Make the next presentation you do, the best you've ever done. The Presentation Book shows how you can easily put your nerves behind you and calmly and confidently deliver a clear, sharp and very influential presentation.
Provides information on creating an effective digital presentation, covering such topics as animation, plot, contrast, software, and handouts.
Combining solid principles of design with the tenets of Zen simplicity, this book will help you along the path to simpler, more effective presentations.
Make the next presentation you do, the best you’ve ever done. The Presentation Book shows how you can easily put your nerves behind you and calmly and confidently deliver a clear, sharp and very influential presentation.
Do What You Never Thought Possible with Your Presentations When you open this book, you'll feel as though you're sitting down with an expert who is disclosing rare information about the art of making a unique presentation.
2012. Why Most PowerPoint Presentations Suck and How You Can Make Them Better. Pleasanton, CA: Harvest. Aron, Laudan Y., Lisa Dubay, Elaine Waxman, and Steven Martin. 2015. To Understand Climbing Death Rates Among White Americans, ...
This book is the one place they can turn to find quick, non-intimidating, excellent design help from trusted design instructor Robin Williams.
Presents practical approaches for developing an effective presentation, covering such topics as creating diagrams, displaying data, arranging elements, creating movement, and interacting with slides.
Presentation Patterns will help you Plan what you’ll say, who you’ll say it to, how long you’ll talk, and where you’ll present Perfectly calibrate your presentation to your audience Use the storyteller’s “narrative arc” to ...
Called the Bible of Public speaking, Knockout Presentations is a “seminar in a book” that reduces fear and gives speakers the steps to craft and deliver a talk that will make them a knockout on the platform!
11: Theatre semiotics, Gunter Narr Verlag, Tubingen, 1982, pp. 204-31. B. Appleyard, 'Of mice and men and Microsoft', The Weekend Australian: Review, 12/13 November 1994 p. 1. This article originally appeared in the Sunday Times ...