Posts Tagged Presentation

Getting Things Done with Mind Maps

11-17-2009 9-08-33 AMLast week, I delivered a webinar presentation to David Allen’s GTD Connect community.

It was great fun to both create and deliver. I mapped out everything that I had wanted to accomplish including the entire content of the presentation. Then, I built my PowerPoint presentation using my map as a guide.

For a full replay of the webinar and to view all the content, sign up for a free trial of GTD Connect or, if you’re already a member, view it here.

I’ve posted (via SlideShare) the highlights of the presentation below… Read the rest of this entry »

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What’s the Value of Visual Thinking?

Get Visual 11-4-2009 8-07-09 AMI’m a fan of David Armano’s work. Here’s a great presentation from the recent BlogWorld 2009 conference in Las Vegas.

It’s a fast but worthwhile journey, exploring how to Get Visual in 4 M’s and six steps to Getting Visual…

Read the rest of this entry »

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Become a Presentation Superhero

This Saturday, I hung out at SlideShare’s office to attend the first Presentation Camp! My original intent was to learn from the great list of attendees, but then I realized, why not present? Here’s how to become a presentation superhero!

The Setup:

First, I introduced the scenario where you’ve just been given the opportunity to develop an important presentation. But, you only have a day to do it and you’re starting from scratch. How do you get it done? Where do you start? Where do you take it? How do you get your thoughts out of your head and into a final product? Enter mind mapping…

What’s Mind Mapping

Now that the stage was set, I had to explain what the heck is a mind map. Borrowing from idea mapping author Jamie Nast, I presented the concept of blooms, flows and the final result, a mind map of blooms and flows. Our topic for this co-created mind map was how to develop a killer presentation.

So, quickly…a bloom captures ideas and surrounds them around the topic that you’re thinking about…

A flow continues to break down an idea into greater detail…

Mind maps are visual representations of your ideas and information, which you can create quickly by combining the concept of ‘blooms’ and ‘flows’. It’ll wind up looking something like this map which is borrowed mostly from Roger Parker’s speech planning map.

The Traditional Approach (or, in other words, what’s the PAIN?)

Next, I used the Beyond Bullet Points example of creating content for a presentation. A traditional approach would use a tool like Microsoft Word for creating your outline before diving into PowerPoint. There are major drawbacks to using Word for this as you quickly lose perspective and relationships of presentation points and details when it is spread across 10+ pages of a word document.

The Solution

The same content was presented in a map where you could see the relationships between your points and easily reorganize them to ensure that you are maintaining a clean, logical flow and providing clear, persuasive support for your desired presentation outcome.

Next, I presented some of the advantages of using mind mapping software to develop your content instead of using your whiteboard or pen and paper. The list could go on; I just covered a few of the key points.

I wrapped it up with some Q&A on how to be a Presentation Super-hero. I think I forgot to show my contact info, but here’s my second chance! 

Here are my presentation maps:

  1. Leave a comment below if you’d like a copy of my Presentation Camp SF Map, How to Map Your Way to Better Presentations.
  2. The Beyond Bullet Points Map Template (requires MindManager)
  3. The Beyond Bullet Points Map Example (requires MindManager)

 

More Great Presentations

Beyond mapping, there was a great group of presenters, presentations and insights shared throughout the day. Here’s a glimpse of who attended:

  • Camen Taran gave a great presentation on Better Beginnings which covered how to engage your audience in 30 seconds! DOs: Create an emotional connection right away  DONTs: Start with an agenda (yawn), lack passion, apologize or be self-indulgent!
  • Cliff Atkinson, author of Beyond Bullet Points, got everyone involved in an improv presentation where audience members created a story from a set of PowerPoint images in real-time. Each participant shared for 30 seconds and then the next participant continued the storyline. It was great to show how much humor and information can be conveyed with images, not bullets!
  • Stowe Boyd led an interesting discussion about how services like Twitter may change real-time and web conferencing in the near future…
  • Terry Gault engaged the group with a presentation on The Creation Myth. Ways to brand yourself or your company. If you want to know a bit more about Mindjet’s creation, check out the Cancer Code story of our founder, Mike Jetter.
  • Scott Schwertly, presentation whiz-kid and founder of ethos3 and slide magnet, delivered a Larry Lessig styled presentation on delivering presentations to Gen X & Y.  
  • Dave McClure, the master of 500 hats, delivered an edgy presentation on…how shall I say this…Start Up Viagra: how to ‘turn on’ a Venture Capitalist.
  • Jeff Widman, who I met at the GTD Summit and is currently blogging for VentureBeat.com, discussed the ‘what, when, where, why and hows’ of story boarding for presentations. Jeff faciliatated the conversation and I built a live map about Storyboards to record the group’s conversations. (Use the Storyboards link to download the map).  

There were some other great sessions which I did not get a chance to see. For more info about this event and other Presentation camps, check out the SlideShare.net blog.

Don’t forget, add a comment below if you’d like a copy of the presentation map that I delivered. Thanks!

About the Author: Michael Deutch is Mindjet’s Chief Evangelist, content contributor for the Mindjet Blog and the Mindjet Connections newsletter. Get more from Michael on Twitter.

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How to Make a Great Presentation: Mapping Your Content

Making a great presentation isn’t as easy as it sounds…
have you noticed?

I’ve recently changed my role at Mindjet to be the official evangelist. What does that mean? All of a sudden, I became a professional communicator! Blogging, writing articles and…making presentations! I’m giving many presentations these days…on the web, podcasts, conference calls, and live events.  I’ll be using this blog not only as communication medium for Mindjet but also a crucible to test out, discuss (with YOU via comments) and share winning strategies to become a more productive worker and effective communicator…in both work and life.

So, back to making great presentations…There are a lot of factors to consider…from research to design, organization to delivery. But no matter how great the delivery is, or how beautiful the map turns out, if the presentation isn’t built on solid content, it will be difficult, if not impossible to succeed. The content is the foundation that you can build upon to tell a winning story that connects you with your audience.

Regarding content and telling great stories, here are a few questions I’m now finding myself asking:

  • How do I know what content to use?
  • How much is the right amount of information for the presentation?
  • What’s relevant to the audience?
  • What extraneous bits can be left on the cutting room floor?

 

Mapping Out Your Story

The following map template has been inspired by Cliff Atkinson’s book, Beyond Bullet Points. Cliff teaches us, through his book and web sites, how we can change the world by making great presentations! I’ve created a presentation map outline that can help develop a story for 5, 15, or even 45 minute presentations.

Download map     Try MindManager

Do you have any presentation map templates or tips to share?

About the Author: Michael Deutch is Mindjet’s Chief Evangelist, content contributor for the Mindjet Blog and the Mindjet Connections newsletter. Get more from Michael on Twitter.

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10 Steps to Great Presentation Maps

If you’re reading this blog, the odds are that you already know mind mapping is a great way to organize your thoughts to prepare presentations. While some people use MindManager it to ‘think out’ and create their PowerPoint slide decks, many others use MindManager to deliver presentations using maps. Like PowerPoint, there are many ways to screw up a map presentation! And like PowerPoint, we can learn a lot from PowerPoint presentation experts like Garr Reynolds on how to make great MindManager map presentations.

To kick off a series on making your presentations shine, I borrowed from Garr’s excellent post on his top ten slide tips. Here’s the mapping perspective:

1. Keep it Simple

Mapping is a new paradigm for many in your audience. Opening up a map may be initially distracting and you don’t want to spend a lot of time discussing mapping, taking away time from your presentation goals. Keeping it simple let’s you display information in your map that supports you, the speaker, and acts as a supplement to your presentation. Garr shares “People came to hear you and be moved or informed (or both) by you and your message. Don’t let your message and your ability to tell a story get derailed by slides that are unnecessarily complicated, busy, or full of what Edward Tufte calls “chart junk.” Nothing in your slide should be superfluous, ever.”

2. Limit Bullet Points & Text

Here’s a challenging aspect that I’ve witnessed for mappers. It’s a great relief to map out all your thoughts and the natural tendency is to want to share your brilliance with the world. Remeber, your presentation is for the benefit of the audience. It’s easy to overwhelm them with complicated maps containing all your detailed points. This will either bore them or put them in a catatonic state of overwhelm called ‘map shock’. Garr indicates that the best PowerPoint slides have no text at all. Can the same be true for map topics? This may sound crazy at first but remember that you are giving the presentation not the map. Let it support you, not the other way around.

Does your map need to be a standalone presentation that you can distribute to others if they missed the event? Worried that an image will not convey your thoughts as eloquently as all of your topics (formally known as bullets in the world of PowerPoint)? Another best practice suggested by Garr is to send a document that highlights your content. That’s easily accomplished with MindManager 8’s export to Microsoft Word.

In the following slide examples, you’ll lose your audience and the tendency would be to read these slides:

The next two slide examples allow the presenter to shine, sharing valuable stories and insights with the audience. The slides no longer compete with you or distract the audience.

3. Make Your Maps for Presentations

Garr’s original topic here is to avoid too many object builds and slide transitions in PowerPoint. While maps are visual representations of your thinking process, keep your audience in mind at all times and bridge the gap by making the content easy to view without getting lost in the layers of your beautiful, but complex thinking. The audience will get distracted if your map is constantly diving into deeper levels. Organize your content carefully, keeping your audience experience in mind. Use number of sup-topics and deeper levels of your map judiciously.

4. Use High-Quality Graphics

Map topics can contain images & text. In some cases, you may opt to use stand-alone images to convey your points. When you do so, always use high-quality graphics including photographs. Garr’s advice for slides also holds true for maps:

  • You can take your own high-quality photographs with your digital camera, purchase professional stock photography, or use the plethora of high-quality images available on line (be cautious of copyright issues, however). Never simply stretch a small, low-resolution photo to make it fit your layout – doing so will degrade the resolution even further.
  • Avoid using PowerPoint Clip Art or other cartoonish line art. Again, if it is included in the software, your audience has seen it a million times before. It may have been interesting in 1993, but today the inclusion of such clip art often undermines the professionalism of the presenter. There are exceptions, of course, and not all PowerPoint art is dreadful, but use carefully and judiciously.

One last point on using imagery within maps: map markers are great for managing content in your maps (show status, % complete, etc…) but are poor choices for graphics in map presentations. They appear too small when projected and may get lost if used on larger maps with many markers.

5. Have a Visual Theme

It doesn’t take long to create a map style that is either consistent with your branding or your client’s brand. Use it as your visual theme for your presentation instead of relying on MindManager’s default map styles. Map styles adjust your background as well as the default look and feel for map topics and fonts used throughout the map. These styles can be saved and reused for future presentations.

6. Use Appropriate Charts

Using MindManager’s embedded spreadsheets, Microsoft Excel integration or ability to cut and paste images into topics, you can display a variety of charts to support your presentation points. Here are a few tips from Garr on how to use the appropriate charts:

Pie Charts: Used to show percentages. Limit the slices to 4-6 and contrast the most important slice either with color or by exploding the slice.

Vertical Bar Charts: Used to show changes in quantity over time. Best if you limit the bars to 4-8.

Horizontal Bar Charts: Used to compare quantities. For example, comparing sales figures among the four regions of the company.

Line Charts: Used to demonstrate trends. For example, here is a simple line chart showing that our sales have gone up every year. The trend is good. The arrow comes in later to underscore the point: Our future looks good!

7. Use Color Well

Color can be a powerful part of your presentation. Colors evoke feelings and emotions. The right color choices help persuade, motivate, improve learning and retention.

Garr provides some great starter points to consider when building out your presentation map styles:

  • You do not need to be an expert in color theory, but it’s good for business professionals to know at least a bit on the subject.
  • Colors can be divided into two general categories: Cool (such as blue and green) and Warm (such as orange and red).
  • Cool colors work best for backgrounds as they appear to recede away from us into the background.
  • Warm colors generally work best for objects in the foreground (such as text) because they appear to be coming at us.
  • If you will be presenting in a dark room (such as a large hall), then a dark background (dark blue, grey, etc.) with white or light text will work fine.
  • But if you plan to keep most of the lights on (which is highly advisable) then a white background with black or dark text works much better.
  • In rooms with a good deal of ambient light, a screen image with a dark background and light text tends to washout, but dark text on a light background will maintain its visual intensity a bit better.

8. Choose Your Fonts Well

This is another great presentation lesson. I’ve seen many presentations as well as documents that are overloaded with competing fonts. Your use of fonts should be deliberate, using a consistent set of fonts throughout the entire map.

Here are some other valuable tips from Garr:

  • Serif fonts were designed to be used in documents filled with lots of text. Serif fonts are said to be easier to read at small point sizes, but for on screen presentations the serifs tend to get lost due to the relatively low resolution of projectors.
  • San-serif fonts are generally best for presentations, but try to avoid the ubiquitous Helvetica. I often choose to use Gill Sans as it is somewhere in between a serif and a sans-serif font and is professional yet friendly and “conversational.”
  • And perhaps one of my favorite font tips: Regardless of what font you choose, make sure the text can be read from the back of the room.

9. Use Video or Audio

Our CEO at Mindjet, Scott Raskin, is a huge fan of using videos to drive home key points or to kick off a presentation with a little humor. Garr recommends using video and audio when appropriate. With MindManager 8, you can use video clips without ever leaving the map. Just add a hyperlink to your video on the topic and launch it within the embedded browser. Using videos, according to Garr, not only will illustrate your point better, it will also serve as a change of pace thereby increasing the interest of your audience.

10. Spend Time in the Slide Sorter (or Better, in MindManager)

The Segmentation Principle of multimedia learning theory states that people comprehend better when information is presented in small chunks or segments. So if you’re using MindManager to plan out PowerPoint presentations or using it for presentations, you can open up your map to the various levels to see how information is presented to the audience. Verify that it flows naturally and logically. Could you reorganize your topics to make your points more persuasively? Use your map to capture the gestalt of your entire presentation — the holistic view or big picture can be best visualized with MindManager. Use this view to remove extraneous pieces of data and you’ll increase visual clarity and improve communication.

More Resources:

Here are a couple of other great resources from Chuck Frey’s mindmapping software blog to help you map out great presentations:

What presentation strategies and tips do you have to share? Add your comments below.

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Getting Projects Done with MindManager 8, Google Docs and Basecamp!

The other day, I posted about the integration between MindManager and Google. Today, I’ll show you how that can supercharge team productivity by showing how it can be used to plan and manage a project. MindManager brings together all the disparate systems used to plan, manage and deliver projects! 

See the Big Picture with MindManager

In early March, Mindjet will be exhibiting at David Allen’s GTD Summit. Our decision to participate was only made a few weeks ago. So, a Mindjet team quickly assembled and we used a MindManager map to capture everything we knew about the project and develop a plan of action. Here’s a snapshot of what this map looked like:

 

Access All Your Project’s Google Documents:

When you open up the Overview branch, you see a series of topics that provide an overview and logistics for the event. I created a Google Document with a copy of the event’s Agenda and linked it into my event map. I added this document so I could easily highlight the sessions that I want to attend and share that with the team that will be at the exhibit. Other documents like event flyers, the speakers and their bios, and legal contracts were added and tracked within the map as well.

 

Track Budgets with Google Spreadsheets:

In order to keep expenses under control, a Google Spreadsheet was linked to the map. Team members can independently access the Google spreadsheet or even simultaneously update the expenses as they become known. At the same time, the spreadsheet can be accessed via the map that pulls together all the moving parts on this project. You can even access your Google Docs with your mobile device.

Add notes, comments and ideas on how to save money into the map where it will not get lost within the clutter of your budget spreadsheet. These items can be tracked, reviewed and updated during your team status meetings.

 

Present with Google Presentations:

Another topic in the map links to a Google Presentation that introduces "Mind Mapping & GTD" to prospects that we meet at the conference. Why show a presentation and not a MindManager map? Well, I did it to illustrate this point for the blog but also believe in using other familiar mediums to present and highlight the power of Mindjet.

Again, different team members can be invited into this presentation to update slides, add images & content. In the map, other meta-information can be added to track status, assign ownership, add comments, etc…

 

Track Status in Basecamp:

The team used Basecamp to track project tasks because we wanted a way to do it from within MindManager, a browser or our iPhones. With a link to the Basecamp project added into the map, I access my tasks, update status and check the team’s progress on their tasks.

 

More Ways to Tap into the Power of MindManager:

Beyond what I’ve listed above, you can also add the following elements into your project maps:

  • Link to other web sites & web-based applications
  • Attach Microsoft Office files or files from other applications
  • Embed spreadsheet ranges directly in the map
  • Add Microsoft Outlook emails, notes & tasks to your maps
  • Plan tasks and view Gantt charts with JCV Gantt
  • Insert task information to track progress on any topic
  • Focus on specific areas with map filters
  • And much more…

 

Extend MindManager with Mindjet Connect:

Add Mindjet Connect into the mix and you’ll supercharge the planning efforts with the following capabilities:

  • Edit project maps with team members simultaneously
  • Access maps anywhere with MindManager Web
  • Host web-conferences to collaborate with teammates in different locations
  • Share project related files in workspaces, saving versions as you go

 

Summary:

Avoid project chaos by bringing together all of its moving parts with MindManager. Get clarity, see the big picture and access to all the details so you can have faster team meetings, make better decisions and deliver great results!

The project above is real but I created the map, Google & Basecamp additions today to illustrate how we could have used these applications. If you’re planning to go to the GTD Summit, make sure to stop by our booth and say hello. I’d love to meet you! If you can’t make the event, Follow Michael Deutch on Twitter and I’ll tweet some updates live from the event!

Do you work use Mindjet software in interesting ways?

Let me know at Michael (dot) Deutch (at) Mindjet (dot) com! 

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Map your way to better Presentations

David Lee King, MindManager user and writer/speaker about library websites and emerging digital technologies, has aggregated some of his favorite presentation tips we’d like to share with you. David takes you through his personal presentation tips, tips for presenters of any kind, tips specifically for online presentations and tips specifically for training sessions. There are some nice basic reminders here to ensure your speaking success, I highly recommend checking out this post. In his general presentation tips, David shares how to weave mind mapping into your speaking prep.

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