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Four Presentation Predictions for 2011

   |    Nancy Duarte

Presentations have been through many (delightfully positive) changes in the last few years—but believe it or not—the most dramatic change is yet to come. Come along as we roll back the curtain and predict what the future looks like.

1. Tablet war will shape future of presentations

Tablets are hot and are creating new ways to engage customers with rich content and immersive experiences. iPads get passed around a conference table the same way yellow pads used to. But delivering a presentation on these devices requires different design considerations and a more immersive experience. Navigable stories and short video clips will win on this presentation platform. You want the folks at the table to hold the tablet and “see” what you’re saying quickly. A recent HBR blog posting said that, “Designing documents to be a sensual physical experience and not just a visually cognitive one demands different aesthetics and sensibilities. This nascent transition will be as profoundly important for future interpersonal communications—and branding—as the transition from radio to television. Having the right touch to get the right touch will become a desirable communications competence.”

2. Authenticity trumps “spin”

The instability in our world continues to make people skittish about the future and skeptical about the “truth” they’re being told by government and business. That leads to an even greater hunger for authenticity and transparency in communication — “spin” is out, “sincerity” is in. Hint to communicators: the audience can tell the difference no matter how you try to disguise it. Read Nick Morgan’s book Trust Me and Garr Reynold’s The Naked Presenter (review to come!). Both will help you come across as more authentic.

3. Hand made by [insert name here]

One way to come across as sincere and authentic is to present slides or sketches made by you. Almost all my internal slides delivered at Duarte staff meetings are all hand-sketched and scanned in. You can achieve the same result by hand drawing slides or even whiteboarding instead of slides. When my IT department was faced with buying new, expensive networking equipment, we brought in three vendors. The most expensive vendor—who also happens to be a Duarte client– had us sit and watch flash overview pieces on the web (the same ones that we created for them!) We felt like they didn’t know us or understand our problem. So we went with the vendor who could whiteboard a vision of how they might solve our problem. If you feel you can’t draw, use your favorite hobby to tell a story and take pictures along the way.

In the beginning, I created the heavens and the earth. And the earth was without form and void.

4. Increase in NO SLIDE ZONES

Speakers will stand up and talk. I didn’t say they won’t plan, they’ll talk without slides. We’ll see this more at the executive level and it will filter down through all layers of the business as well. People will get over the urge to sit behind the security blanket of a badly-designed, word-riddled PowerPoint slide. They’ll present “naked” or they’ll put in the effort required for great visuals.

Here’s a great example of a speech by Facebook’s COO Sheryl Sandberg.

You’ll notice that her comfort monitor has dense text slides that serve as her teleprompter but they are not projected behind her. She’s very lovely on stage and her talk is chock full of stories. If she’d chosen to project her slides, it would have diminished her gracefulness on stage.

Less and less people will stand in front of poorly constructed visuals. Presenters will use great supporting visuals or none at all. The public’s tolerance for bad PowerPoint will eliminate the majority of bad visuals out there. Social stigma and peer pressure from having poorly constructed and distracting visuals will be career limiting.

Thanks for feedback from the Twitterverse: @viperblueuk @stephenRemedios @jwgorham @mpascoe @story_jon @reggyMortier @pediatricINC @tlgerglund @advanceUrSlides @anafxfz @matthewmccull @brataas @janschultink @twid @paulflanigan @toddbullivant @jaeSelle @edlee

  • http://www.kansascityrealestate411.com Ken Jansen

    Thank you Nancy. I would be wildly happy to never sit through another presentation where the ‘presenter’ turns around and reads the slides to me. Never. Ever.
    Love your new book Resonate. I am 1/3 of the way through it.

  • http://DrDougGreen.Com Douglas W. Green, EdD

    Let’s hope that educational leaders get this message from prediction #4. I push this with my leadership classes for teachers working on their administrative certification. If only all presentations could be as good as just about any TED talk.

  • http://www.presentationcourse.net Al Thornton

    I think that you are way too early on your thoughts about the Tablet. I see the tablet as being useful for one to one sales presentations in 2011 but as far as larger audiences – that is something that is 2 years out.

  • Ernesto Z. Gutierrez

    Tech and mediums are not as important as the narrative. Now leaving China after 3 years of Education work within the university system there are a lot of people who will be entering the environment with no concept of the need for ‘narrative.’

    Here in China tech and advancement take precedence, as the quality of work and narrative diminish or simply evaporate into the void of text slides and their ridged Confucius style thought of ‘history is most important.’

    The tablet as a medium for ‘ideas’ as in presentations is a ways off but will poke it’s head out here in 2011.

  • http://www.nosweatpublicspeaking.com Fred E. Miller

    Good peering into the future, Nancy.

    I think your crystal ball is correct.

    Simple – Clean – Naked
    Get to the point quickly and clearly.

    Thanks!

  • Eliav

    I travel and give presentations at conferences often. And I see too many bullet point slides. I love your blog. And I love my new ipad. I’ve love to brainstorm with you and others about ways to present with my ipad. Or if you have ideas or examples, I’d love to read about them!

  • http://www.entscheiderblog.de Kai-Jürgen Lietz

    Im am sure you are right.
    I use my convertible TabletPC (Windows) with active digitizer to actually write into my presentations. So I can work with my audience and take their input to make it their presentation as well.
    I like “resonate” very much and I am reading now “Slide:ology”. I am very impressed to say at least.

  • http://www.duarte.com/ Nancy Duarte

    We have a blog post coming soon i.e. how to create presentations from an iPad.

  • http://www.thespeakerpoint.com Alex Cequea

    I have been wondering how a platform like Prezi can take advantage of tablets. So far, the Prezi app for the iPad has gotten fairly low reviews, but it does seem to be a very important medium that isn’t fully being taken advantage of. I’m reading Resonate right now, and I absolutely love it! And Slide:ology is sitting my coffee table waiting for its turn. Thanks for the great insight an information!

  • http://www.duarte.com/team/nancy Nancy Duarte

    Hi Alex,
    Have been noodling on best-practices for Prezi. It’s an app with 2 cool transitions that PowerPoint doesn’t have. I get dizzy but it’s a HOT app. People feel it’s innovative and givint PPT and Keynote a run for the money.

  • http://twitter.com/sarahmarkels SarahMarkelsMaynard

    I would really love to see your thoughts on this subject! Prezi presentations have such potential and impact. I have used them in some of my own presentations, but I can see how building presentations using Prezi can be quite overwhelming. I know I still have a lot to learn!

  • Guest

    It’s fewer and fewer people, not less and less people.

  • http://www.duarte.com/team/nancy Nancy Duarte

    Thank you.

  • Nitin Kaulavkar

    Hello Nancy,

    I just chanced upon your site and it was like Nirvana moment for me. I have gone through your TED talks, INK talks, both books and a lot of tips on this blog. I am just amazed by the concepts you have put across. I am glad that my company (HP) uses some of the templates/slides that probably your company prepared :) I get a lot of requests to make technical presentations and so far I have been only been good at being bad at it – Not so much of talking part but preparing slides. I know it’s unfair but now I have started judging people by their presentation slides :)

    I have a question thoguh. I predominantly use MS Powerpoint. Where can I get readymade Abstract Concepts that you have referred to in the Slide:ology book. I know SmartArt attempts to get there but it’s far from complete.

    Thanks and good luck
    nitin

  • Nitin Kaulavkar

    Hello Nancy,

    I just chanced upon your site and it was like Nirvana moment for me. I have gone through your TED talks, INK talks, both books and a lot of tips on this blog. I am just amazed by the concepts you have put across. I am glad that my company (HP) uses some of the templates/slides that probably your company prepared :) I get a lot of requests to make technical presentations and so far I have been only been good at being bad at it – Not so much of talking part but preparing slides. I know it’s unfair but now I have started judging people by their presentation slides :)

    I have a question thoguh. I predominantly use MS Powerpoint. Where can I get readymade Abstract Concepts that you have referred to in the Slide:ology book. I know SmartArt attempts to get there but it’s far from complete.

    Thanks and good luck
    nitin

  • http://www.duarte.com/team/nancy Nancy Duarte

    Hi Nitin,

    The timing of your note is kinda funny. I just posted this tweet today: http://nancyduarte.posterous.com/sweet-morning-spent-pouring-over-thousands-of We will be launching the store in December. Sign up for our newsletter on Duarte.com and you’ll get a notice when it’s ready!