Palin’s speech is classic casuistry”

July 8, 2009 by Jerry 

To everyone’s—including the Republican Party’s—great surprise, Sarah Palin resigned as the Governor of Alaska during the July 4th weekend. To no one’s great surprise, two of the New York Times’ most mordant columnists, Gail Collins and Maureen Dowd, promptly dipped their pens in their customary acid and went after Palin. Both writers deconstructed Palin’s words and then commented on them in their usual sardonic style. For the purpose of our primary focus on how one tells one’s story, let’s concentrate on the key paragraph of Palin’s resignation announcement:         Life is too short to compromise time (Read More...)

The House That Jack Built

July 6, 2009 by Jerry 

This is the house that Jack built. This is the cat That ate the malt That lay in the house that Jack built. This is the cat, That killed the rat, That ate the malt That lay in the house that Jack built. This is the dog, That worried the cat, That killed the rat, That ate the malt That lay in the house that Jack built. The repetitive progression structure of this classic Mother Goose nursery rhyme has been applied in many variations with many stories in many cultures. In all its expressions, the progression (Read More...)
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