Looking back at more than 10 years of presentation design work, I noticed that my best decks are often the ones that were designed for very short time slots, usually pitch competitions where a speaker would have 5-10 minutes to give it all.
Why?
- These requests would often come after the client and I completed the "regular" presentation: I went through the process of getting to know the company in-depth, but, and this is important, I had given the content some rest, and when coming back to something after a couple of weeks, you often get an even better perspective on how to tell the story
- The all-or-nothing 5 minutes makes the client more confident to take visual risks: bolder, simpler slides
- The client would rehearse more (it is easy to run through a 5 minute story twenty times) and as a result would stumble on imperfect story flows more often
So maybe there is a natural evolution in presentations:
- The internal strategy/board deck where you lay out your company's ideas and make strategic decisions (management consultants stop here)
- An attempt at a bullet point story line for a pitch (most pitch presentations stop here)
- The properly designed company pitch deck (my projects often stop here)
- The "let's give it one more go deck"
Photo by Mitchell Hollander on Unsplash
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