Powerpoint is an essential tool for most people and we have put everything you need to make learning how to use powerpoint easy. We hope you enjoy this presentation and if you think it will benefit others please share.
This document provides an overview of an intermediate PowerPoint workshop. The workshop will teach attendees how to create PowerPoint presentations, use various functions like styles and animations, and understand best practices. It outlines the content which includes how to create and save presentations, insert objects, use templates, add animations and transitions. It also discusses design elements like slide size and alignment as well as dos and don'ts of PowerPoint design.
This guide provides instructions for using PowerPoint to create effective presentations. It discusses the various toolbars in PowerPoint and how to select presentation options. It also covers how to create and organize slides, including adding text, images, charts and animation effects. The guide emphasizes balancing different design elements on slides to ensure the content is clear and visually pleasing.
Why do so many people bash PowerPoint? Learn to use this tool more effectively, impress your audience, and save time creating your professional content as well! More tutorials can be found on my YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/smcvey85.
The document provides an overview of key features in Microsoft PowerPoint, including how to use the ribbon interface, add and format slides, insert images and other content, choose themes, and add speaker notes. Some key points covered include:
- The ribbon is used to navigate menu items in PowerPoint similarly to other MS Office programs.
- New slides can be added by clicking the "New Slide" button and choosing a layout, which determines placeholder positions and formatting.
- Images and other content can be inserted either by clicking icons within placeholders or using options on the "Insert" tab.
- Themes determine the overall look of a presentation through features like color schemes, fonts, and placeholder positioning.
- Speaker
This document provides instructions for enhancing PowerPoint presentations with images, shapes, WordArt, and formatting backgrounds. It discusses how to insert and format images, apply styles and effects, resize and rotate images. It also covers inserting and formatting shapes and WordArt, applying themes, deleting slides, and using the format painter. Background formatting such as solid, gradient, picture/texture, and pattern fills are also explained.
Microsoft® office creating your first presentationbholmes
This document provides an overview and lessons for creating a first presentation using Microsoft PowerPoint. It discusses the basics of navigating the PowerPoint interface, adding and formatting text on slides, inserting slides, applying design templates and slide layouts, and adding notes. The goals are to learn how to add text and images to slides, navigate slides, apply templates, arrange content using layouts, print handouts and notes, and prepare for presenting.
This document provides an agenda and overview for a Microsoft Powerpoint 2010 training presented by an instructional design team. The agenda covers the ribbon and toolbar, creating and customizing slides, adding slide transitions and animations, inserting multimedia like images and video, and guidelines for effective presentations. Attendees will participate in activities to practice these skills and apply what they learned.
This document provides an overview of an intermediate PowerPoint workshop. The workshop will teach attendees how to create PowerPoint presentations, use various functions like styles and animations, and understand best practices. It outlines the content which includes how to create and save presentations, insert objects, use templates, add animations and transitions. It also discusses design elements like slide size and alignment as well as dos and don'ts of PowerPoint design.
This guide provides instructions for using PowerPoint to create effective presentations. It discusses the various toolbars in PowerPoint and how to select presentation options. It also covers how to create and organize slides, including adding text, images, charts and animation effects. The guide emphasizes balancing different design elements on slides to ensure the content is clear and visually pleasing.
Why do so many people bash PowerPoint? Learn to use this tool more effectively, impress your audience, and save time creating your professional content as well! More tutorials can be found on my YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/smcvey85.
The document provides an overview of key features in Microsoft PowerPoint, including how to use the ribbon interface, add and format slides, insert images and other content, choose themes, and add speaker notes. Some key points covered include:
- The ribbon is used to navigate menu items in PowerPoint similarly to other MS Office programs.
- New slides can be added by clicking the "New Slide" button and choosing a layout, which determines placeholder positions and formatting.
- Images and other content can be inserted either by clicking icons within placeholders or using options on the "Insert" tab.
- Themes determine the overall look of a presentation through features like color schemes, fonts, and placeholder positioning.
- Speaker
This document provides instructions for enhancing PowerPoint presentations with images, shapes, WordArt, and formatting backgrounds. It discusses how to insert and format images, apply styles and effects, resize and rotate images. It also covers inserting and formatting shapes and WordArt, applying themes, deleting slides, and using the format painter. Background formatting such as solid, gradient, picture/texture, and pattern fills are also explained.
Microsoft® office creating your first presentationbholmes
This document provides an overview and lessons for creating a first presentation using Microsoft PowerPoint. It discusses the basics of navigating the PowerPoint interface, adding and formatting text on slides, inserting slides, applying design templates and slide layouts, and adding notes. The goals are to learn how to add text and images to slides, navigate slides, apply templates, arrange content using layouts, print handouts and notes, and prepare for presenting.
This document provides an agenda and overview for a Microsoft Powerpoint 2010 training presented by an instructional design team. The agenda covers the ribbon and toolbar, creating and customizing slides, adding slide transitions and animations, inserting multimedia like images and video, and guidelines for effective presentations. Attendees will participate in activities to practice these skills and apply what they learned.
This document provides an overview of techniques for creating and delivering effective PowerPoint presentations. It covers topics such as starting a new presentation using templates or wizards, adding different types of content like text, images, and animations, various slide views for editing, options for printing and delivering presentations, and resources for additional training.
This document provides guidelines for creating effective PowerPoint presentations, including tips on slide layout, design, formatting, and delivery. It recommends using a consistent template and color scheme throughout the presentation. Key points include using minimal text, short bullet points, high-contrast images and charts, and focusing each slide around one main idea. The presentation should tell a clear story, keep the audience engaged, and leave them with a strong takeaway message.
PowerPoint is a Microsoft program used to create slide presentations. It allows users to add text, images, video, audio, and charts to slides. Key PowerPoint terms include the ribbon, slides, slide layouts, slide views (normal, sorter, show), themes, and transitions. Themes control colors, fonts and effects, while transitions add movement between slides during a presentation. Users can customize the ribbon and quick access toolbar. Slides contain placeholders that hold different types of content.
This document provides an overview of creating and managing presentations in Microsoft PowerPoint 2010. It discusses planning an effective presentation, examining the PowerPoint window and interface, entering slide text, adding new slides, applying design themes, comparing different presentation views, and printing a PowerPoint presentation. The chapter objectives are defined for each section to guide the user in learning key PowerPoint functions.
The document provides guidance on designing effective PowerPoint presentations, including structuring the message, following design principles, selecting themes, fonts, images and using animation sparingly. It emphasizes practicing the presentation to ensure successful delivery that engages the audience.
This document provides instructions for creating a basic presentation in Microsoft PowerPoint 2007. It discusses getting familiar with the PowerPoint window layout, adding new slides, choosing slide layouts, inserting text, inserting slides from other presentations, creating speaker notes, choosing a theme, and inserting pictures. The document contains screenshots and step-by-step directions to guide users through the process of setting up their first PowerPoint presentation.
This document provides templates and examples for creating quiz shows, photo albums, and pitchbooks in PowerPoint. It demonstrates new features in PowerPoint 2007 like SmartArt, themes, layouts, and widescreen presentation tips. Sample slides show various layouts for presenting financial reports, market analyses, and business summaries in a pitchbook format. The document aims to help users make the most of PowerPoint's presentation capabilities.
1) To edit footage in Adobe Premier Pro CS6, you first need to import your footage from an SD card into a folder on your hard drive. Then open Premier Pro CS6 and start a new project, selecting the correct video, audio, and frame rate settings to match your footage.
2) Once your project is created, you can drag your footage from the media browser into the timeline to begin editing. You can cut clips, add transitions and effects, and overlay titles.
3) When you have finished editing, you render your project by setting export settings for video, audio, and file format (usually H.264 mp4). Then click export to convert your edited project into a shareable
Microsoft PowerPoint is a presentation program developed by Microsoft as part of the Microsoft Office suite. It was launched in 1990 and runs on Windows and Mac operating systems. PowerPoint 2007 introduced new features like better sharing capabilities, digital signatures, and a new user interface. PowerPoint is a multimedia tool that can be used for projects, reports, tutorials, and presentations in learning and business. It has tools for creating and displaying slides with text, images, video, and audio. Effective PowerPoint presentations are concise, visually engaging, well-organized, and technically well-executed during the live presentation.
This lesson discusses organizing clips in Final Cut Pro X using events, keywords, ratings and notes. It covers:
1. Organizing clips by manually assigning keywords, ratings clips, and creating smart collections to arrange media for easy access.
2. Using the event library and browser to organize, sort, filter and find clips by applying metadata like keywords, ratings and notes.
3. Adding user metadata like keywords, ratings and notes to clips to customize clip organization for a faster workflow. Keywords are applied by creating collections in the event library and browser.
Using PowerPoint to Design Effective PresentationsRamrao Desai
This document provides guidance on using PowerPoint to design effective presentations. It covers topics such as planning content, getting started with design, displaying text and graphics, using animation, and presenting. The document instructs the reader to follow along with the slides and complete tasks when prompted. It emphasizes keeping content concise and easy to understand through techniques like using bullet points, parallel structure, appropriate fonts, colors and sizing for visuals, and purposeful animation. Tips are provided for delivery including adapting to the environment, using body language and eye contact, and handling questions confidently.
TSweeney training end users presentationTim Sweeney
This training module teaches how to create a basic PowerPoint presentation. It covers how to create a new presentation, add and format text and images on slides, choose a theme and slide layouts, add transitions between slides, and play a slideshow. The document provides step-by-step instructions on each task, including screenshots, and gives an example presentation on evacuation procedures for a building as a demonstration.
Are you a bit noobish at gamification? No problem! StylelLearn got you cover with this quick intro to gamification and the Mechanics, Dynamics and Aesthetics (MDA) framework for game design. Conquer your noobness and become gamification dangerous ; )
This document is a guide to free resources for creating visually impressive presentations. It provides direct links to websites for free fonts, colors, icons, photos, backgrounds, charts, infographics, PSD/vector files, inspiration, and extras. The guide aims to provide creative people with everything they might need for their design process. It encourages using the resources to complement unique creativity and create designs for all to share.
You and I have wasted enough time on PowerPoint Presentations. It's a necessary evil, but there are much better ways to approach it. Based off a talk I gave @ APTS. Enjoy!
Your welcome email (or lack thereof) sets the tone for the email marketing relationship you have with your subscribers—make sure it's sending the right message!
Did you know that Tuesdays at 11am is one of the worst possible times to send your email campaigns? Stop relying on guesswork and hunches to drive your email marketing--you might be shooting yourself in the foot. Learn How to Tweak Your Email Messaging to Generate More Leads!
View full presentation here: http://www.hubspot.com/the-science-of-email-marketing/
Pitching Ideas: How to sell your ideas to othersJeroen van Geel
Learn how to convince others of your UX ideas by understanding them.
We are good in designing usable and engaging products and services. We understand the user's needs and have a toolkit with dozens of deliverables. But for some reason it remains difficult to sell an idea or concept to team members, managers or clients. After this session that problem will be solved!
Selling your ideas and convincing others is one of the most undervalued assets in our field. This ranges from convincing a colleague to use a certain design pattern to selling research to your boss and convincing a client to go for your concept. You can come up with the best ideas in the world, but if it is presented in the wrong way these ideas will die a lonely dead. This is sad, because everybody can learn how to bring a message across. The main thing is that you know what to pay attention to.
In this session I will take you on a journey through the world of presenting ideas. We will move through the heads of clients and your colleagues, learn what their thoughts and needs are. We will move to the core of your idea and into the world of psychology.
https://www.wrike.com/blog/08/27/2014/Crowdfunding-Sites-Infographic - In the last few years, the crowdfunding scene has exploded. It's not just about Kickstarter and IndieGoGo anymore. Now there are hundreds of platforms to choose from, with more popping up every day. But which crowdfunding site is best for your startup, small business, or charitable cause?
In this infographic, we cover 26 Top Crowdfunding Sites with all the essential details so you can choose wisely.
More info here on the blog: https://www.wrike.com/blog/08/27/2014/Crowdfunding-Sites-Infographic
The eBooks you create have the potential to become an important pillar in your content marketing mix.
Do it right and these high-converting "lead magnets" can continue to work for your content marketing machine long after the average blog post has ran out of steam.
But first, we need to move past the assumption that great eBooks are merely written and start building them with all the right parts!
Using icons is a great way to add visuals to your presentation. There are many ways to get icons online, some are even free. But if you need a specific icon that you can’t find or if you want a special spin to your icon (color, shadow etc) – you can use PowerPoint’s great (and somewhat hidden) “Merge Shapes” commands to create your own icons.
Using these commands you can combine basic shapes into other shapes. You can union and subtract shapes. You can intersect and combine. All while still working natively inside PowerPoint. Once you have created an icon you can change the color, filling and add shadows as needed.
It is just as fun as building with Lego blocks! Well, almost..
This is a guide in 15 steps showing you how you can use these commands to create your own icon - the example we are using is a calendar icon.
This document provides an overview of techniques for creating and delivering effective PowerPoint presentations. It covers topics such as starting a new presentation using templates or wizards, adding different types of content like text, images, and animations, various slide views for editing, options for printing and delivering presentations, and resources for additional training.
This document provides guidelines for creating effective PowerPoint presentations, including tips on slide layout, design, formatting, and delivery. It recommends using a consistent template and color scheme throughout the presentation. Key points include using minimal text, short bullet points, high-contrast images and charts, and focusing each slide around one main idea. The presentation should tell a clear story, keep the audience engaged, and leave them with a strong takeaway message.
PowerPoint is a Microsoft program used to create slide presentations. It allows users to add text, images, video, audio, and charts to slides. Key PowerPoint terms include the ribbon, slides, slide layouts, slide views (normal, sorter, show), themes, and transitions. Themes control colors, fonts and effects, while transitions add movement between slides during a presentation. Users can customize the ribbon and quick access toolbar. Slides contain placeholders that hold different types of content.
This document provides an overview of creating and managing presentations in Microsoft PowerPoint 2010. It discusses planning an effective presentation, examining the PowerPoint window and interface, entering slide text, adding new slides, applying design themes, comparing different presentation views, and printing a PowerPoint presentation. The chapter objectives are defined for each section to guide the user in learning key PowerPoint functions.
The document provides guidance on designing effective PowerPoint presentations, including structuring the message, following design principles, selecting themes, fonts, images and using animation sparingly. It emphasizes practicing the presentation to ensure successful delivery that engages the audience.
This document provides instructions for creating a basic presentation in Microsoft PowerPoint 2007. It discusses getting familiar with the PowerPoint window layout, adding new slides, choosing slide layouts, inserting text, inserting slides from other presentations, creating speaker notes, choosing a theme, and inserting pictures. The document contains screenshots and step-by-step directions to guide users through the process of setting up their first PowerPoint presentation.
This document provides templates and examples for creating quiz shows, photo albums, and pitchbooks in PowerPoint. It demonstrates new features in PowerPoint 2007 like SmartArt, themes, layouts, and widescreen presentation tips. Sample slides show various layouts for presenting financial reports, market analyses, and business summaries in a pitchbook format. The document aims to help users make the most of PowerPoint's presentation capabilities.
1) To edit footage in Adobe Premier Pro CS6, you first need to import your footage from an SD card into a folder on your hard drive. Then open Premier Pro CS6 and start a new project, selecting the correct video, audio, and frame rate settings to match your footage.
2) Once your project is created, you can drag your footage from the media browser into the timeline to begin editing. You can cut clips, add transitions and effects, and overlay titles.
3) When you have finished editing, you render your project by setting export settings for video, audio, and file format (usually H.264 mp4). Then click export to convert your edited project into a shareable
Microsoft PowerPoint is a presentation program developed by Microsoft as part of the Microsoft Office suite. It was launched in 1990 and runs on Windows and Mac operating systems. PowerPoint 2007 introduced new features like better sharing capabilities, digital signatures, and a new user interface. PowerPoint is a multimedia tool that can be used for projects, reports, tutorials, and presentations in learning and business. It has tools for creating and displaying slides with text, images, video, and audio. Effective PowerPoint presentations are concise, visually engaging, well-organized, and technically well-executed during the live presentation.
This lesson discusses organizing clips in Final Cut Pro X using events, keywords, ratings and notes. It covers:
1. Organizing clips by manually assigning keywords, ratings clips, and creating smart collections to arrange media for easy access.
2. Using the event library and browser to organize, sort, filter and find clips by applying metadata like keywords, ratings and notes.
3. Adding user metadata like keywords, ratings and notes to clips to customize clip organization for a faster workflow. Keywords are applied by creating collections in the event library and browser.
Using PowerPoint to Design Effective PresentationsRamrao Desai
This document provides guidance on using PowerPoint to design effective presentations. It covers topics such as planning content, getting started with design, displaying text and graphics, using animation, and presenting. The document instructs the reader to follow along with the slides and complete tasks when prompted. It emphasizes keeping content concise and easy to understand through techniques like using bullet points, parallel structure, appropriate fonts, colors and sizing for visuals, and purposeful animation. Tips are provided for delivery including adapting to the environment, using body language and eye contact, and handling questions confidently.
TSweeney training end users presentationTim Sweeney
This training module teaches how to create a basic PowerPoint presentation. It covers how to create a new presentation, add and format text and images on slides, choose a theme and slide layouts, add transitions between slides, and play a slideshow. The document provides step-by-step instructions on each task, including screenshots, and gives an example presentation on evacuation procedures for a building as a demonstration.
Are you a bit noobish at gamification? No problem! StylelLearn got you cover with this quick intro to gamification and the Mechanics, Dynamics and Aesthetics (MDA) framework for game design. Conquer your noobness and become gamification dangerous ; )
This document is a guide to free resources for creating visually impressive presentations. It provides direct links to websites for free fonts, colors, icons, photos, backgrounds, charts, infographics, PSD/vector files, inspiration, and extras. The guide aims to provide creative people with everything they might need for their design process. It encourages using the resources to complement unique creativity and create designs for all to share.
You and I have wasted enough time on PowerPoint Presentations. It's a necessary evil, but there are much better ways to approach it. Based off a talk I gave @ APTS. Enjoy!
Your welcome email (or lack thereof) sets the tone for the email marketing relationship you have with your subscribers—make sure it's sending the right message!
Did you know that Tuesdays at 11am is one of the worst possible times to send your email campaigns? Stop relying on guesswork and hunches to drive your email marketing--you might be shooting yourself in the foot. Learn How to Tweak Your Email Messaging to Generate More Leads!
View full presentation here: http://www.hubspot.com/the-science-of-email-marketing/
Pitching Ideas: How to sell your ideas to othersJeroen van Geel
Learn how to convince others of your UX ideas by understanding them.
We are good in designing usable and engaging products and services. We understand the user's needs and have a toolkit with dozens of deliverables. But for some reason it remains difficult to sell an idea or concept to team members, managers or clients. After this session that problem will be solved!
Selling your ideas and convincing others is one of the most undervalued assets in our field. This ranges from convincing a colleague to use a certain design pattern to selling research to your boss and convincing a client to go for your concept. You can come up with the best ideas in the world, but if it is presented in the wrong way these ideas will die a lonely dead. This is sad, because everybody can learn how to bring a message across. The main thing is that you know what to pay attention to.
In this session I will take you on a journey through the world of presenting ideas. We will move through the heads of clients and your colleagues, learn what their thoughts and needs are. We will move to the core of your idea and into the world of psychology.
https://www.wrike.com/blog/08/27/2014/Crowdfunding-Sites-Infographic - In the last few years, the crowdfunding scene has exploded. It's not just about Kickstarter and IndieGoGo anymore. Now there are hundreds of platforms to choose from, with more popping up every day. But which crowdfunding site is best for your startup, small business, or charitable cause?
In this infographic, we cover 26 Top Crowdfunding Sites with all the essential details so you can choose wisely.
More info here on the blog: https://www.wrike.com/blog/08/27/2014/Crowdfunding-Sites-Infographic
The eBooks you create have the potential to become an important pillar in your content marketing mix.
Do it right and these high-converting "lead magnets" can continue to work for your content marketing machine long after the average blog post has ran out of steam.
But first, we need to move past the assumption that great eBooks are merely written and start building them with all the right parts!
Using icons is a great way to add visuals to your presentation. There are many ways to get icons online, some are even free. But if you need a specific icon that you can’t find or if you want a special spin to your icon (color, shadow etc) – you can use PowerPoint’s great (and somewhat hidden) “Merge Shapes” commands to create your own icons.
Using these commands you can combine basic shapes into other shapes. You can union and subtract shapes. You can intersect and combine. All while still working natively inside PowerPoint. Once you have created an icon you can change the color, filling and add shadows as needed.
It is just as fun as building with Lego blocks! Well, almost..
This is a guide in 15 steps showing you how you can use these commands to create your own icon - the example we are using is a calendar icon.
Three business basics to always remember! People don't care about your brand. They care about what you can do for them. Back to basics... Give people what they want, do it consistently and do it better than your competition.
10 Disruptive Quotes for EntrepreneursGuy Kawasaki
People think that innovation happens by sitting around with your buddies and letting magical ideas pop into your head. Or, your customers tell you exactly what they need, and you just have to build it.
Dream on. Innovation is a hard, messy process with no shortcuts. It starts with making something that you’d like to use and that might make people’s lives better. Then you have to get the word out that your product or service exists.
Follow #VirginDisruptors to join the conversation with Richard Branson and Guy Kawasaki as they talk about whether entrepreneurs have lost the will to innovate.
The Live Google+ Hangout with Richard Branson will be live streamed on Friday, May 9 at 9:30 am PT/12:30 pm PT with a live audience as well. It’s sure to generate a thoughtful conversation and innovative thinking. RSVP on the Google+ event to get a reminder. http://bit.ly/1mgP0b6
The document discusses the rise of the sharing economy. It notes that sharing services now reach 40,000 people per day across 30,000 cities and 192 countries. The sharing economy has grown due to factors like the recession, excess waste and unused goods, information overload, and a new generation that values sustainability and community over consumerism. Examples mentioned include crowdfunding sites like Kickstarter, local marketplaces like Etsy, and communities formed around sharing items, skills and physical spaces. The document argues this shift represents more than a fad and will continue transforming economic and social systems.
Go Viral on the Social Web: The Definitive How-To guide!XPLAIN
Creating a Viral Content success story has no recipe. It has a lot of variables, not all of which can be controlled by a Brand. However, this deck offers you the ideal How-To approach in creating tasteful, inspired Content that will help your message stand out from the information noise on Social Web and make people eager to share it around.
17 Copywriting Do's and Don'ts: How To Write Persuasive ContentHenneke Duistermaat
The document provides tips for writing more persuasive copy, including avoiding filler phrases like "excellent customer service", superlatives like "the best", vague descriptions, passive voice, addressing readers as a crowd, jargon, multiple adjectives, and sugary testimonials. It recommends using sensory words, focusing on benefits and problems solved, mentioning objections overcome, focusing on the reader's needs, asking questions, telling stories with examples, and making calls-to-action direct. The goal is to appeal directly to the reader and their needs rather than using empty phrases.
This is the first SlideShare adaption of Timothy E. Johansson's 100 Growth Hacks in 100 Days. The growth hacks that's included in the slide are 1 to 10. Timothy is the front-end developer at UserApp (www.userapp.io).
The document provides 10 timeless productivity hacks that will make you more productive. Some of the key hacks include: defining your most important tasks each day; focusing on one task at a time instead of multitasking; creating a morning routine; limiting distractions like social media; prioritizing important work; batching similar tasks; eliminating unnecessary tasks; and doing the task you are most likely to procrastinate first. Following these simple habits can improve overall productivity without needing a complex system.
These are the slides I will be using for an executive workshop in Mexico on the topic of "Competitive Advantage through Business Model Design and Innovation"
The slide deck we used to raise half a million dollarsBuffer
This is the pitchdeck we used to raise half a million dollars from Angel investors. More here:
http://onstartups.com/tabid/3339/bid/98034/The-Pitch-Deck-We-Used-To-Raise-500-000-For-Our-Startup.aspx
This document provides guidance on using PowerPoint to design effective presentations. It discusses how to select a presentation option, create slides, organize text, images, and effects, and balance design elements. The key points are:
- PowerPoint allows blank presentations for full customization or templates for guided design.
- Slides should be kept simple with short bullet points reinforcing the speech.
- Consistent formatting, readable fonts, and complimentary colors improve visuals.
- Animation and media should emphasize important points without distracting from the content.
- Effective slides balance different elements so no one part overpowers the others.
This document provides guidance on using PowerPoint to create effective presentations. It discusses the basic functions and toolbars in PowerPoint, how to design and organize slides, and tips for balancing text, images, and other design elements. The key steps covered include learning the various toolbars in PowerPoint, how to create and format slides, inserting and organizing text, images, charts and other visual elements, using animation effects, and balancing the design of slides for clarity and readability.
This document provides an overview of how to use Microsoft PowerPoint to create and deliver effective presentations. It begins with objectives for learning PowerPoint and covers topics like creating and formatting slides, adding transitions between slides, animating text and objects, including multimedia elements, and delivering the presentation. The document provides instructions and examples for each topic and encourages the reader to do practice exercises along the way to reinforce their learning.
This guide provides instructions for using PowerPoint effectively:
- PowerPoint is presentation software that works similarly to Word and Excel. It allows adding text, images, charts and animations to slides.
- To create a presentation, select a blank or template option. Learn the various toolbars and views. Create slides using layouts and customize colors and fonts.
- Organize content by adding short, clear text to slides and using images and charts sparingly to reinforce key points. Limit fonts and animation effects to avoid distraction.
- Ensure a balanced design where no element overpowers others and the overall experience is pleasant and easy to understand. Practice your timed presentation.
This guide provides instructions for using PowerPoint to create effective presentations. It discusses the various toolbars in PowerPoint and how to select presentation options. It also covers how to create and organize slides, including adding text, images, charts and animation. The guide emphasizes keeping design elements balanced so the presentation is easy to follow and visually pleasing.
This guide provides instructions for using PowerPoint to create effective presentations. It discusses the various toolbars in PowerPoint and how to select presentation options. It also covers how to create and organize slides, including adding text, images, charts and animation. The guide emphasizes keeping design elements balanced so the presentation is easy to follow and visually pleasing.
This document provides guidance on using PowerPoint to create effective presentations. It discusses the basic functions and toolbars in PowerPoint, how to design and organize slides, and tips for balancing text, images, and other design elements. The key steps covered include selecting a presentation type, learning the toolbars, creating and organizing slides, inserting text, images, and other media, using animation effects sparingly, and balancing design elements so the presentation is easy to follow.
PowerPoint 2013 is a slide show presentation program developed by Microsoft that allows users to create and deliver professional presentations. It offers tools for word processing, outlining, drawing, graphing, and presentation management. The document discusses how to create and open presentations in PowerPoint, save files, customize slides, apply themes, insert images, tables, charts, videos and other media, animate objects, and present slideshows. It also covers more advanced topics like grouping objects, customizing tables and charts, using SmartArt graphics, and applying slide timings and transitions.
This document provides an introduction to Microsoft PowerPoint. It discusses what PowerPoint is, important interface elements like the ribbon and slide views, how to add and format text and slides, apply themes and transitions, insert images, and save and print a presentation. The document includes mini challenges throughout to encourage hands-on learning of PowerPoint's basic functions.
This document provides an overview of the basics of using Microsoft PowerPoint. It describes the main tabs in PowerPoint including File, Home, Insert, Design, Transitions and Animations, Slideshow, Review and View. It explains how to create and save presentations, add slides, insert elements like images and tables, choose slide designs and themes, add transitions and animations, view and manage slideshows, and use spellcheck and other review tools. The document recommends always saving presentations frequently and using themes, transitions, and animations sparingly to avoid distraction. It provides contact information for the Pickerington Public Library reference staff if more help is needed with PowerPoint.
Microsoft PowerPoint is a presentation program developed by Microsoft as part of its Microsoft Office suite. It allows users to create slideshow presentations consisting of text, images, videos, and other objects that can be displayed on-screen or printed. PowerPoint has tools for inserting tables, charts, graphics, and other media and formatting slide layouts, as well as tools for animating and transitioning between slides during a live presentation. The main components of the PowerPoint interface include the ribbon, which contains tabs for commonly used tools, and the Microsoft Office button for creating new presentations or accessing recently opened ones.
This document provides instructions on presentation designing in PowerPoint. It discusses how to create and format slides, add text, images, and other objects, apply themes and transitions, and present the slides. The key learning outcomes are to create presentations with multiple slides that have different layouts and inserted content. Various views and formatting options are described to design professional-looking presentations. Students will learn how to add visual elements, animate objects, set up slide shows, and be able to create and present their own PowerPoint presentations on the topic of the universe.
PowerPoint allows users to create visually appealing presentations with templates, themes, multimedia elements, and various design and animation features. It provides tools for inserting slides, tables, images, illustrations, links, comments, and media. Users can customize designs, add transitions between slides, apply animations, rehearse slide shows, record narrations, review and get feedback on presentations.
Ribbon Toolbar & Formatting
Inserting and Adding Objects
Creating Theme Color
Creating a Hyperlink
Slide Transitions
Slide Animation
Starting a Slide Show
Printing Slide
Microsoft Office Templates
Microsoft PowerPoint is a presentation program developed by Microsoft as part of its Microsoft Office suite. It allows users to create slideshow presentations consisting of text, images, videos, and other objects which can be displayed on-screen and navigated through using slide transitions and animations. The main interface features include the Ribbon menu, which contains tabs for inserting objects, setting up slide designs and animations, reviewing slides, and changing views. New presentations can be created from blank slides or templates. Users can add pictures, charts, tables and other media to slides and customize their appearance. Transitions control how slides change during a presentation, while animations add effects to objects on individual slides.
This document provides an overview of frequently used shortcuts and features in PowerPoint, including how to:
- Navigate slides using keyboard shortcuts like P, N, and the arrow keys.
- Cut, copy, paste, and insert objects and hyperlinks using keyboard shortcuts.
- Change the background color, fill, gradient, or insert a picture as the background.
- Animate text and objects using custom animation and control the order and timing of animations.
- Insert sounds to accompany animations and record sounds to insert into presentations.
Grade vi presentation and visual effectsAnkita Shirke
This chapter discusses various visual effects and features in Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 including applying animation effects, adding transition effects between slides, inserting sound and video clips, using action buttons, importing data from other programs, and different views for creating, editing, and presenting a slideshow. It also covers using the slide master to set default formatting for all slides in a presentation.
The document provides an overview of the different views and functionalities in PowerPoint, including:
- Normal view is best for designing slides while Slide Sorter view manages all slides.
- Steps for creating a presentation include visualizing it, adding slides, titles, text, images, shapes, tables, sounds, videos, diagrams, and hyperlinks.
- Interactive objects and animations can be added using options like Interaction and Animations to make the presentation more engaging. Transitions and slide order can also be customized.
PowerPoint allows users to create presentations combining text, graphics, and multimedia. It provides various tools to insert images, illustrations, slide designs, transitions, hyperlinks, and media. Users can also record narration and rehearse timings for presentations. When creating presentations, it is recommended to minimize slides, choose readable fonts and sizes, keep text simple, present information instead of reading slides, use visuals to complement messages, and check for errors.
This document provides an overview of features and functions in Microsoft PowerPoint 2013, including:
- Creating and editing presentations, slides, text, and visual elements like tables, charts, photos, and videos.
- Formatting presentations with themes, slide layouts, animations, and multimedia enhancements.
- Organizing slides into sections, rearranging slides, and outlining the presentation.
- Customizing elements like the ribbon, slide masters, and saving as templates.
- Sharing and delivering presentations through different formats, password protection, comments, and collaboration.
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Powerpoint skills are an essential part of the marketers toolkit. This presentation is an in depth beginners guide to using Powerpoint.
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Set your intentions for tasks and visualize their successful completion. Accept compliments graciously instead of denying them. Dress professionally even on casual days at work to make a good impression and feel appreciated. Surround yourself with successful people and share your goals with them so they can support and congratulate you. Focus on your strengths rather than weaknesses and see yourself as capable and successful. Reframe problems and challenges positively as opportunities to improve.
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The document discusses various ways to build self-confidence, including maintaining good posture, avoiding negative self-talk, setting achievable goals, using positive affirmations, trusting oneself, ignoring unrealistic beauty standards, practicing yoga, mindfulness meditation, and stepping outside one's comfort zone by taking on leadership roles.
The document provides tips for improving self-esteem, including making a list of past successes, reviewing accomplishments and how they made you feel, pursuing hobbies and activities you enjoy, living according to your own values rather than others' expectations, taking action to face challenges, using hypnosis to change negative thought patterns, engaging in creative arts, and helping children feel valued through praise and celebrating their successes.
This document provides tips to improve self-esteem and confidence. It recommends voicing your opinions instead of holding them back, accepting mistakes as opportunities to learn and grow, experimenting with new activities to develop skills, letting go of past traumatic experiences, complimenting others instead of gossiping, sitting in the front row to be noticed, standing up when asking questions, and becoming an expert in an area to contribute value. The overall message is to take pride in yourself and new abilities, have energy and purpose in your actions, and free yourself from past limitations.
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The document discusses how to use PowerPoint to repurpose existing content into presentations and slideshows for websites and blogs. It recommends copying articles or content into PowerPoint slides, one paragraph per slide, and then formatting the slides with different fonts, colors, images, and text boxes to create visually appealing presentations without extra writing. With some creativity, PowerPoint can be used to easily transform plain text into stunning, repurposed content.
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2. Why Use PowerPoint?
• Very dynamic platform
• Turn boring presentations into multimedia
presentations
– You can add audio, video, photographs, charts,
graphs & much more
– Interactivity engages your audience
• Appeal to the visual learners in your audience
• Great way to demonstrate how your product
works
3. PowerPoint Menus
• Most of the PowerPoint icons are self-
explanatory
• It’s very easy to correct mistakes without losing
your work
• Always remember to save your work frequently
– Hit the save button after creating a new slide
5. Getting Started
• Or open up an existing presentation
– Click the File tab, Open folder, then search for the file
6. The Main Menu
• This is where you will find the following
submenus
• Hint: the best way to learn what PowerPoint can
do is by playing around with it
7. The Design Menu
• Choose a template, colors & optional design
elements before adding text to your slides
• Preloaded templates are convenient for those
who don’t want to design their own
8. The Background Menu
• Create a custom background with color
gradations, textures, patterns or photo
backgrounds
9. Choosing a Template
• Go to the Design Menu, choose a template &
hover over the template to see a preview
10. Choosing a Template
• If you like the template design, click Save & the
design shows up in the smaller boxes in the left
margin
11. Choosing Colors & Fonts
• From the Design tab, select the Colors link
12. Choosing Colors & Fonts
• Hover over each color selection to see a preview
13. Choosing Colors & Fonts
• You can also choose your own custom color
palette
14. Choosing Colors & Fonts
• Click the Fonts link & hover over each name to
see a preview
15. Adding an Image to Your Design
• Click on View tab, then Slide Master
16. Adding an Image to Your Design
• Click on the slide layout where you want to place
the image, click Insert > Photo, then search for
the file
17. Adding an Image to Your Design
• Resize & reposition image as needed, then exit
out of Slide Master
• Every time you choose that layout, your image
will appear
24. Modifying Backgrounds
• Tip – use the Transparency slider to make the
photo look like a watermark so it doesn’t
compete with the text on each slide
• Try Recoloring the photo by selecting
Background Styles > Picture Color > Recolor
• Set Contrast & Brightness as needed
27. Adding & Formatting Text
• The Home menu is where you find the
Clipboard, Slides, Fonts, Paragraph, Drawing &
Editing submenus
• Clipboard – allows for cutting & pasting
• Slides – select a new blank slide or change the
layout of a slide
• Fonts – choose a new font style, size or add
some bolding or italics
28. Adding & Formatting Text
• Paragraph – add bullet points, numerical lists,
indentations, or columns
• Drawing – add shapes, change color of shapes,
or group objects together so they are evenly
spaced
• Editing – find or replace certain words
throughout the entire presentation
29. Adding & Formatting Text
• Basic overview
– Type some text on a slide
– Highlight the text, then hover mouse over the font
menu
30. Adding & Formatting Text
• Basic overview
– Follow the same steps to change the font size
31. Adding & Formatting Text
• Basic overview
– Now add bold, italics or underlines to the text
(optional)
32. Adding & Formatting Text
• Basic overview
– Bullet points are set as
default but you can
change the look
33. Adding & Formatting Text
• Basic overview
– Or you can use
numbers, Roman
numerals, or ABC
ordered lists
34. Adding & Formatting Text
• Basic overview
– Try changing the text position on the slide
36. Adding & Formatting Text
• Basic overview
– Text Align indicates
where in the box the
text should be
– Choices are top,
middle & bottom
37. Adding & Formatting Text
• Basic overview
– Columns allow you to
fit more text inside a
single text box
38. Formatting in Master Slide View
• This allows for
consistent formatting
throughout the
presentation
• Click on View > Slide
Master
39. Formatting in Master Slide View
• Note the sidebar has the different layouts
associated with your current theme
40. Formatting in Master Slide View
• This is NOT where you enter your slide text!
• Simply highlight the sample text to change the
font or size
41. Formatting in Master Slide View
• Make note of the font names & sizes
• Click on each of the other layouts you plan to
use & make the same changes
• Once these changes are made, exit from Master
Slide View & start entering your slide text
• All the formatting is now preset for each new
slide
42. Slide Sorter
• This view displays all slides horizontally,
indicating which have transitions & animations
43. Notes View
• Allows
presenters to add
notes to each
slide
• Especially helpful
for presenters to
print out ahead of
time & to jot
down speaking
points
44. Other Tools in the View Menu
• These tools are used for design purposes – your
audience will NOT see these in the final
presentation
– Ruler – places a ruler at the top & left of slide
– Gridlines – places a grid on top of the slide
– Guides – places a dotted line vertically & horizontally
through the center of the slide
• Helpful for aligning multiple design elements
45.
46. Different Slide Layouts
• PowerPoint slides should compliment your
presentation
• They should NOT be a word for word transcript!
• Too many words on a slide will be hard for
audience to read
• Use slides to summarize your points
48. Different Slide Layouts
• Choose a layout; add your slide text
• To add a new slide, click Home > New Slide
• To delete a slide, click on slide in left preview
sidebar & hit delete button or Ctl + x
• To rearrange slides, click on slide in left preview
sidebar & drag to new position
• To duplicate a slide, highlight it, click New Slide
arrow > Duplicate Selected Slides
49.
50. Inserting Screenshots or Graphics
• Insert Menu
– Insert graphics, photos, tables, illustrations & media
51. Inserting Screenshots or Graphics
• Insert Tables
– Select the number of
columns & rows or
upload a table from
Excel
52. Inserting Screenshots or Graphics
• Insert Pictures
– Or other graphics
from your hard
drive
– Just make sure
the new graphics
don’t overlap with
any other
elements
56. Other Tools from the Insert Menu
• Hyperlinks – add website URL’s to your
presentation
• Text – add text boxes, headers & footers, dates,
times & slide numbers
• Note: put your presentation & URL in the header
or footer of every slide so people have a way to
contact you
57.
58. How to Insert Videos
• Go to Insert > Media tab
• Click on Media tab > Video
• Insert video from hard drive, YouTube, website
or Amazon hosting account
59. Video Tool Bar
• Allows you to adjust video brightness, change
color or add a frame around video
• Bring Forward – the video will be in front of any
background images or text boxes on that slide
• Send Backward – the video will become part of
the slide background (not ideal)
60. Playing a Video
• When you reach the slide that contains the
video, simply look for the video control buttons &
hit Play
• Videos can be useful in presentations to:
– compliment your topic
– showcase a members-only video
– illustrate your point of view
– gives you a break from speaking!
61. How to Insert Audios
• Follow the same process as with videos but
choose an mp3 file instead
62. Playing an Audio
• Click the button when you’re ready
• Note: the audio will stop playing if you advance
to the next slide
• Audios will add extra value to your presentation
– Share an interview with your audience
– Share client testimonials
– Share your latest podcast or radio commercial
63. Adding Transitions & Animations
• Transitions = movement occurs when you
advance to the next slide
64. Adding Transitions & Animations
• Animations = gives movement to the text on
each slide
65. Adding Transitions & Animations
• Notes:
– Transitions – you can customize how the transition
occurs (top to bottom, side to side) as well as the
duration & if you want sound
– Animations – you can choose the type of animation,
duration & when it should start (automatically or with
mouse click)
– Stay consistent with your choices! Too many different
types of transitions or animations will confuse your
audience
66. Creating a Slide Show
• Prescreen your presentation
• Allows you to see what your audience will see
• Click From Beginning
• Slides will be full screen
• Click mouse to advance slides
67. Creating a Slide Show
• Broadcast slideshow
– Allows remote users to view your slideshow in their
browser window while you still maintain control
• Rehearse timings
– Used for creating a PowerPoint video
– This option times how long each slide in on screen
– Click mouse to advance & to activate all transitions &
animations
– Save & then start From Beginning to see it automated
69. Reviewing Your Presentation
• Proofing, Language, Comments & Compare
submenus
• Spell check & Thesaurus are under Proofing
Features
70. Reviewing Your Presentation
• Research – find a definition or synonym
• Translate – translate a section or the entire
presentation into another language
• Comments – handy for remote collaborators to
jot notes
• Compare – combine two presentations together
71. Creating a PowerPoint Video
• Design your slides
• Add some music or record your own voice
• Record your slide show
• Camtasia is a video editing software that is
compatible with PowerPoint
• If you have both software titles, you will see the
Add Ins option on the main menu
72. Creating a PowerPoint Video
• Save & edit your video in Camtasia
• Jing is a free recording software but there is no
editing function & it only allows recording for 5
minute
73. Printing Your Presentation
• It’s all about capturing an audience through
different learning styles
– Your visual presentation will appeal to visual learners
– Your audio will appeal to auditory learners
– Your printed presentation will appeal to those who
want to read & refer to your presentation at a later
date
• Printing a copy for yourself also ensures you’ll
never lose it
74.
75. Printing Your Presentation
• Handouts of your slides are helpful at live
presentations
• Choose from these printing options:
– Print all slides
– Print single slides
– Print slides in a custom range
– 9 different hand out layouts (most popular is the
Notes layout)
76. Reusing Your Slides
• Turn your presentation slides into the following
products:
– A marketing video for YouTube
– A free special report to grow your email list
– Bundle your PDF report with your audio recording for
those who could not attend the presentation live
– Reuse your branded layout for future presentations
Thank you or reading our presentation we hope you
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