giving presentations the evl way

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Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois a Giving Presentations the EVL way Jason Leigh and Andy Johnson Electronic Visualization Laboratory University of Illinois at Chicago (last updated 10/07) Jason, you maybe a good programmer but it don’t mea beans if you can’t tell a good story!” - Tom Moher

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Giving Presentations the EVL way. “Jason, you maybe a good programmer but it don’t mean beans if you can’t tell a good story!” - Tom Moher. Jason Leigh and Andy Johnson Electronic Visualization Laboratory University of Illinois at Chicago (last updated 10/07). The Introduction. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

Giving Presentations the EVL way

Jason Leigh and Andy JohnsonElectronic Visualization Laboratory

University of Illinois at Chicago(last updated 10/07)

“Jason, you maybe a good programmer but it don’t meanbeans if you can’t tell a good story!” - Tom Moher

Page 2: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

The Introduction

• TELL A GOOD STORY!• Rehearse an opening• Know your audience. Give them a copy of your slides• What is the motivating problem?• Why is it important?

• Sound enthusiastic• Everyone wants to hear a good presentation- the only one

who can screw it up is you. Have you ever gone to a movie that you wanted to suck?

• No outline slide please- everyone knows you are going to give an intro, a middle and a conclusion.

Page 3: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

The Content

• Speak slowly, boldly, loudly, and clearly• Choose good visible fonts, sizes and colors• Dark backgrounds, light text, consistent color scheme• Use slides as notes, not a book. Don’t read your slides (unless you

have difficulty with English because it is your second language).• If you put up a formula you better explain it so that your audience

understands. Pages of formulae will lose people• Interact with your audience• Look at your audience, all of them. Not just one person or the floor, or

the screen, or your notes• Define your acronyms if audience does not know them• Test your slides on the projector ahead of time - Stand where the

audience will be and see what they see. Can you see?

Page 4: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

How Many Slides

• Stay on time! Rehearse! Stay on time! Rehearse! • Figure on 2 minutes per slide• Really - its true• If it takes less than that to go through a slide maybe

it isn’t worth devoting a slide to it• If it takes more than 2 minutes then the slide is

probably too dense• You should aim to finish 1 minute before your time

runs out

Page 5: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

Versions of Presentations

• You will often give the same talk more than once

• Modify your slides for this particular audience• Do not have a mass of slides and skip over several

of them - that shows bad planning and a disregard for your audience

Page 6: Giving Presentations the EVL way

White background, Black Text- Agh!Tolerable if you have only Overhead Transparencies.

• Dark backgrounds, light text.

• Choose good visible fonts, sizes and colors.

• You’re from a graphics lab, you better have pictures!

Step to the back of the room and try and read this slide

• This is 40pt font• This is 32pt font• This is 24pt font - This is the limit• This is 18pt font• This is 14pt font• This is 12pt font• This is 10pt font

Page 7: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Dark Background Example

• Dark backgrounds, light text.

• Choose good visible fonts, sizes and colors.

• You’re from a graphics lab, you better have pictures!

• This is 40pt font• This is 32pt font• This is 24pt font - This is the limit• This is 18pt font• This is 14pt font• This is 12pt font• This is 10pt font

Step to the back of the room and try and read this slide

Page 8: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

Another Dark Background Example

• Dark backgrounds, light text.

• Choose good visible fonts, sizes and colors.

• You’re from a graphics lab, you better have pictures!

• This is 40pt font• This is 32pt font• This is 24pt font - This is the limit• This is 18pt font• This is 14pt font• This is 12pt font• This is 10pt font

Page 9: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

Choose a good font size

• This is 40pt font• This is 32pt font• This is 24pt font - This is the limit• This is 18pt font• This is 14pt font• This is 12pt font• This is 10pt font

Step to the back of the room and try and read this slide

Page 10: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

Choose colors that’s easy to read

• This is text - good!

• This is text - good!

• This is text - good!

• This is text - agh!!!!!!!

• This is text - no!!!!

• This is text - good!

• This is text - borderline

Step to the back of the room and try and read this slide

Page 11: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

Choose a good font

• This is 40pt font• This is 32pt font• This is 24pt font - This is the limit• This is 18pt font• This is 14pt font• This is 12pt font• This is 10pt font

• This is 40pt font• This is 32pt font• This is 24pt font - This is the limit• This is 18pt font• This is 14pt font• This is 12pt font• This is 10pt font

Arial / Helvetica Times Roman

• Sans-serif fonts like Arial are easier to read than serif fonts like Times

• Use only one font during your talk

Step to the back of the room and try and read this slide

Page 12: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

You’re from a graphics lab, you better have lots of pictures!

• Use pictures to wake-up the presentation

• But use meaningful pictures• Explain the pictures to the

audience• Are the labels in the picture

readable?• Make it match your slides.

You match your tie to your shirt don’t you?

• Show a video of your application running

Page 13: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

Graphs

• Remember that white background & blacktext is bad! Invert thechart so it has a blackbackground

• Don’t accept whatExcel gives you.Fix the colors to makeeverything readable

• Everything that appliesto your slides appliesto your pictures and graphs

• Read the text for the audience if it is unavoidably too small

Do you have a title?

-6

-4

-2

0

2

4

6

1 3 5 7 9

What are the UNITS of your axis?

Do you have a label for

the Y axis?

Series1

Series2

Series3

Series4

Series5

Page 14: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

Tables

Seconds A B C D E F G H

2 Y N N N N Y N

3 Y N N N N Y N

4 N N N Y N N N

5 Y Y Y N N N N

A B C D E F G H

2 Y N N N N Y N

3 Y N N N N Y N

4 N N N Y N N N

5 Y Y Y N N N N

A B C D E F G H

2 Y - - - - Y -

3 Y - - - - Y -

4 - - - Y - - -

5 Y Y Y - - - -

• Highlight important info in tables. The table on the right is very hard to read. The ones below are easier to read

Page 15: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

Animations

• Animation can be used to clarify diagrams, showing flows or transitions between states

• More often its over-used• Be very careful using cutesy animation sequences

in a serious presentations

• Do not use excessive ‘bling’ like multiple types of slide transitions. Stick with one simple transition for all of the slides

Page 16: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

Movies

• Movies can be very nice for illustrating visualization applications and user interfaces.

• Make sure the movie plays smoothly on the hardware you will be using

• Trim the movie to show what is important rather than skipping through a larger movie

Page 17: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

The Conclusions

• Don’t end with: “well uh that’s it.”• End with: “And that concludes my talk, If

there are questions I’d be happy to answer them.”

• Rehearse the close of your talk• Show a fast 1 slide overview of your work• Show a web site where they can get more

information and your contact info - leave it on the screen so people can write it down

Page 18: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

Answering Questions

• Repeat the question so that everyone in the room can hear

• If you don’t know the answer, just say so • If a question will take a lot of time to answer, tell

them that you’d be happy to discuss this further after the talk

• If a member of your thesis insists you are wrong, don’t “spar” with him/her. You will always lose. Say something like: “Maybe you’re right, I’ll look more deeply into it…”

Page 19: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

Backups

• Have a backup of your slides on the same machine

• Have a backup of your slides on a usb keychain drive or a DVD

• Make sure you have a backup dongle / adapter to connect your laptop to the projector

Page 20: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

Giving Demos

• The demo is like a play that must WORK! • Rehearse your demo. Sound enthusiastic• Test your demo and all its components the day before• Book the equipment in advance. Email out a message to tell

everyone not to screw up your settings & equipment• Arrive 1 hour early & check all the equipment AGAIN

because people will have screwed up your equipment- welcome to EVL

• Do you know who all the tech experts are and how to contact them? Alan, Pat, Lance? You should

• What is your backup plan if some component fails? What is the backup for your backup plan? What if ALL the tech fails?

Page 21: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

Giving Demos (cont)

• Speak slowly, boldly, clearly, competently. Give the audience a context. They are not psychic!

• Encourage your audience to play with the application• Give them the tracked glasses. Keep the wand initially &

then gradually relinquish control to audience• Don’t hack in a fix in the last minute, or the last day• Don’t develop new code right up to the moment you have to

demo it. Make a firm decision of what you can show and make sure it works flawlessly

• Don’t say anything in your slides and then later in the demo say you had a problem and you disabled it

Page 22: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

Tools for creating presentations

• Powerpoint / Keynote

• Photoshop - picture touch up

• XV / imageMagic / Graphic Converter - file format conversion

• IrfanView

Page 23: Giving Presentations the EVL way

Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago

Just Do It- but do it GREAT!

• Tell a Great story ALWAYS• Make the demo work flawlessly and brilliantly• Speak clearly, boldly, slowly and enthusiastically• You’re not doing this for course credit. This is a personal

reflection of YOU and your competence• Imagine everyone in EVL has died, WORK THE

PROBLEM, MAKE IT WORK• Do or do not, don’t waste your audiences time• Stay on time! Rehearse! Stay on time! Rehearse!