10 Power Tips for Presenting
with Computer Projection
When was the last time you sat through a terrible presentation using computer projection? When was the last time
you gave one? If you want to avoid disaster and give your career a boost then apply these ten tips the next time
you present with the computer projector. And if you want to do a friend a favour then slide them a copy of these
tips before their next presentation.
The biggest mistake is to believe that cool graphics will make up for your lack of presentation skills. If you can
not cook - it does not matter how good the stove is. Use these tips to develop your presentation skills and work
with the tools. The computer is only a tool. You are the presenter. When you present with multi-media you are more
than a performer. You are a producer. Be aware and stay in control of what you and your technology are doing to the
audience.
1. Stand on the left side as the audience sees you. Because we read from left to right your audience can
look at you then follow your gesture to the screen. Their eyes are comfortably moving left to right, they read the
text then they return to you. If you stood on the right side their eyes have to make too many movements to read the
slides and watch you. If you present using Hebrew, (read right to left), stand on the right side of the screen. If
you present using old Chinese, (top to bottom), climb on top of the screen, (just kidding).
2. You are the show. Be heard and be seen. Stand away from the computer and in the light. Use a remote mouse
to get away from the computer. Too many people hide in the dark behind the laptop. Arrange the lighting in the room
so that you are in the light while the screen is dark. You might need to unscrew some of the ceiling lights to get
it right.
3. Turn off the screen savers on your computer - any that are part of the Windows software - plus the one
that comes with the laptop. It is embarrassing for you to be talking about important points you thought were on the
screen while they are looking at flying toasters or Bart Simpson. It is even worse when your energy saver kicks in
and shuts it all down. Remember to adjust this as well.
4. Learn how to use the switch that toggles both screens on. Often this is a function key. This toggle
controls whether your laptop or projector - or both are on. You want both on so you can look at the laptop while
the audience watches the same image behind you on the screen. Occasionally glance quickly at the screen just to
check. But put your laptop between you and the audience so you can be looking at your audience while speaking.
5. Colours appear differently on the projector, the laptop, and the desktop where you designed it. If the
exact colour is important, (perhaps for a company logo), test and adjust the colour ahead of time.
6. Keep it simple with the colours and special effects. Use no more than six colours on a slide. Use
slide transitions and builds to entertain without detracting from your message. Effects like
partial build reveals one point at a time allowing your audience to stay right with you.
7. Motion attracts their eyes. Gesture to the screen when you want them to look there. Use moving text to
grab attention. Stand still when you want them to look at the screen. Move when you want to capture their attention
again.
8. Test your slides for size and readability by standing six feet away from the monitor. If you can read the
monitor then your audience will likely be able to read the screen. If they can not comfortably see and read your
screen all you did was to annoy them.
9. Arrive early and test everything. Re-read this line - again!
10. Murphy loves technology. Be prepared with backup files, an extra power source for the laptop and
projector and spare batteries for your remote mouse. It only takes one little thing to spoil it. Be prepared to
give your presentation without the hardware.
Bonus TIP: People buy you - not your technology. You are always selling
yourself - don't get lost in the technology.
10 Power Tips for Presenting with Computer
Projectors
© George Torok is The Public Speaking
Pro.
As a professional speaker
he has delivered over 1,000 presentations. He coaches executives to deliver million dollar presentations and has
trained hundreds of managers, sales reps and professionals to deliver more effective
presentations.
Yet George Torok was a shy
high school student who refused to speak to an audience. Since then he learned and developed the public speaking
skills of a professional speaker.
Contact him to arrange
presentation skills training for your business associates or speech coaching for your
executives.
Call direct
905-335-1997
www.Public-Speaking-Pro.biz
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