Here Are 11 Design Tips To Make Your Presentation More Beautiful. You’ll Find These Very Helpful, For Sure!

Presentation really matters in any lecture or information-sharing. Since human are 100% visual learners, we tend to grasp more information easily when we see it rather than hear it. It simply denotes that learners are more attentive when what they see is pleasant to their eyes (I can attest to that).

But not all presentations are pleasant- not because it’s literally ugly but it got poor quality of content and design. It’s ridiculous for me to say but what’s with your talent of speech if your visual aid is too poor? Don’t you think everything won’t be affected?

If you’re in difficult time making a good presentation, worry no more. Here are 11 tips to help you create perfect presentation that will perfectly enhance your points in sharing your thoughts. I hope this will help you.

1. Skip the Stock Template

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Using the slide themes included in your software is presentation death. They’re overused, boring and usually pretty ugly. Create cleaner presentations by starting with a clean presentation and building from there.

2. Ditch the Bullet Points

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Too many presentations are bullet point crazy. No one will remember 10 bullet points, but they will remember 10 compelling slides. Use each slide to build your case and incrementally tell your story. (Consider your slides to be an outline for what you’re saying.) Try to share one idea per slide.

3. Don’t Use More than 6 Lines of Text

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Packing too much information into a slide will completely undermine its purpose. Remember: The audience often has to process everything you say while they view the slide.

4. Maintain a Strong Contrast Between Text and Background

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In order for your message to pop, you need a high level of contrast between your text and the background. If your background image features a lot of variation, portions of your text may not be legible. In that case, a stylish bar of color behind the text can bring the legibility back while adding visual interest.

5. Use Sans Serif Fonts

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With typography, go for legibility over fun. While you can use a creative font for a slide title, avoid using it for body text. Instead, stick to clean, traditional typefaces like Helvetica. And if you’re using a dark background, make the text bold for readability.

6. Size Fonts Appropriately

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Chances are you’re designing your presentation on a laptop—and that’s a much different size than the final presentation screen. When sizing your fonts, keep in mind that the text should be large enough to be read by the person in the back of the room.

 

7. Use Single Images

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Images help make your presentation more visual, but don’t get carried away with too many on one slide. It’s a presentation, not a photo album. Limit your designs to a single image with simple or no text.

 

8. Use No More than 5 Colors

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A harmonious palette can easily enhance the look of your entire presentation. No need for complex gradients or textures here; you can get excellent results with just the right colors. Use a tool like Adobe’s Kuler or a site like COLOURLovers to choose a good selection.

 

9. Use Contrasting Text Colors to Draw Attention

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It’s like bold and italic, but better. Use a single color in your selected palette to emphasize important points in your text. However, make sure not to overdo it.

10. Use Visuals to Increase Emotional Appeal

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Visuals are there to help support your message; they can enhance comprehension, retention and elicit an emotional response that increases impact. Use powerful visuals to get your point across.

11. Freeze the Transitions

There are plenty of clever transitions built into today’s presentation software, but most quality presentations eschew any distracting transitions. No matter what your presentation content, make sure you are always using design to your full advantage.

Source Credit: Visage.co

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