PowerPoint.Advanced.Presentation.Techniques [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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Faithe Wempen

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User-Interactivity: Letting the Audience Drive

It can be scary letting the audience take control. If you aren't forcing people to go at a certain pace and view all the slides, what's to guarantee that they don't skim through quickly or quit halfway through?

Well, there are no guarantees. Even in a show with a live speaker, though, you can't control whether people pay attention or not. The best you can do is put together a compelling presentation and hope that people want to view it. The same goes for a user-interactive presentation. People are either going to watch and absorb it or they're not. There's no point in treating the audience like children. On the contrary, they will likely respond much better if you give them options and let them decide what content they need.



Navigational Controls


Navigational controls are the main thing that separates user-interactive presentations from normal ones. You have to provide an idiot-proof way for people to move from slide to slide. Okay, technically yes, they could use the same navigational controls that you use when presenting a show (see Chapter 15), but those controls aren't always obvious. Moving forward is a no-brainer (click the mouse), but what about moving backward? Would you have guessed "P" for Previous if you hadn't already known? Probably not. And what if they want to end the show early? In the first half of this chapter I'll show you various techniques for creating navigational controls.

Here are some ideas for ways to use navigational controls.



Web resource listings. Include a slide that lists Web page addresses that users can visit for more information about various topics covered in your presentation. You can also include Web cross-references throughout the presentation at the bottom of pertinent slides.



Product information. Create a basic presentation describing your products, with For More Information buttons for each product. Then, create hidden slides with the detailed information about each product and hyperlink those hidden slides to the For More Information buttons. Don't forget to put a Return button on each hidden slide so users can easily return to the main presentation.



Access to custom shows. If you have created custom shows, set up action buttons or hyperlinks that jump the users to them on request.



Quizzes. Create a presentation with a series of multiple-choice questions. Create custom action buttons for each answer. Depending on which answer the user clicks, set it up to jump either to a "Congratulations, You're Right!" slide or a "Sorry, Try Again" slide. From each, include a Return button to go on with the quiz.



Troubleshooting information. Ask the user a series of questions and include action buttons or hyperlinks for the answers. Set them up to jump to the slides that further narrow down the problem based on their answers until they finally arrive at a slide that explains the exact problem and proposes a solution.



Directories. Include a company directory with e-mail hyperlinks for various people or departments so that anyone reading the presentation can easily make contact.




Distribution Methods


Besides navigational controls, the other big consideration with a user-interactive show is distribution. How will you distribute the presentation to your audience? Chapter 15). Or, you may choose instead to set up a user kiosk in a public location, e-mail the presentation file to others, or make it available on the Web. In the second half of this chapter I'll help you weigh the pros and cons of each distribution method and show you how to set each one up.





Tip

The Secure Pack add-in allows you to package one or multiple presentations as a stand-alone, non-editable executable file. You can use password protection, and you can limit the number of times it runs. See www.mvps.org/skp/securepack/index.


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