Sunteți pe pagina 1din 117

Biswajit Tripathy

Design your Business

Published by: Orissaa.com


Design your Business

by
Biswajit Tripathy
NOTE TO READERS

Though every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained in the book, it
may change at any time for various reasons that includes technical advancement, upgradation of
softwares etc. Readers should be sure to call, email us for confirmation of any information that is found
questionable in this book. If you find any information out-of-date or incorrect, we would appreciate it if
you would let us know via our email id (biswajitt@gmail.com).

No parts of this book may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted,
in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without
the prior permission of the publisher.
W e Spend our days w aiting for the ideal path to appear
in front of us. B ut w hat w e forget is that, Paths are
m ade by w alking, not by w aiting.

- A nonym ous -
To my Father who was always a spring in the summer of my days, his name is Basanta, which means
Spring,

My Mother whose name is Puspa, meaning Flower. She has always showered my path with flowers,

My Wife Ruby who is a very precious part of my life,

My Kids Harsh & Khushi, who are the source of my happiness and the reason for my life.

&

to all those who always thought I would never make it; they gave me the determination to go ahead.
Making of….

Why another book on PowerPoint? If that’s what you are thinking now, then you need to read this book;
because this is not just another book on PowerPoint. This is the book on PowerPoint, which has started
where all other books have chosen to end.

This book talks about a lot of features of PowerPoint that you may not find anywhere else. This book will
guide you to design the most beautiful & professional presentation you have ever designed.

I am not a master in PowerPoint. After completing my graduation in Computer Engineering, I started


working for a few companies and gradually reached a senior level where I needed to develop a lot of
presentations. The low quality of presentations being designed was a major irritant to me and I started
thinking of doing something that will help every PowerPoint user to make better presentations in an
easier way. I started reading a lot of books on PowerPoint & read a lot of articles on Internet. But then I
found that there was not a single book on PowerPoint that had the level of detail that I wanted. There was
no material available to tell you how to design your own templates, to reduce the size of a big
presentation, to convert your presentation to a self-running executable file & so on. This book has tried
to cover a lot of things that you will need, which are not available anywhere else.

So here I am and here is this book. I hope that everyone who reads and uses this book will find it useful. I
am sure this book will address the purpose it is meant for. Please read the book & tell others if this book
has been useful to you.
Dreams do come true…..

You only have to believe they can..

After completing my Engineering in Computer Science, I started working as a Software Engineer for few
years. Then I moved on to work for an Aerospace Company. After a year, I moved to work in a few
manufacturing companies. After leaving my job in Paradeep Phosphates Limited as the Head of IT in
2004, I designed a website ww w. or i s s a a. c o m . During that time, I also planned to write this book. After
the website was stabilized a bit, I went on to write the book.

During the making of this book I have done a lot of research. I hope it helps you. All the best and enjoy
this book.
Blueprints for a successful presentation

HISTORY OF POWERPOINT ................................................................................................................................................ 12

BEFORE USING MICROSOFT POWERPOINT..................................................................................................................... 15

CREATING A SIMPLE PRESENTATION ............................................................................................................................... 19

Introduction ............................................................................................................................................................................. 20

Getting Started........................................................................................................................................................................ 20

Slide Manipulation .................................................................................................................................................................. 22

Adding Transitions to a Slide Show ........................................................................................................................................ 26

Color Scheme ......................................................................................................................................................................... 26


Using the Animation Scheme .............................................................................................................................................. 26
Using Custom Animations ................................................................................................................................................... 26

Reviewing the Slide Show ...................................................................................................................................................... 27


To preview the slide show ................................................................................................................................................... 27
Highlighting parts of the slide show ..................................................................................................................................... 27
To use the Slide Show Menu............................................................................................................................................... 27
Navigating While In Your Slide Show .................................................................................................................................. 27

Saving Your Presentation ....................................................................................................................................................... 28


Saving the document as another file type............................................................................................................................ 28
Saving to the Web ............................................................................................................................................................... 28
To save a copy of a presentation to a Web server in Windows Explorer ............................................................................. 28

Pack & Go............................................................................................................................................................................... 28


Pack up a presentation for use on another computer .......................................................................................................... 28
Unpack a presentation to run on another computer............................................................................................................. 28

Designing a Quick Presentation using Design Template ........................................................................................................ 29

Printing a Presentation ........................................................................................................................................................... 29


To print notes....................................................................................................................................................................... 29
To print handouts................................................................................................................................................................. 29

MIND MAPPING ..................................................................................................................................................................... 31


How to Draw a Mind Map .................................................................................................................................................... 32
Benefits of Mind Mapping .................................................................................................................................................... 33
Creating a Mind Map ........................................................................................................................................................... 33

ADDING MULTIMEDIA CONTENTS ...................................................................................................................................... 34

About recording a voice narration or sound in a slide show.................................................................................................... 35

To record a voice narration ..................................................................................................................................................... 35

To insert a CD audio track on a slide...................................................................................................................................... 36

To insert a video on a slide ..................................................................................................................................................... 36

Adding Flash Animation to PowerPoint Presentations............................................................................................................ 36

CREATING A TEMPLATE ...................................................................................................................................................... 38

-8-
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Creating Custom Templates ................................................................................................................................................... 39

To create a design template ................................................................................................................................................... 39

To create a content template .................................................................................................................................................. 40

To add a template to the AutoContent Wizard ........................................................................................................................ 40

Animating PowerPoint Design Templates............................................................................................................................... 40

IMPORTING OTHER OFFICE FORMATS ............................................................................................................................. 41

Import Microsoft Word text into your presentation .................................................................................................................. 42

To import an Microsoft Excel chart ......................................................................................................................................... 42

CREATING PORTABLE PRESENTATIONS .......................................................................................................................... 43

MACRO PROGRAMMING IN POWERPOINT........................................................................................................................ 45


Create a New Presentation.................................................................................................................................................. 46

PROJECTING YOUR SLIDESHOW IN THE CLASSROOM .................................................................................................. 50

PROOFING, EDITING, & COLLABORATING ........................................................................................................................ 53

To check consistency and style .............................................................................................................................................. 54

To follow up with Meeting Minder and Action Items................................................................................................................ 54

Master slides and custom templates....................................................................................................................................... 54

Customizing your slides using the slide master ...................................................................................................................... 54

To change master text and title styles .................................................................................................................................... 54

COPYING YOUR PRESENTATION TO MEMORY STICK..................................................................................................... 55

ADVANCED POWERPOINT .................................................................................................................................................. 57

Introduction ............................................................................................................................................................................. 58

Working with Text ................................................................................................................................................................... 58


Guides and Rulers............................................................................................................................................................... 58

Identifying Toolbars ................................................................................................................................................................ 59

Page Setup for 35mm slides................................................................................................................................................... 61

Creating Action Buttons .......................................................................................................................................................... 61

Adding Objects to Slides Using the Drawing Toolbar ............................................................................................................. 61

Advanced Drawing Techniques .............................................................................................................................................. 63

Combining Presentation ......................................................................................................................................................... 65

Creating Original Artworks in PowerPoint ............................................................................................................................... 65

-9-
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Builds and Transitions - A Review .......................................................................................................................................... 66

Setting Animation.................................................................................................................................................................... 66

Saving a Slide as a Graphic File............................................................................................................................................. 67

Organizational Charts ............................................................................................................................................................. 67

Showing Off your Presentation at a KIOSK ............................................................................................................................ 68

Annotating Slides.................................................................................................................................................................... 69

Style Checker ......................................................................................................................................................................... 69

ADDING A NARRATION ........................................................................................................................................................ 70

EXTENDING POWERPOINT BEYOND ................................................................................................................................. 73

POWERPOINT FAQS ............................................................................................................................................................ 77

Drawing In PowerPoint ........................................................................................................................................................... 77

Pictures and Other External Files ........................................................................................................................................... 78

Animation and Slide Show ...................................................................................................................................................... 80

Sound and Video .................................................................................................................................................................... 82

Printing.................................................................................................................................................................................... 83

Formatting............................................................................................................................................................................... 84

Saving, Using, Editing And Opening Presentations ................................................................................................................ 85

Unsolved Mysteries ................................................................................................................................................................ 87

POWERPOINT TIPS .............................................................................................................................................................. 88

Toolbars.................................................................................................................................................................................. 88

Saving, Using, Editing And Opening Presentations ................................................................................................................ 90

Formatting............................................................................................................................................................................... 92

Transitions & Animations ...................................................................................................................................................... 103

Templates ............................................................................................................................................................................. 104

Drawing In PowerPoint ......................................................................................................................................................... 106

Pictures And Other External Files......................................................................................................................................... 107

Printing.................................................................................................................................................................................. 109

PowerPoint Mysteries ........................................................................................................................................................... 111

Powerpoint Add Ins............................................................................................................................................................... 113

- 10 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

POWERPOINT KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS ......................................................................................................................... 114

Text Formatting..................................................................................................................................................................... 114

Deleting and Copying ........................................................................................................................................................... 114

Navigating in Text Blocks...................................................................................................................................................... 114

Navigating and Working With Objects .................................................................................................................................. 114

Outlining, in All Views ........................................................................................................................................................... 115

Outlining, in Outline View...................................................................................................................................................... 115

Selecting, in Text .................................................................................................................................................................. 115

Working with Slides and Presentation Files .......................................................................................................................... 115

Working with Presentation Windows..................................................................................................................................... 115

Drawing & Formatting ........................................................................................................................................................... 115

Controlling Slides in Slide Show ........................................................................................................................................... 116

Getting Help & Programming Tools ...................................................................................................................................... 116

- 11 -
Blueprints for a Successful Presentation

History of PowerPoint

- 12 -
Blueprints for a Successful Presentation

Microsoft PowerPoint is a powerful tool to create presentations and slide shows. These presentations are laid out in
a storyboard type fashion, where individual slides are created & formatted with text & images. Microsoft PowerPoint
allows you to construct dynamic looking presentations from scratch or by using the easy to use wizard. You can
also choose to prepare the presentations manually if you have got some basic expertise.

1983 - April 1987: PowerPoint Version 1 Forthought was founded by Rob Campbell and
Taylor Pohlman in order to develop a software
First version of PowerPoint published by Forethought of called Presenter which was later renamed as
Sunnyvale, CA. Powerpoint.
This version was originally called “Presenter” and was
designed for Windows version 2.0 Features
Development was done by 2 developers, and it took them All slides in one file.
exactly 16 months to complete Slide Master, Handout Pages & Note Pages.
Coding of the same was done using a Lisa with two 5 MB Slide Show, Lines, Boxes & Circles.
hard drives connected via the serial port. Black & White
Ran on any Macintosh with 512K RAM and a floppy drive—no
hard disk required.
May 1988: PowerPoint Version 2 Features
Find & Replace, Spell Checker, Color Schemes,
In August 1987, Microsoft acquires Forethought for $14 Shaded Fills.
Million; the product unit stays in California. Genigraphics Driver for slides
The competitor Aldus ships Persuasion 1.0 for Macintosh:
outliner
multiple masters
graphing
polygons
Harvard Graphics for DOS.
Lotus Freelance for DOS.

May 1990: Windows PowerPoint Version 2 Features


256 color support, WYSIWYG support, Bullets,
This was the first presentation product for Windows 3.0. Graphing, Compatibility with Harvard Graphics.
Fonts are a major problem for everyone.
Harvard Graphics announces move to OS/2; later ships
Windows product with same UI as DOS version.
Lotus Freelance ships newly designed product on OS/2, then
Windows.
Aldus slow to release buggy, slow Windows product with
poor Mac file compatibility.

May 1992: PowerPoint Version 3 Features


Outlining & drawing tools, transition effects,
PowerPoint version 3 is again the first application which flying bullets, sounds & video
required Windows 3.1.
Introduction of TrueType Fonts in this version of PowerPoint.
Major release with shared code between Mac and Windows
versions.
Aldus share leader on Macintosh.
Harvard Graphics share leader on PCs.
Microsoft puts serious effort into promoting Microsoft Office.

February 1994: PowerPoint Version 4.0 Features


Office look & feel: tooltips, status bar, OLE 2.0,
The suite battles begin from here with other players like Auto Layouts, Auto Content Wizard, Word Tables,
Lotus SmartSuite, Word Perfect. Rehearsal & Hidden Slides.
Lotus ships SmartSuite:
1-2-3, Ami Pro, Freelance Graphics
Word Perfect ships PerfectOffice:
Word Perfect, Quattro Pro, Draw Perfect
Harvard Graphics can’t find a dance partner
Aldus ignores Windows market, focuses on Mac.

- 13 -
Blueprints for a Successful Presentation

February 1994: PowerPoint Version 7.0 Features


Rewritten in C++, VBA programmability, Real
Application version number goes random. curves & textures, New animation schemes,
Microsoft owns major market share on PCs & MACs due to meeting minder, auto correct, black & white view.
phenomenal sales of Microsoft Office.
Lotus was bought by IBM & Word Perfect bought by Novell.
Aldus was also bought by Adobe & was left on Cans.
Harvard was left to die.

May 1997: PowerPoint Version 97 Features


Office Assistant, File compression, save to HTML,
By this time most of original PowerPoint team has left improved sound & animation effects, pack & go,
Microsoft. Auto Clipart.
Microsoft has dominant market share -- virtually no
competition.
Central office development team makes most product
decisions.
Focus on electronic presentations and on-line documents.
Product is Virtually “documentation free”

June 1999: Office 2000. Features


(From here onwards PowerPoint became a part of Microsoft Tri Pane view, picture bullets, animated GIFs,
Office Suite) Save to Web, Auto Fit text, real tables,
presentation conferencing, aliased fonts.
Now 4 versions of Office, that ship nine different products.
Typical installation of Office Premium: 626 MB for all nine
apps.
PowerPoint version 2000.

Sometime in 2004: Powerpoint 2002, XP Version Comparing & Merging changes in presentation,
animation paths for various shapes.
2005: Powerpoint 2003 Enhanced Collaboration between co-workers.
Package for CD
Improved Graphics & Multimedia.
Non’2006: Microsoft Office 2007 Major changes in User Interface & enhanced
graphics capabilities.
A lot of new features like Office One Note have been a part of
MS Office Suite.

- 14 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Before Using Microsoft PowerPoint

- 15 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Check for latest updates

PowerPoint is a complex software and like any other software this might also have bugs. Microsoft works real hard
to fix bugs as & when they're discovered. To get the fixes, you have to use what are called "Service Packs". We
strongly recommend that you check regularly for updates to your versions of both PowerPoint/Office and of
Windows. These updates are available in Microsoft site.

It is possible that you may not want to apply all available patches and service packs. If that is the case, you'll need
to read the information from Microsoft to decide what to update and what not to? But ... if you use Office 2003, you
should use Service Pack 1.

For Office updates, start at

http://office.microsoft.com/officeupdate/default.aspx?CTT=6&Origin=EC790020111033

For Windows updates see http://www.microsoft.com/windows/downloads/default.mspx

Or if you have one of these Windows versions:

Windows XP/Home, click Start, and then click Help and Support.

Windows XP or Windows 2000, click Start, Windows Update

Make sure you've got a printer driver installed and set it as Default

PowerPoint needs to find a printer driver when it starts up. Install some kind of printer driver and set it as your
default. Even if you don’t have a printer, install simple any printer driver that you find available in your PC. Any
printer with postscript fonts is advisable.

Even if you never actually print to this driver, it'll make


PowerPoint run smoothly. It doesn't matter whether the
printer's connected or not. You don't even need to own a
printer.

If your default printer is on a network and the driver's


installed on the network too, you'll have problems if the
network goes down or if you disconnect from the network.
That's the same as having no default printer at all. Laptop
users should watch out for this one especially.

Hence, it's advisable to install a local driver as your default


printer, even though you never print to it.

Turn off Fast Saves

Select Options from the Tools menu. In the Options dialog


box, click on the Save tab. Remove the checkmark next to
Allow Fast Saves.

Cut back on the number of Undos

Click the Edit tab of the Options dialog box. Change Maximum Number of Undos to something reasonable. Ten or
less seems like plenty; can you remember back more steps than that? Leaving Undos set too high uses more
memory and can confuse PowerPoint at times. The default is always 20.

And as long as you're in Options

PowerPoint 97: Advanced tab Here you can set your Default File Location -- the drive and folder where PowerPoint
will automatically offer to open/save your presentations when you do a File, Open or File, Save.

PowerPoint 2000 onwards: Same deal, except it's on the Save tab.

Print tab Turn off Background Printing. It might seem that Background Printing would speed up your work, but it
probably won't. PowerPoint returns control to you a little more quickly when Background Printing is turned on, but

- 16 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

because it's sharing computer cycles with the printing process, performance suffers (both your editing work and
printing).
Overall, you'll print faster with Background Printing turned off.
And your printouts may be better: sometimes PowerPoint misprints notes pages if Background Printing is on.

You may also want to experiment with turning Print Inserted Objects At Printer Resolution ON. This can improve
your printouts of e.g. pie charts.

Turn off Automatic Layout if you have PowerPoint XP or higher

Automatic layout can cause no end of peculiar little problems and this seems to have no practical value.

Turn it off.

Choose Tools, AutoCorrect Options (you'll need to have a presentation open for this to work).
Click the AutoFormat As You Type tab.
Remove the checkmark next to "Automatic layout for inserted objects"
Click OK

Though this appears to be a presentation-specific setting, once you turn it off, it will stay off.

Check the TEMP folder

Periodically check your \TEMP folder and delete excess files. If there's a lot of stuff in there, it can slow PowerPoint
(and other programs) down dramatically.

If you use PowerPoint 2000

Choose Tools, Customize then click the Options tab.


Remove the checkmark next to Menus Show Recently Used Commands First.
This prevents PowerPoint from "hiding" menu items you don't use often.

That's it, but ...

Here are a few other suggestions that may prevent you from losing your work:

NEVER open from or save to a diskette directly. Always copy presentations to your hard drive, open them, save
them to your hard drive, then copy them back to diskette if necessary.

Avoid opening from/saving to a shared Novell or NFS network drive. As with diskettes, work from a local (ie, on
your hard drive) copy of the presentation, then copy it off to the network drive when you're done with it.

Save Regularly and save often. Here's a good way to work:

While you're working on a presentation, press Ctrl+S every few slides to save the presentation.

Every time you're about to make any major changes, choose File, Save As and give the file a new name. We like to
tack on a number ... MyPresentation-1, MyPresentation-2, MyPresentation-3 and so on.

Or if you prefer something more automatic (and elegant), download & install Sequential Save, an utility which saves
PowerPoint files sequentially on every changes.

In either case, periodically copy the most recently saved file off to another drive, a network drive, removable
storage or burn it to CD. That way if the computer's hard drive crashes, you don't lose all your work.

Windows setup

We suggest making the following change to your default Windows setup:

Make Windows show your file extensions. Normally, Windows hides the dot+three-character file extension from
you. This file extension is what Windows uses to decide what application owns each of your flies, what to do when
you double-click an icon and so forth. Sooner or later, you'll need to view or change the extension for one of your
PowerPoint or related files, so to avoid confusion then, get Windows in the habit of showing you the info now.
Here's how:

- 17 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Double-click My Computer, Choose Tools, Folder Options from the menu bar of the "My Computer" window

Click the View tab

Scroll down a bit and remove the check mark next to "Hide extensions for known file types"

Make sure the other options are set the way you want them for all folders on you computer

Click "Apply to all folders"

Now when somebody suggests something cryptic like "Rename your .PPT file to .PPS" you'll be able to see what
they're talking about and you'll know how to do it.

- 18 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Creating a Simple Presentation

When you complete this chapter you will know

1. How to Open PowerPoint


2. Getting Started with PowerPoint
3. Various Views
4. Slide Manipulation
5. Adding Transitions
6. Color Schemes
7. Review the show
8. Saving Presentation
9. Pack & Go
10. Using Templates
11. Printing a Presentation

- 19 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Introduction
PowerPoint is an application that lets you create, print, and
deliver presentations.

You have several options for the delivery of a presentation, but


you only have to develop it once. You can print slides (a "slide"
is what PowerPoint calls each screen of information), print
handouts, print notes pages, prepare for 35mm slides, or deliver
an on-screen presentation. Only the on-screen presentation
allows you to use the full range of PowerPoint's features.

This chapter will help you get started with PowerPoint prepare a
basic presentation with a little effort. But the best idea will be using the help files that are an integral part of
Microsoft PowerPoint.

Getting Started

How to get started with PowerPoint?

Click on the Start button >> Programs >> Microsoft PowerPoint


OR
Click on the Start button >> Programs >> Microsoft Office >> Microsoft
PowerPoint, in case of Office 2003.

About the Slides On any given slide in a PowerPoint presentation, you can present
information in a variety of ways. You can type in text using text boxes, images, or
sounds, create charts, graphs, lists. Each element in a slide is considered its own
object, and can be moved or modified independently from other objects in a slide.

As you develop a PowerPoint presentation, it is important to remember that you


should not try to include every piece of information you wish to deliver.
PowerPoint slides should contain brief, concise, descriptive phrases that will help
you remember what you want to present and to serve as a reminder for your
audience. The most common mistake made by novice PowerPoint developers is to stuff too much information on
each slide.

When you start PowerPoint, the new presentation dialog box offers four choices as follows:

AutoContent Wizard asks you a series of questions designed to invite information about you and the type of
presentation you are making. The Wizard then builds a dummy presentation that will guide you in developing the
content of the presentation.

Design Template allows you to establish the background and color scheme from the available templates prior to
beginning work in the new presentation. Template choices are generally easier to make after you have opened the
new presentation because you can better see the characteristics of each template before making a selection. You
can either select the available templates, download
templates from web or prepare your custom templates
with the help of information in later part of this book.

Blank presentation opens a new presentation with no


template.

Open an existing presentation displays a list of recently


opened PowerPoint presentations from which you can
choose. Or, you may choose More Files to move to the
location of a previously saved presentation file and open
it.

Auto Layout

After you have opened a new presentation, PowerPoint displays


the New Slide dialog box containing twelve AutoLayouts.
AutoLayouts provide a pre-determined layout for each specific

- 20 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

type of slide. They provide consistency throughout the


presentation. Each layout depicted is described in the lower right
corner when you click the layout. This sample New Slide dialog
box shows the Title Slide selected (denoted with the thick border).

Title Slide
Bulleted List
Two Column Text
Table
Text & Chart
Chart & Text
Organizational Chart
Chart
Text & Clip Art
Clip Art & Text
Title Only
Blank Slide

Note: If you know what information you are going to put in your presentation, it is a good idea to use pre-designed layouts from above. Else
choose the Blank Slide & go ahead with your presentation.

Different Views That PowerPoint Demonstrates

There are different views within Microsoft PowerPoint that allow you to look at your presentation from different
perspectives.

Normal View Outline View Slide View Slide Sorter View Slide Show View

Switches to normal Switches to outline Switches to slide Displays miniature Runs your slide
view, where you can view, where you can view, where you can versions of all slides show in a full
work on one slide at work with the work on one slide at in a presentation, screen, beginning
a time or organize structure of your file a time complete with text with the current slide
the structure of all in outline form. Work and graphics. In if you are in slide
the slides in your in outline view when slide sorter view, view or the selected
presentation you need to organize you can reorder slide if you are in
the structure of your slides, add slide sorter view. If
file. transitions, and you simply want to
animation effects. view your show from
You can also set the the first slide:
timings for Click Slide Show at
electronic slide the top of the screen
shows. Select View Show

Review the PowerPoint Development Area

Title Menu Tool

- 21 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Slide

Slide Sorter
Normal View

Title Bar displays the name of the file that is opened and options for closing, minimizing and maximizing the
application window.

Menu Bar is the first row, which represents the various options like Edit, File etc. Clicking on each of these options
invokes a submenu offering a set of command options.
Toolbar contains a set of buttons that allows the users to work faster by clicking on a button that is symbolic of a
specific command.

Status Bar is available at the bottom of the screen. It displays the slide number on which the cursor is positioned in
the active presentation.

Drawing Toolbar enables a user to select various drawing options for presentations.

Slide Manipulation
1. Inserting A New Slide
Click Insert at top of screen
Select New Slide

2. Formatting A Slide Background

You can format your slide to make it look however you would
like, whether it be a background color, picture, or a design
template built into Microsoft PowerPoint. The next step will
show you how to apply a Design Template, but the other items
mentioned above can be accomplished the same way.

Click Format on the menu bar.


Select Apply Design Template
Select Design you wish to apply
Click Apply Button

3. Adding Text to a Slide

Open the presentation you created. The first slide already contains the title and your name. Also, note that the
footer text that you chose is on the slide.

In the Outline pane, select the text “State the purpose of the discussion” and then type Classroom procedures,
attendance, and grades.

Select the text “Identify yourself” and then type Instructor and student introductions.

Continue by replacing text in each of the slides. You can edit slides at any time by clicking the text you want to
change. Then you can delete, add, or change text.

- 22 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

4. Adding Notes to a Slide

The Notes pane is used to add speaking notes to a presentation. After you have completed a presentation, you can
print the presentation with notes so that you can keep track of what is coming up next in the presentation.

Use the scroll bar in the Slide pane to move to the first slide in the presentation.
Click in the Notes pane.

Type Explain that the presentation will give all class participants an overview of what to expect for the coming
semester.

Continue to add notes to each slide by selecting the slide with the scroll bar, clicking in the Notes pane, and then
typing the notes.

Save your work.

5. Replacing Fonts in your Presentation

On the Format menu, click Replace Fonts. To see this option, you may have to click the chevron.
In the With box, click Arial Black.
Click Replace.
Click the Replace menu and click Tahoma.
In the With box, click AvantGarde.
Click Replace.
Repeat steps 4-6 until you have selected the most effective fonts for your presentation.
Click Close when you have finished.
Save your work.

6. Inserting Clipart & Pictures

Display the slide you want to add a picture to.


Click Insert on the menu bar.
Select Picture
Select Clip Art
Click the category you want
Click the picture you want
Click Insert Clip on the shortcut menu
When you are finished using the Clip Gallery, click the Close button on the Clip Gallery title bar
Steps 1-4 are very similar when inserting other Pictures, Objects, Movies, Sounds, and Charts

7. Add an Autoshape

On the Insert menu, click Picture and then click AutoShapes.


Click Stars and Banners and then click the 5-Point Star.
Click in the upper-right corner of the slide and then drag the object down diagonally about one inch.
To delete an AutoShape, right-click the AutoShape you want to delete and then click Cut.

8. Add an Autoshape with Text

On the AutoShapes toolbar, click Callouts.


Click the Rounded Rectangular Callout.
Click in the slide and drag the object down diagonally about one inch.
Type the text of your choice.
Select the text you have just typed.
Right-click the Callout box, click Font, change the font size to 24, and then click OK.
Click and drag the upper-right corner of the Callout box until all the text fits within it.
Close the AutoShapes toolbar.

9. Grouping & Ungrouping

• Choose the objects or pictures you want to group. From the drawing toolbar, select Draw –
Group. You will see all individual pictures or objects will be combined to a single object. For
ungrouping, select the object, click Draw – Ungroup. All the individual components in the
object will be ungrouped.

- 23 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

10. Insert a Chart

Click on the Insert Menu


Click New Slide
Click on Chart
Type a title: Create a Chart
Double-click on the box marked “Double click to add chart”
PowerPoint includes sample data that can be replaced with your own.
Change the numbers under 1st Qtr with: 85, 62.5, 15
Change the chart type to a 3D bar. Click the Chart Type button on the toolbar:
Select 3D Bar

Click on the white area outside of the chart box to return to PowerPoint slide view.

11. Inserting Slide Numbers, Date Time

Select Insert – Slide Number from the menu bar to insert a slide number.
Select Insert – Date/Time from the menu bar to insert your date/time.

12. Inserting Headers & Footers

On the View menu, click Header and Footer.

On the Slide tab, under Include on slide, select Date and time and Update automatically if you want the date to
reflect the last date the slides were modified. You can also do one of the following:

You can also select a date format from the date list

- Or –

Select Fixed and type the date you will be giving the presentation, so that it reflects when the presentation is given
instead of when it was updated.

Select Slide number to print a number on each slide.

Select Footer; the text English 7-8 is already in the footer. To change this, select the text and then type the preferred
text in the text box.

Select Don't show on title slide. This shows the footer you have created on all subsequent slides, but leave the
footer off the title slide.

Click Apply to All to make these changes throughout the presentation.

13. Inserting Movie & Sound

For a media-rich slideshow, you may decide to display some movie or sound files that you can play during your
presentation. You must first have the movie or sound file saved on your computer. For more details on this, see the
later part of this book. You can insert a voice narration, video, audio, music etc in this section.

14. Inserting Comments

On the Insert menu, click Comment, and then type Remember to update this slide. PowerPoint 2000 automatically
adds your user name to indicate that you wrote the note.

To move the comment, move the pointer over the it. When the double-headed arrow appears, click and drag the
comment to where you want to move it.

To turn off Comments, on the View menu, click Comments.

15. Follow up with meeting minder

Participants in an online meeting can also use the Meeting Minder dialog box or the Speaker Notes dialog box to take
notes. The notes are visible to all participants. These features are available only when the presentation is in Slide
Show view.

To add notes or meeting minutes, right-click the slide and then click Meeting Minder or Speaker Notes.

- 24 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Click in the box and then type the notes or minutes.

To add an action item, right-click the slide, click Meeting Minder and then click the Action Items tab.

Click in the box, type the information for the first action item, and then click Add.

Repeat step 2 for every action item and then click OK. The action items appear on a new slide at the end of the slide
show.

16. Make your Presentation Look Great with a Background

PowerPoint includes several presentation designs with formatting and graphic elements. Even if you only have a
black and white printer, there is an option that can make presentation designs look great in black and white. In this
exercise, we will show you that option.

Add a design:
• Click on the Format Menu
• Choose Apply Design
• Scroll through the list of designs and select one you like
• Click Apply

View your Presentation in Black and White:

• Click on the View Menu


• Choose Black and White

17. Inserting Other Objects

Tables: Go to the menu bar and select Insert >> Table to insert a number of rows and columns to create a table.
When the table is inserted, a new table menu window will pop up with various formatting features. Here, you can
add borders, change the border sizes of the table, and manage the cells in the table.

Hyperlink: If you are giving a presentation on a computer that has access to the Internet, then you may find it
helpful to have some hyperlinks in your slideshow, so that you can click on a link while you are presenting and then
demonstrate a web site. To insert a hyperlink, go to the menu bar and select Insert >> Hyperlink. Then, a new
window will appear for specifying the information regarding the hyperlink you want to insert into your document.

List: boxes are the same as any other text box. There are many ways you can create lists in text boxes in
PowerPoint. The first way is to create a new slide and choose a slide from the pre-made layouts. You can recognize
a slide with a list object box by the bulleted list. Another way to add a list is insert a new text box in a slide. Then,
click inside the box. Using the formatting toolbar, click on the Numbering or Bullets button. To start making your
list, simply click your cursor next to the first bullet and type. To add a new item to the list, just hit the Enter key on
your keyboard to begin a new line.

WordArt: Inserting a WordArt element rather than regularly formatting text can
give a little extra flair. WordArt is essentially text effects. To bring up the WordArt
Gallery, open up the WordArt toolbar by going to the menu bar and selecting
View >> Toolbars >> WordArt. A separate toolbar just for making WordArt will
now appear. Click on the respective options to create a nice looking wordart to be
inserted into the slide.

Inserting Wordart

1. On the Insert menu, click Picture and then click WordArt.


2. Double-click the WordArt in the first column, third row.
3. Type the text you want in the WordArt.
4. In the Font box, click a font.
5. In the Size box, click 72.
6. Click OK. The WordArt appears on the slide.
7. Drag the WordArt to the location on the slide that you prefer.
8. Close the WordArt toolbar by clicking the X in the upper-right corner of the toolbar.

Flowchart
1. Select the slide to which you want to add flowchart symbols.
2. On the View menu, click Toolbars and then click Drawing.
3. On the Drawing toolbar, click AutoShapes, click Flowchart, and then click a shape.
4. Click in the slide and then drag the shape down diagonally about one inch.

- 25 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

5. Type the text you want in the shape and then make any changes to the text like you did with
the AutoShape.
6. Add additional flowchart symbols by following steps 3-5.

Add Smart Connectors


1. On the Drawing toolbar, click AutoShapes and then click Connectors.
2. Click Straight Arrow Connector (in the upper-center of the palette).
3. Move the pointer over the shape you just added to your slide. Notice that OfficeArt changes
the pointer to a scope and the object is outlined by four blue boxes.
4. Click any connection point on the first shape. Release the mouse button to anchor the
connector.
5. Click any connection point on a second shape. Release the mouse button to anchor the
connector.
6. Drag the first shape to a new location on the slide. Notice that OfficeArt keeps the arrow
connector attached between the shapes.

Adding Transitions to a Slide Show


You can add customized transitions to your slide show that will make it come alive and become appealing to your
audience. Follow these steps when adding Slide Transitions.

In slide or slide sorter view, select the slide or slides you want to add a transition to.
On the Slide Show menu at the top of the screen, click Slide Transition
In the Effect box, click the transition you want, and then select any other options you want
To apply the transition to the selected slide, click Apply.
To apply the transition to all the slides, click Apply to All.
Repeat the process for each slide you want to add a transition to.
To view the transitions, on the Slide Show menu, click Animation Preview.

Color Scheme
Color schemes are useful if you are not already using a pre-
made designed template. If you click on the “Color
Schemes” text, you will see the color schemes menu.

From this point, you can apply pre-made color schemes to


one or all slides. Simply click on a color scheme, and you
will see how it looks on the current slide appearing on your
scheme.

If you don’t like any of the available color schemes, click on


the Edit Color Schemes or Customs to create your own
color schemes.

Using the Animation Scheme

When you select a text box, an image object, a graph, or any other sort of PowerPoint object, you can choose to
apply an animation to it. During your slideshow presentation, instead of the text just appearing on the screen
regularly, an applied preset animation uses a special effect to make an object appear on the screen in some sort of
action, such as "flying" or "typing" or "spinning" on to the screen. View the Animation Schemes by going to the
menu bar and selecting Slide Show >> Animation Schemes.

A panel containing all of the animations you can use will appear in the “Slide Design” panel on the right of your
screen:

Make sure you have selected an object. Then choose a Preset Animation from the list. If you click on an animation
name, you can preview the animation on your screen.

Using Custom Animations

You feel like doing more advanced work with animations, you can choose to make your own special effects to apply
to objects. Go to the menu bar and select Slide Show >> Custom Animation. The custom animation options will
appear in the “Slide Design” panel on the right side of the screen. Play around with all of the different options until

- 26 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

you come up with something you like. You can come up with just about any kind of combination of transitions,
directions, timing, and grouping of words/letters/objects.

Reviewing the Slide Show


Now that you have created a presentation, you can make sure that the delivery is as well prepared as the
presentation itself. PowerPoint offers a variety of ways to review and deliver presentations so that they are polished
and professional.

The Slide Show feature allows you to preview your presentation on your computer. You can use the Slide Show to
check a presentation before printing it or to prepare to show it electronically. By adding transitions to your
presentation, you can help emphasize topic changes.

To preview the slide show

• On the Slide Show menu, click View Show.


• After the first slide appears, click anywhere on the screen to move through the presentation.
• At the last slide, click anywhere to end the slide show.

Highlighting parts of the slide show

You can use highlighting while you are giving the presentation to add emphasis to important information.

• On the Slide Show menu, click View Show.


• Click the right-mouse button, point to Pointer Options and then click Pen. The mouse pointer becomes a
pen.
• Click and hold the pen on the slide. Drag the pen around the words you want to highlight until a line
encircles the text.
• Click the right-mouse button, point to Pointer Options and then click Arrow. The pen changes back to the
mouse pointer.
• Click anywhere on the slide to advance to the next slide.
• To save your changes, on the File menu, click Save.

To use the Slide Show Menu

• On the Slide Show menu, click Set Up Show.


• Click Browsed at a kiosk and notice that PowerPoint automatically checks the Loop continuously box.
• Under Slides, click All. Notice the box at the bottom of the menu that lets you select how slides are
advanced--manually or based on slide timings. The selections that make it easy for you to set up a self-
running presentation are all now available in a single menu. Leave as the default by clicking OK.
• On the Slide Show menu, click View Show. The presentation runs in a continuous loop.
• To end the show, press ESC.

You can view your slide show by any of the following ways:

Click Slide Show at the lower left of the PowerPoint window.

On the Slide Show menu, click View Show.

On the View menu, click Slide Show.

Press F5 on the keyboard

Navigating While In Your Slide Show

Forward Navigation: Simply click on the left Mouse Button or hit the Enter Button on your keyboard
Reverse Navigation: Hit the Backspace on the keyboard
Exiting the show: Hit the Esc Button on the keyboard

- 27 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Saving Your Presentation


It's important to save your work frequently, so that you don't lose your work. To save your presentation, go to the
menu bar and select File >> Save As.

When the window appears, find a location to save your presentation on your computer, and give it a file name in the
text box. To save your file periodically as you work on it, use the shortcut Ctrl+S.

Saving the document as another file type

Now that you have a conventional slide show presentation, you can save the presentation as another file type for
use on any computer. If you are sharing your presentation with others who have a different version of PowerPoint
or other kinds of presentation software or files, you may need to select a different file type. By saving your file in
HTML, you make it possible for anyone with a browser to download and read the presentation.

Saving to the Web

To “Save a presentation to the Web” means to place a copy of the presentation in HTML format on the Web. When
saving a presentation to the Web you can do any of the following:

• Make available on the Web a copy of a presentation that only you will edit.
• Make a subset of your presentation available.
• Select which browser format you want to make your presentation available in, such as Microsoft Internet
Explorer 6.0 or Netscape Navigator 8.0.
• Make only the slides (not the notes) of your presentation available.

To save your presentation as a Web page

• On the File menu, click Save as Web Page.


• Select a folder and name the file and then click Save.
• To view the presentation as a Web page, open it in the browser.

To save a copy of a presentation to a Web server in Windows Explorer

• In Windows Explorer, right-click the file you want to copy or move to a Web server and then click Copy.
• Double-click Web Folders.
• In the list of Web folder sites, double-click the folder you want and then right-click the destination folder
you want to save the presentation to and then click Paste.
• If you don't see the Web server you want to save your presentation to, double-click Add Web Folder at
the root folder of Web Folders to create a new Web folder to it. When you save a presentation as a Web
page, all supporting files—such as bullets, background textures, and graphics—are organized in a
supporting folder. If you move or copy a Web page to another location, you must also move the
supporting folder so that you maintain all links to the Web page.

Pack & Go

Pack up a presentation for use on another computer

Open the Presentation you want to pack


On the File menu, click Pack and Go
Follow the instructions in the Pack and Go Wizard.

Unpack a presentation to run on another computer

Insert the disk or connect to the network location you packed the presentation to
In My Computer, go to the location of the packed presentation, and then double-click Pngsetup
Enter the destination you want to copy the presentation to

- 28 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Designing a Quick Presentation using Design Template

Design Template In the new section of the New


Presentation panel, click on the “From Design
Template” button. The following panel will then
appear. This is a list of different design
templates. They are pre-made backgrounds &
layouts that you can use to quickly prepare a
presentation. When you find the design you
want to use, simply click on the design and it
will be applied to your presentation. Each new
slide you create now onwards, will retain the
same design.

You can right-click on a design template to


bring up even more options. You can apply a
design template to selected slides, all the
slides, use the design for all new presentations
you create, or choose to view large preview
versions of the slide designs.

Printing a Presentation

You can print other types of presentation output using the Print what list. When you print notes pages, they print
with one slide at the top of the page and the presentation notes at the bottom of the page. Handouts print two,
three, or six slides per page with room for your audience to add notes as you give the presentation. You may use
handouts to provide an outline of the presentation to your class.

To print notes

• On the View menu, point to Master, and then click Notes Master.
• Add the items you want on the notes master—art, text, headers or footers, date, time, or page
number. Items you add appear only on the notes; no changes are made to the slide master.
• On the File menu, click Print.
• In the Print what box, click Notes Pages.
• Click OK.

To print handouts

• On the View menu, point to Master and then click Handout Master.
• On the View menu, point to Toolbars and then click Handout Master. To preview the layout you
want, click the layout buttons on the Handout Master toolbar.
• Add the items you want on the handout master— art, text, headers or footers, date, time, or page
number. Items you add appear only on the handouts; no changes are made to the slide master.
• On the File menu, click Print.
• In the Print what box, click Handouts.
• In the Slides per page box, click the number of slides you want on the handouts.
• If you select four, six, or nine slides per page, click Horizontal or Vertical to specify the order in
which you want the slides to appear on the page.
• You can also change the orientation of the paper when you print handouts. Click Page Setup on
the File menu and then click Landscape or Portrait under Notes, handouts & outline.
• Click OK.

- 29 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Good bye to your Ignorance of making a Presentation


PowerPoint 2000 is a powerful presentation tool that can be used by both educators and students to present information to
students and peers.

Use PowerPoint to write lecture notes. You can also record your lecture directly into the slide show and then save
the presentation to the Web for students to review before tests.

Search the World Wide Web for the topic you or your students are studying. By downloading videos, sounds, and
pictures you can bring the world right into your classroom. You can also record sounds directly into a slide show if
your computer has a microphone.

Teach foreign language phrases and simple stories using the voice narratives partnered with illustrations.

Create multimedia presentations for class reports and group projects.

Incorporate research from Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, Microsoft Bookshelf, and the Internet in a presentation.

Show the results of surveys and questionnaires using charts and graphs in a PowerPoint slide.

Create slide shows using the Clip Gallery to teach vocabulary in the foreign language classroom.

- 30 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Mind Mapping

At the end of this chapter you will know about

Using Mind Mapping


Drawing a Mind Map
Benefits of Mind Map
Creating a Mind Map

- 31 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Whenever I plan to make a presentation, I simply get stressed by thinking about it.

How do I begin? What format I should use? How can I make my presentation as impressive as possible? Sometimes
this creates a serious mind block and I keep postponing the presentation. It was not that I didn’t know what to do? It
was because too many things were in the mind about how to present the presentation.

Later I realized maybe I don’t have all the information required for choosing a format for the presentation. I used to
get excited that the presentation always posed both as a creative & intellectual challenge for me.

When presented with challenging tasks like this, we often fail to organize our thought process – even if it is an all-
important presentation that could be the turning point in our career.

Mind Mapping is a process that helps us beat these mind blocks. So what is a mind map actually?

Mind Maps are very important techniques for improving the way we take notes. By using Mind Maps we show the
structure of the subject and linkages between points, as well as the raw facts contained in normal notes. Mind Maps
hold information in a format that our mind will find easy to remember and quick to review.

Mind Maps abandon the list format of conventional note taking. They do this in favor of a two-dimensional structure. A good Mind
Map shows the 'shape' of the subject, the relative importance of individual points and the way in which one fact relates to other.

Mind Maps are more compact than conventional notes, often taking up one side of paper. This helps you to make
associations easily. If you find out more information after you have drawn the main Mind Map, then you can easily
integrate it with little disruption.

Mind Maps are also useful for:


Summarizing information
Consolidating information from different research sources
Thinking through complex problems, and
Presenting information that shows the overall structure of your subject

Mind Maps are also very quick to review, as it is easy to refresh information in your mind just by glancing at one.

The following example shows how mind mapping can be used to think creatively.

Give a child to write an essay on any particular topic. He will have trouble finding enough words to write the essay.
Now follow this method. Instead of asking him to write an essay, ask him to write certain words associated with the
topic. As his imagination runs through, he will fill up the sheet with a lot of words. Once he is through with that, ask
him to use the words as reference to write an essay. He will be able to write the essay.

How to Draw a Mind Map

Use just key words, or wherever possible images. Only related points & few words (as few as possible)
Keep your thoughts logical.
Start from the center of the page and work out.
Make the center a clear and strong visual image that depicts the general theme of the map.
Create sub-centers for sub-themes.
Put key words on lines. This reinforces structure of notes.
Print rather than write in script. It makes them more readable and memorable. Lower case is more visually
distinctive (and better remembered) than upper case.
Use color to depict themes, associations and to make things stand out.
Anything that stands out on the page will stand out in your mind.
Think three-dimensionally.
When two topics seems related, connect them using an arrow.
Don't get stuck in one area. If you dry up in one area go to another branch.
Put ideas down as they occur, wherever they fit. Don't judge or hold back.
Break boundaries. If you run out of space, don't start a new sheet; paste more paper onto the map. (Break the 8x11
mentality.)
If you forgot something, come back, add them & continue.
Be creative. Creativity aids memory.
Take a break. Come back, see what you’ve done. Spend sometime modifying the map that you have prepared.

- 32 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Benefits of Mind Mapping

Mind Map can halve the time it takes to


prepare a presentation or write a report.
Mind Map allows you to use words to
visually relate concepts & information in
ways that are more enlightening than note
taking or outlining.
Mind mapping a presentation helps you take
a look at how you can best present your
information, because it enables you to
focus not only on the content, but also on
the sequence of the content.
Mind Map also allows you to see what is
missing.

Creating a Mind Map

Start with the central word or idea. Note only


related points. Keep exhausting your ideas until you
are finished.

Do not restrict your thoughts and keep them


logical.

Use only key words. Don’t use too many words than required. That
might confuse you later.

If you remind something, which you have forgot to add, bounce back, add the idea and continue.

When two topics are related to each other, draw an arrow to connect them. Make the arrow in a different color so
that it can be identified easily.

Give yourself a break of a few minutes. Sit back & look at what you have prepared. Spend sometime on adding,
modifying the mind map.

Congratulations!!! Now you are ready with your mind map. Remember; don’t use the mind map as a presentation.
Instead, use the mind map to write your report. Use it to make sure that all the elements you want is there before
you start working on your presentation.

Notes:

Leave lots of space


Some of the most useful mind maps are those which are added to over a period of time. After the initial drawing of the mind map
you may wish to highlight things, add information or add questions for the duration of a subject right up until exam time. For this
reason it is a good idea to leave lots of space.

Use capitals
The idea of using capitals is to encourage you to get down only the key points. Capitals are also easier to read in a diagram. You
may, however, wish to write down some explanatory notes in lower case. Some students do this when they revisit the mind map at
a later date while others write in such things as assessment criteria in this way.

Look for relationships


Use lines, colors, arrows, branches or some other way of showing connections between the ideas generated on your mind map.
These relationships may be important in you understanding new information or in constructing a structured essay plan. By
personalizing the map with your own symbols and designs you will be constructing visual and meaningful relationships between
ideas which will assist in your recall and understanding.

Use color to separate different ideas:


This will help you to separate ideas where necessary. It also helps you to visualize of the Mind Map for recall. Color also helps to
show the organization of the subject.

- 33 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Adding Multimedia Contents

When you complete this chapter you will know

Recording a Voice Narration


Insert an audio track
Insert a Video
Adding Flash Animation

- 34 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

As the audiences become more sophisticated, they expect from you, more professional-looking presentations.
Adding multimedia content such as video and sound to your presentation gives it the edge that it needs to capture
your audiences’ attention and hold it. At the same time, multimedia content can often communicate more
information than a slide with only a few sentences.

Sounds, music, videos, and animated GIF pictures are available in the Clip Gallery. You can insert a music, sound,
or video clip into a slide show. You can have the clip play automatically when you move to the slide or have the clip
play only when you click its icon during a slide show.

You need speakers and a sound card on the computer to play music and sounds. To find out what's installed on the
computer and what settings are in use, check both the Multimedia and Sounds categories in Windows Control
Panel.

P.S. Keep in mind that voice narration is not always the best way to get your information across. If some of your audience is
deaf or hard of hearing, if some people in your audience have computers that do not have sound cards, or if the computer is
located in a noisy room, you might want to use slide notes for each slide also.

About recording a voice narration or sound in a slide show


You might want to add narration to a slide show in the following cases:

• For a Web-based presentation


• For archiving a meeting so that presenters can review it later and hear comments made during the
presentation
• For individuals who can't attend a presentation
• For self-running slide shows

To record a narration, the computer needs a sound card and a microphone. You can record a narration before you
run a slide show or you can record it during the presentation and include audience comments.

If you don't want narration throughout the entire slide show, you can also record separate sounds or comments on
selected slides or objects.

You can't record and play sounds at the same time, so while you're recording the narration, you won't hear other
sounds you inserted in your slide show. Also, voice narration takes precedence over all other sounds. If you are
running a slide show that includes both narration and other sounds, only the narration is played.

The narration automatically plays when running the show. To run the slide show without narration, click Set Up
Show on the Slide Show menu and then select the Show without narration check box.

To record a voice narration

For this procedure, you need a microphone.

• On the Slide Show menu, click Record Narration. A dialog box appears showing the amount
of free disk space and the number of minutes you can record.

• If this is the first time you are recording, click Set Microphone Level, and then follow the
directions to set the microphone level.

• Do one of the following:


• To insert the narration on your slides as an embedded object and to begin recording,
click OK to begin recording.
• To insert the narration as a linked object, select the Link narrations in check box and
then click OK to begin recording.

• Advance through the slide show, and add narration as you go.

• To save the timings along with the narration, click Yes. To save only the narration, click No.
A sound icon appears in the lower-right corner of each slide that has narration.

- 35 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

To insert a CD audio track on a slide


You don't need to insert the CD in the CD-ROM drive for this procedure.

Display the slide you want to add a CD audio track to.

On the Insert menu, point to Movies and Sounds and then click Play CD Audio Track.

Select the track and timing options you want, and then click OK. A CD icon appears on
the slide.
A message is displayed. If you want the CD to play automatically when you move to the
slide, click Yes. If you want the CD to play only when you click the CD icon during a
slide show, click No.

To preview the music in Normal view, double-click the CD icon.

To insert a video on a slide


Display the slide you want to add the video to.

On the Insert menu, point to Movies and Sounds.

Do one of the following:

To insert a video from the Clip Gallery, click Movie from Gallery and then locate and insert
the video you want.

To insert a video from another location, click Movie from File, locate the folder that
contains the video and then double-click the video you want. Preferably try to copy
the video file to the same directory as your PowerPoint Presentation.

A message is displayed. If you want the movie to play automatically when you move to the
slide, click Yes. If you want the movie to play only when you click the movie during a
slide show, click No.

To preview the movie in Normal view, double-click the movie.

Advanced Options: You can drag your movie clip around and insert text boxes & images around it, as with any other
slide item. You can also resize movies just like pictures: drag on the white circle in one of the corners. For full-
screen projection, just enlarge your movie until it fills the slide. If you have PowerPoint 2003, you can also right-
click on the movie, choose Edit Movie Object, and check Zoom to Full Screen.

Adding Flash Animation to PowerPoint Presentations


Most of the people have the idea that Flash is a web design tool. It is no doubt, it allows you to create incredible
web content with sound, animation, and graphics. However, if you are going to use Flash to create web content or
other complex media, you can take advantage of this and use Flash animation (Shockwave files) to add to
PowerPoint presentations. This will make your PowerPoint presentation look more attractive.

The advantage of having a Flash Animation are many. Some of them are:

• Vector-based animation: looks good at any size.


• much smaller files than gifs
• powerpoint loops all animated gifs
• very precise controls, including buttons, starts & stops
• gif files aliased to specific background color--easy to change in flash

Though PowerPoint supports various types animated files, these are quite static and are quite large in size. Using
Flash animations inside PowerPoint presentations adds interactivity & vector animation to the PowerPoint
presentation – with fairly little increase in file size. And, if the Flash ActiveX Control r25 is installed, the Flash movie
can even be printed.

- 36 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Integrating a Flash movie inside PowerPoint allows vector animation and interactivity to be added to a PowerPoint
presentation.

Note: Don't Forget the ActiveX Control!

Using Flash in PowerPoint requires the Flash ActiveX control to be installed on the machine used to view the
PowerPoint content. If that machine uses Internet Explorer 4 or higher and can view Flash, the ActiveX control is
automatically installed.

To add a Flash movie to a PowerPoint presentation

1. Open the PowerPoint 2000 presentation to which you want to add Flash animation.
2. Select View > Toolbars > Control Toolbox. The Control Toolbox appears.
3. Click the Hammer and Wrench icon (More Controls). A list of all the ActiveX controls installed on the
machine appears.
4. Choose Shockwave Flash Object from the list of controls.
5. Move cursor over the slide. Click and drag to define the area in which to play the Flash movie. You can
make the movie any size.
6. Right-click on the Flash movie placeholder and select Properties from the popup menu that appears. The
Properties dialog appears.

On the Alphabetic tab, scroll down to view swURL. In the box to the right, enter the path or URL to the SWF you
wish to use. If the SWF is in the same directory as the PowerPoint file just enter the SWF name. The SWF can also
be at any valid URL network address.

Click OK. Now view the slideshow. The Flash content should play as expected.

When you choose the object, the cursor should change into a crosshair.

- 37 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Creating a Template

When you complete this chapter you will know about

1. Creating Custom Templates


2. Create a Design Template
3. Add a template to Autocontent Wizard
4. Animating Design Templates

- 38 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Creating Custom Templates

With PowerPoint you can easily change presentation styles. Depending on the available material and category of
audience you are addressing, you may want to select specific styles or keep a consistent style for a topic or series
of lessons. In case you don’t

If at any time you select a style that you do not want to use for your presentation, you can easily and quickly
change to another style. Or you can try several different styles to find one that fits your presentation. Design
templates are used to change the styles at one go. In this chapter we will show you how to create your own design
template

P.S. If none of the templates suit your needs or you want to create a presentation with a unique appearance, start with a blank
presentation and follow the steps for designing a template. To open a blank presentation, click New on the File menu.

To create a design template


To build your own template, start with a new blank presentation, and select the blank new slide option.

Click the OK button, and then, from PowerPoint’s main menu, select View| Master| Slide Master.

When the slide master appears on the screen, you'll see a fairly black-and-white uninspiring template.

You can, however, change the fonts, colors, and background of the slide.

Begin by setting the background color: right-click over a blank area of the slide (outside any of the frames) to view
a menu of options for adjusting the template's background and color schemes.

From the menu, select Background to introduce the Background dialog that controls background colors.

From the Background dialog, you can select from the default palette of colors, click on the More Colors option to
introduce more colors still, and/or click on the Fill Effects option to introduce a variety of pattern/fading color
options. (You might want avoid the fill effects, since they can potentially interfere with the clarity of text elements
on the screen: if you do use fill effects, always double-check for visibility and clarity.)

Once you've set your background color, you can adjust the slide color scheme: this lets you choose default colors
for a variety of elements that might appear on your slides. Again, start by right-clicking over a blank area of the
slide (outside of any frame). Select the Slide Color Scheme option from the context menu that appears. You'll then be
presented with a two-tabbed dialog, as illustrated below:

A range of preset color combinations appears under the Standard tab. Under the Custom tab, you have the option
of setting screen element colors one at a time. Make your adjustments as you'd like and then click the Apply to All
button.

Next, you'll want to adjust the Font styles, the Bullet styles, and the Animation Effects. To do this, you'll need to
click on the screen element you'd like to adjust (i.e. the title area) to highlight its border.

Then right-click on the selected frame to bring up a context menu of possible actions.

For differing slide elements, you'll want to set differing properties, as outlined below:

Title Style : Set only the font and font color; avoid applying animations to titles.

Text Style : Font colors and animations can be set for the entire Text area by selecting the frame; alternately,
individual heading levels can have font sizes, colors, bullet styles, and animations set one at a time if you select
each line individually and right-click on a single line.
Date/Footer/Number Styles : Animations should be avoided here. Font sizes and colors can be set.

Finally, if you'd like to include a picture (or a logo) as part of your slide template, you can use the Insert|Picture item
from PowerPoint's main menu, and then add to your template whatever image you'd like. You should remember
also that right-clicking on a picture and selecting the Order option allows you to send the picture behind the text
elements on your screen.

- 39 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

That's it. Your template is finished. Click on File|Save As and select Design Template (*.pot) from the Save as type
field. Give your template file a name in the File Name field, and then click the Save button.

The next time you create a presentation, you'll be able to apply your very own design template by selecting it from
the list of options under the Format|Apply Design Template list of templates.

To create a content template

• Open an existing presentation or template that you want to base the new template on.
• Change the presentation or template to suit your needs.
• On the File menu, click Save As.
• In the Save as type box, click Design Template.
• In the File name box, enter a name for the new template and then click Save.

To add a template to the AutoContent Wizard

• On the File menu, click New and then click the General tab.
• Double-click the AutoContent Wizard and then click Next.
• Select the category that you want your template to be displayed in (you cannot add to the All or Carnegie
Coach categories) and then click Add.
• Find the template you want to add and then click OK.

Animating PowerPoint Design Templates


You've learned a great deal about creating an effective PowerPoint presentation. Here's the piece that will separate
your presentation from all the rest: animating PowerPoint's own design templates.

Drawing upon your knowledge of using Slide Masters, of grouping and ungrouping objects, of re-coloring objects, and
animation, you can add your own personal touches to PowerPoint's own Design Templates.

For the most effective animation, choose those designs that contain concrete objects, such as twinkles, tropics,
and theater, rather than blended and shaded designs.

To animate template designs,

1. Choose VIEW: Master: Slide Master.


2. Click in an empty place on the slide (not in a text box).
3. From the Drawing Toolbar, choose DRAW: Ungroup.
4. Press ESC to deselect all the objects.
5. Click on the object you wish to animate (remember you can group objects to have them function as a single
entity.)
6. Choose SLIDE SHOW: Custom Animation.
7. Choose your animations options.

Animate any other objects you desire.

- 40 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Importing Other Office Formats

- 41 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Import Microsoft Word text into your presentation


You can use text or document created in Word to add text to an existing presentation. PowerPoint can import Word
documents, and documents in rich text format (.rtf), plain text format (.txt), or HTML format (.htm).

PowerPoint uses the outline structure from the styles in the document, when you import a Word document. A
heading 1 becomes a slide title; a heading 2 becomes the first level of text, and so on. If the document contains no
styles, PowerPoint uses the paragraph indentations to create an outline. The slide master in the current
presentation determines the format for the title and text.

1. Open a Word document.


2. In Word, select the text you want to import into PowerPoint.
3. On the Edit menu, click Copy.
4. Click PowerPoint on the taskbar.
5. Place the cursor in the outline where you want to insert the text.
6. On the Edit menu, click Paste.

To import an Microsoft Excel chart

Like Microsoft Word, you can also import spreadsheets created in Microsoft Excel into a PowerPoint Presentation.

1. Open an Excel chart.


2. In Excel, select the chart you want to import into PowerPoint.
3. On the Edit menu, click Copy.
4. Click PowerPoint on the taskbar.
5. Place the cursor on the slide where you want to insert the chart.

On the Edit menu, click Paste.

- 42 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Creating Portable Presentations

- 43 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

After creating a Presentation in your PC, you might need to move it to another PC. To do the same, please follow
the guidelines mentioned herewith:

Fonts: Do not use any fancy fonts. Use only those fonts that ship with Office or PowerPoint. Fonts do not travel
with the presentation, so if you do have a special font that your company uses, you'll need to know how to copy the
necessary files, and install that font on the destination machine. Well, if it is really necessary to use the fonts, see
the later part of this book on tips to carry fonts with your presentation.

Sounds and Movies: make sure that all sound and movie files are located in the same folder as the presentation that
you've created, and that you insert them from this location. Sound and movie files, because of their large size, don't
become an actual part of the presentation file - a link is formed to the file. When the presentation is played, the
program goes looking for the sound at the location described in the link. This works fine on the original creation
machine, but as soon as you move things to another machine, if the links don't accurately describe where the files
are, things fail to play. PowerPoint will always look for the sound in the folder that contains the presentation, so
this is the best place to put them. Start off by putting the sounds or movies in the same folder as the presentation,
and then inserting them into your presentation. This will create an internal link with no real address: PowerPoint
knows that the sound or movie is in the same folder as the presentation, and will look for it there regardless of what
that folder's name is.

Get all the Pieces: If you've used sounds, movies, or special fonts, remember to take those files with you as well as
your presentation. They don't travel with the presentation automatically!

Confirm Software Versions: Call the person who is working with the destination machine, and verify what version of
PowerPoint it is running. If you have to save down to that version, you should definitely check the presentation
before giving it--you might get some unwelcome surprises!

Allow Extra Time: Allow some extra time to review the presentation on the destination machine ahead of time. If
there are problems, it's best to know up front when you have time to do something about them.

Save As... When you've completed all the edits to your presentation, it may have gotten pretty big. To reduce the
file size a bit, try saving the presentation with a new name. This sometimes reduces the file size by as much as
30%. Find utilities in Internet which actually reduces the size by upto 40%.

- 44 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Macro Programming in PowerPoint

- 45 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

This chapter describes the steps to create macros within PowerPoint. The example to be given here, will add a slide
to your presentation, set a background texture for a slide, set slide timings, and run a slide show.

The chapter will teach you to learn some of the tools & concept you need to become a macro programmer.

Create a New Presentation

On the File menu, click New.


This opens the New Presentation dialog box.

Select the Blank Presentation icon on the General tab, and click OK.
This opens the New Slide dialog box.

Select the Blank Auto Layout in the lower-right corner, and click OK.

You now have a blank presentation open, ready to create the macro.

Create a Macro

On the Tools menu, point to Macro, and then click Macros.

This opens the Macro dialog box.

In the Macro Name box, type a name for your macro.

NOTE: Macro names must begin with a letter and can contain up to 80 characters. Visual Basic for Applications
keywords are invalid names for macros. The name cannot contain any spaces. Programmers typically use an
underscore character(_) to separate words.

If you type an invalid macro name, you receive a message similar to the following
<macro name> is not a valid name for a macro

where <macro name> is the name that you typed for the macro.

Click Create.

This opens the Visual Basic Editor. The Visual Basic Editor is an area where you can create, edit, and debug your
macros.

Add Code to a New Macro

You are now looking at a flashing insertion point within the Code window. The Code window is where you actually
type Visual Basic commands. A recorded macro can also be viewed in the code window. For the most part, the
Code window acts like a typical text editor, enabling you to cut, copy, and paste text.

However, there are some differences that make it easier for you to create macros. The important differences are
detailed below.

Type the following line of code between the Sub and End Sub:

Dim MySlide As Slide

When you were typing in the code, you probably noticed some interesting things happen. After you hit the spacebar
following the word as, a drop down list of the available data types appeared on your screen. This is just one of the
ways the Visual Basic Editor makes programming a little easier.

What does this code do?


Dim Indicates to the Visual Basic Editor you are about to declare a variable. There are several other methods available to
declare variables, but this article discusses only the Dim method.

MySlide Is the name you provide the variable. It is a good idea to give your variables meaningful descriptive names. X is an
example of a poor variable name. Meaningful names make your code easier to read.

As Slide Specifies the type of data the variable will contain. In this case, MySlide will have the data type Slide.

Let's add some more code. Type the following line of code after the variable declaration:

- 46 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Set MySlide = ActivePresentation.Slides.Add(1, ppLayoutTitle)

This code adds a new slide to the active presentation. The slide created uses the Title Only AutoLayout. Lets take a
closer look at this line of code.
Set MySlide Assigns an object reference to a variable or property. Using Set makes it easier to refer to that same
object later in your code.

ActivePresentation Tells the Visual Basic Editor you are referring to the presentation that is open in the active window.

Add(1, ppLayoutTitle) Creates a new slide and adds it to the collection of slides in the presentation. The Add method takes two
parameters:

The first parameter, the slide index, is the number 1 in this case. The slide index is the position where PowerPoint creates the
slide. When the index is set to 1, PowerPoint creates the new slide at the beginning of the presentation.

The second parameter specifies the type of AutoLayout.

For more information about creating slides programmatically, search for "Add Slides" using the Help menu.

For more information on the slide AutoLayouts available, search for "PpPlaceHolder Type" using the Help menu.

TIP: When entering code, if the property and method list pops up, you can select the item you want and then press
TAB, which adds the object to your command and leave the cursor on the same line.

Your macro-code now looks something like this:

Sub YourMacro ()
'
' Macro created 1/7/97 by You
'
Dim MySlide As Slide
Set MySlide = ActivePresentation.Slides.Add(1, ppLayoutTitle)

End Sub

NOTE: The text following ' apostrophe (on the same line) is a comment. Comments are ignored by the Visual Basic
Editor. They are added to the code to make it easier to understand what is going on in the code.

Now that your macro actually does something, you can try running the macro.

Run the Macro

There are several methods to run a macro. Only one method is described in this article. On the File menu, click
Close and Return to Microsoft PowerPoint.

The Visual Basic Editor closes and you return to PowerPoint. On the Tools menu, point to Macro, and then click
Macros.

This opens up the Macro dialog box. Select your macro from the list and then click Run.

View the Macro Code

To view the source code of a specific macro, follow these steps:


On the Tools menu, point to Macro, and then click Macros.

This opens up the Macro dialog box. Click the macro that you want to edit. Click Edit.

This opens the macro within the Visual Basic Editor. The Visual Basic Editor is where you make corrections,
remove unnecessary steps, or add instructions you can't record in PowerPoint.

Add Some More Code

You are now ready to add the rest of the commands to complete the macro.

Type the following as the next line of code in your macro:


ActiveWindow.ViewType = ppViewSlideSorter

- 47 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

This changes the presentation to slide sorter view. We are doing this so we can select the entire slide, including the
slide itself.

For more information about PowerPoint views, search for "views" using the Help menu.

Add the next line of code to your macro:

MySlide.Select

Add the next section of code to your macro:

With ActiveWindow.Selection.SlideRange
.FollowMasterBackground = msoFalse
.Background.Fill.PresetTextured msoTextureRecycledPaper
End With

These commands tell PowerPoint that this particular slide does not follow the master, and then set the background
preset texture to the recycled paper.
The With statement allows you to group commands that have common references. Using With to group multiple
commands can improve the performance of the macro as well as saving you a lot of typing.

If you didn't use the With statement, your code would look like this:

ActiveWindow.Selection.SlideRange.FollowMasterBackground = msoFalse
ActiveWindow.Selection.SlideRange.Background.Fill.PresetTextured _
msoTextureRecycledPaper

The underscore (_) in the second line is a continuation character. It tells the Visual Basic Editor that you could not
fit the specific command on one line and are continuing the instruction on the next line.

You can see the advantage of using With statements: less typing and faster code. The main disadvantage of the
With statement is that it sometimes makes the code more difficult to read, especially if you nest a With within
another With statement.

Add the next line of code to your macro:


MySlide.Shapes.Title.TextFrame.TextRange.Text = "Look What I Did!"

This command adds the text "Look What I Did!" into the title box of the slide that you created.
Add the next section of code to your macro:

With ActivePresentation.Slides.Range.SlideShowTransition
.AdvanceTime = 5
.EntryEffect = ppEffectCheckerboardAcross
End With

AdvanceTime Specifies how long (in seconds) a particular


slide is visible when running a slide show.

EntryEffect Specifies the slide transition effect that runs just


prior to the slide appearing.

Add the last line of code to your macro:


ActivePresentation.SlideShowSettings.Run

This line of code starts the presentation as a slide show.

The Complete Macro Code


Sub YourMacro()
'
' Macro created <Date> by <You>
'
Dim MySlide As Slide

' Add a new slide to the presentation.


Set MySlide = ActivePresentation.Slides.Add(1, ppLayoutTitle)

' Change the presentation to slide sorter view.

- 48 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

ActiveWindow.ViewType = ppViewSlideSorter

' Select your slide.


MySlide.Select

' Apply a preset texture to the slide.


With ActiveWindow.Selection.SlideRange
.FollowMasterBackground = msoFalse
.Background.Fill.PresetTextured msoTextureRecycledPaper
End With

' Add text into title of the slide.


MySlide.Shapes.Title.TextFrame.TextRange.Text = "Look What I Did!"

' Set the slide timing and transition effect.


With ActivePresentation.Slides.Range.SlideShowTransition
.AdvanceTime = 5
.EntryEffect = ppEffectCheckerboardAcross
End With
' Start the slide show.
ActivePresentation.SlideShowSettings.Run

End Sub

- 49 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Projecting Your Slideshow in the Classroom

When you complete this chapter you will be able to

Project the presentation on an LCD Projector


Export to Overheads
Export to 35mm Slides

- 50 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Projecting the show in a LCD Projector

After you are done with the Presentation, you might need to show the presentation to your audience. You will need
a digital projector to do the same.

Even though the instructions given in this book are relatively simple, every computer-projector combination is
different and it is very common for something to go wrong. Hence, you need to try out in advance if possible by
having a demo projection, and still leave yourself plenty of time to set up the final show.

Advance preparations

The Projector comes with a cable that connects your laptop with the projector. This cable fits with most computers.
There should only be one port on your laptop that it could possibly connect with.

You might also need to use a standard extension cord/cable, depending on the classroom.

If your presentation is having any media with sound, you will need a second cable to link your laptop’s
headphone/speaker jack to the audio input on the projector. This cable looks like a walkman headphone jack on
both ends. If you have those cables, you can connect them directly, but if not, they should be fairly cheap to buy at
an electronics store. If you check your computer speakers, there might be one running between them which you
can detach. As a last resort, you could bring in your computer speakers and hook those up to your computer
instead

Find out in advance which key combination will get your computer screen to display from the projector.
Unfortunately it is not the same for all computers. It is usually Fn + some F-key. On Dell laptops it is Fn + F8. On
Toshiba laptops it is Fn + F5. On at least some IBM laptops it is Fn + F7. If you’re lucky, the correct F-key on your
laptop will say “CRT/LCD” or have a tiny icon of a computer and screen. Even in some other laptops you will find a
picture of projector in the related Function Key. If you have no clue what works, you can try pressing Fn + each F-
key without the projector connected. When your screen temporarily flashes black, and/or if some icons of monitors
appear, you have probably found the right combination. If your screen stays black, that’s still a good sign – just
keep pressing the same two keys until your display returns.

Setting up the presentation

For setting up the presentation, start with both projector and laptop off. (If your computer is already turned on you
can try following these instructions anyway – sometimes it works).
Plug in the projector.
Attach your laptop to the projector with the main cable, and the audio cable if necessary.
Turn on the projector. It may take a while to warm up. You will not see your slideshow yet, but you should see a
blue screen projected onto the wall. If not, check to make sure the power is on and the lens cap is off.
Turn on the computer. Wait for it to boot up, and then press the required keys for projector display (Fn + F8 on a
Dell laptop). Your computer screen might go black for a few seconds, but then you should see it displayed on the
wall. If this works but your laptop screen remains black, press Fn + F8 (or whatever keys you pressed before) one
more time.
If you are using audio, play a sound file and check the volume. You should be able to turn the projector volume up
fairly high, even though the sound quality is not great. Turn the volume up on your computer as well, if necessary.
If you still don’t hear anything at all, make sure the mute function is off on both projector and computer, and that
the audio input cord is pushed all the way into projector and laptop ports.
Open PowerPoint and your slideshow file. Press F5 to start your slideshow.
Yes, it is possible to get your slideshow to display on the wall and your lecture notes (or whatever you want) to
display on your laptop screen. You need to use dual monitor configuration for this. Like setting up a projector, it is
often a lot more complicated than it should be, and it varies by computer. You can find instructions in the
PowerPoint help files if you like, or through Google.

Desperate last-ditch attempts to make your show appear

• Try other key combinations. Press all the F-keys in turn. Press the Fn-key with each F-key. Something has to
work!
• Make sure the resolution of your laptop matches that of the projector:
a) Look on the projector and see if you can find the resolution written on it. It is probably
either 1024x768 or 800x600. If you can’t find it, try these instructions anyway.
b) On your laptop, go to Control Panel  Display, then click on the Settings tab.

- 51 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

c) Under Screen Resolution, move the slider to the correct resolution. If you don’t know, try
1024x768 pixels. Click on Apply. If you still can’t get your screen to display, try 800x600
pixels. Keep trying resolutions until one works.
• Sometimes there are different input sources on the projector. Find the input button and cycle through these.
• Turn everything off and turn it on again, starting with the projector.

Running your presentation once the projector is set up

• Open your PowerPoint file, then press F5 to start your show.

• Move through your slideshow either by clicking on the mouse or by using the up and down arrows on your
keyboard. (Some projectors also come with a remote control). A bunch of fancy commands for jumping
around in your slideshow are available at: http://office.microsoft.com/en-gb/assistance/HP051953031033.aspx

• If you need to go backwards, press the up arrow.

• If you move your mouse pointer over the bottom left-hand corner of the screen, you will see a menu with
several advanced options. If you click on the pen icon, you can get a “pen” that allows you to draw on your
slides (in non-permanent ink).

• To leave the slideshow at any time, hit ESC.

• Congratulations, you’re done with setting up the show. Good Luck with your presentation.

Export to Overheads (Transparencies)

You can print transparencies directly from the presentation without printing out the paper copies and running
transparencies from the paper copies through your copier. Just load the transparencies into your printer and print
one or two slides to make sure everything is working correctly. Then do the remaining slides.

If you have a color printer you can print color transparencies directly, too.

Use transparencies when you're not sure you'll have an LCD projector and as a backup in case the equipment
doesn't work - as it sometimes doesn't.

Export to 35mm slides

If you eventually want to output your PowerPoint presentation to 35mm slides, you should change the page setup
before you begin entering data. 35mm slides are slightly wider than slides used in presentations. Changing the
page setup after you've completed your presentation might radically change the formatting.

So, the instant you begin creating a 35mm slide show, go into File | Page Setup | Slides Sized For | 35mm slides.
Now you have the correct aspect ratio for 35mm slides.

- 52 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Proofing, Editing, & Collaborating

- 53 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

When you have created and saved a presentation, it is important that you proof read and edit a presentation to
make sure it is error-free. This is especially important for collaborative projects that have several authors.

To check consistency and style


By default, PowerPoint automatically checks the presentation for consistency and style, and marks problems
on a slide with a light bulb. You can fix or ignore these errors and also change the elements that PowerPoint
checks for. The light bulb is not available if you have turned off the Office Assistant. To turn on the Assistant,
click Show the Office Assistant on the Help menu.

• Open the presentation you want to check for style and consistency.
• Click the light bulb and then click the option you want in the list.

To follow up with Meeting Minder and Action Items


Participants in an online meeting can also use the Meeting Minder dialog box or the Speaker Notes dialog box
to take notes. The notes are visible to all participants. These features are available only when the presentation
is in Slide Show view.

• To add notes or meeting minutes, right-click the slide and then click Meeting Minder or Speaker
Notes.
• Click in the box and then type the notes or minutes.
• To add an action item, right-click the slide, click Meeting Minder and then click the Action Items
tab.
• Click in the box, type the information for the first action item, and then click Add.
• Repeat step 2 for every action item and then click OK. The action items appear on a new slide at
the end of the slide show.

Master slides and custom templates


If you use PowerPoint on a regular basis for presenting related materials, you may want to use master slides
and create a custom template. With the master slides and custom template, all of your presentations will have a
consistent look and feel, and you won't have to customize each presentation layout separately.

Customizing your slides using the slide master


The slide master allows you to customize the look of each slide and ensure consistency across your
presentation. In the slide master, you can change fonts, bullets, and header and footer information.

Use the slide master to do the following: add a picture; change the background; adjust the size of the
placeholders; and change font style, size, and color.

To have art or text—for example, a company name or logo—appear on every slide, put it on the slide master.
Objects appear on slides in the same location as they do on the slide master. To add the same text to every
slide, add the text to the slide master by clicking Text Box on the Drawing toolbar—do not type in the text
placeholders. The look of text you've added with Text Box is not governed by the slide master.

To change master text and title styles


The date, footer, and number areas can all be changed in the same way. Experiment to see which combinations
you like best. Remember that the slide master changes every slide in your presentation

• On the View menu, point to Master and then click Slide Master.
• Click anywhere in the Click to edit Master title styles text block.
• On the Standard toolbar, click the Font down arrow and then click Arial.
• On the Standard toolbar, click the Font Size down arrow and then click 40.
• Right-mouse click anywhere on Click to edit Master text styles and then click Bullet.
• In the Bullets and Numbering list box and then click Pictures.
• Click the multi-color block in the first row of the third column and then click Insert Clip.

On the View menu, click Normal to return to the presentation.

- 54 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Copying Your Presentation to Memory Stick

- 55 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Resist the temptation to drag & drop PowerPoint files to a memory Stick, unless you are absolutely sure the
presentation has no link to any other file (audio, video, excel sheet etc.). If you copied your linked files into the
folder with your slideshow as you were creating it, you can afford to drag & drop the presentation into the memory
stick. If you have a newer version of PowerPoint installed in your PC/Laptop, various tools are available, which
makes copying even easier.

PowerPoint 2003

PowerPoint 2003 allows transfer of files in few clicks. Go to >File – Package for CD. If you are burning to a CD,
insert the CD & click on Copy to CD. If you are copying to a memory stick, insert it, Choose copy to folder & locate
the appropriate drive. All of your linked files should automatically be included, regardless of whether or not you
copied them all into the same folder. You also get a copy of PowerPoint viewer, which allows the Show to play even
if the target computer doesn’t have PowerPoint installed.

PowerPoint 2002

In PowerPoint 2002, you should be able to use the command, File – Pack & Go, but make sure to check the boxes
marked Include Linked Files and Embed True Type fonts. This process also gives you the option of downloading
the PowerPoint Viewer if you don’t already have it.

PowerPoint 2002 zips your files; hence you need to unzip them on the new computer.

Other Versions of PowerPoint

In all older versions of PowerPoint, you will have to rely on copying the entire folder method. If you don’t have
PowerPoint in the target machine, you can download the PowerPoint Viewer & install it in the target machine. What I
would suggest to all PowerPoint users is to have a copy of PowerPoint Viewer with them all the time. You can also
carry a copy of PowerPoint Viewer in the memory stick.

- 56 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Advanced PowerPoint

At the end of this chapter you will know about

Working with Text


Identifying Toolbars
Page Setup
Creating Action Buttons
Adding Objects to Slides Using the Drawing Toolbar
Advanced Drawing Techniques
Combining Presentations
Creating Original Artworks
Builds & Transitions
Setting Animation
Saving a slide as a graphic file.
Organization Charts
Showing Off your Presentation at a KIOSK
Annotating Slides
Style Checker

- 57 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Introduction
This advanced module of PowerPoint is intended for those who have already mastered the basics of PowerPoint.

Working with Text


Reminders about Fonts

It is preferable to use a sans serif font type in a presentation because a font without serifs is easier to read on a
screen. Serif fonts like Times New Roman or Palatino or Courier tend to drag the viewer's eye back to the line. The
serifs themselves do not translate well into on-screen presentations and are best kept for print-based book
chapters and articles.

The best presentation fonts are Arial, Helvetica and Tahoma.

Alignment and Formatting Objects

Text and objects can be placed right up to the edges of a slide but for accuracy of placement, use guides. To get
additional information on guides see below. To align objects, select the object or objects you want to align from
the Drawing toolbar, click Draw, then point to Align or Distribute, following it with the alignment you need.
Possibilities include:

Align Left
Align Right
Align Center
Align Middle
Align Bottom
and so on...

Use WordArt to Enhance Titles or Text

Use Insert | Picture | WordArt or from the Drawing Toolbar, select the WordArt icon. Select the WordArt format you
want. Click OK. Type in the text (keep it short). Next select the Font and Font Size, bolding or italics and click OK. If
the text looks the way you want it to look on the slide, grab the handles at the corner of the object and tug it
carefully into the size you want. Reposition the object by clicking in the middle of the image; hold down the left
mouse button and drag it into place. If you want to make any changes, double-click on the middle of the object and
PowerPoint will bring up the WordArt window.

Be judicious in your use of WordArt. A little goes a long way.

Add a Shadow to Text

First select the text you want to be shadowed and from the Formatting toolbar, select Text Shadow. The text will be
shadowed.

To shadow all slide titles, go into the Slide View master, click the dashed line in the title box and when you see the
hatched line, click the Shadow Button. Now all titles will be shadowed. This is not an affect I particularly care for -
so I rarely use it - but many do.

Creating Mirrored Text

For some reason you might wish to have a word or phrase appear as its mirror image. To do this, use WordArt to
create the text. Click on the text to select it. Then do File | Copy, then File Paste. Move the second copy directly
underneath the first. If the second image is not selected, click on it. That will select it. From Draw select Rotate or
Flip, then Flip Horizontal. This does give you a different view of things.

Guides and Rulers.

Guides are the lines that drop down the slide from the ruler. It's a good idea to have both the guides and the ruler
turned on if you want to locate objects precisely.

Use guides to move and place objects exactly where you want them. Guides can be used to group objects, or to
rotate objects in relations to the edges of a portion of the document. If you are a good designer, you can use the

- 58 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

guides to stack objects. Stacking objects involves drawing objects and placing them on top of each other. Stacked
objects can be brought forward or sent backward depending on the commands you use.
To view the Rulers or Guides, select Slide view, then from the View menu, select Guides and then select View |
Rulers

To add a guide, hold down Ctrl, grab and drag an existing guide, for example, the guide dividing the slide in half
vertically. To delete a guide, drag it off the slide. You may hide the guides without deleting them, by selecting
Guides on the View menu. This turns the guides off.

To align objects, select the objects you want to align. From the Drawing toolbar, click Draw, and then point to Align
or Distribute. Select Relative to Slide, then select the alignment option you want.

Adding hypertext links

You can create hypertext links to a site on the Web, to a different section of your presentation, to another
presentation or to a Word document.

Select the text you want to use as your hyperlink. This can be the URL itself. From your Standard toolbar, click on
the Insert Hyperlink icon. You can enter an Web address beginning with http://, or browse for a file, such as an EXE
(executable) program on your hard drive or on your Intranet. (The Insert Hyperlink button is also used in Word,
Microsoft Excel, and Microsoft Access).

When you are presenting (and connected to the Internet), and when you get to the slide with a hyperlink, clicking on
the link will open Internet Explorer and take you to the site.

Clicking on Internet Explorer's Back button will take you back to the presentation so that you can continue on with
your discussion.

Hyperlinks become active only when you run your slide show - not when you're creating the show. Be aware that if
you link to something on the Web or to another object, that that object must be available on the site or you will get
an error message.

Hyperlinks can be set as relative or absolute links.

Identifying Toolbars

Most of the tasks in PowerPoint can be accomplished either through menu choices or via a toolbar. Generally, you
will find the toolbars easier and quicker to access once you are comfortable with their functions.

Office 2000 may be installed to show only your most recent menu selections. To see non-visible choices, click the
double-headed arrow at the bottom of the menu list, or hold the mouse over the menu for a few seconds. Either of
these actions will then display all the choices in that menu item. After you choose an option, that menu choice
becomes "recently used" and is visible when menus are pulled-down. When toolbars contain more choices than
can easily be displayed on a toolbar, additional, less frequently used choices, are hidden. You can click the double-
headed arrows, as well as drop down arrows, to display additional toolbar choices.

To "permanently" reveal all menu choices, choose TOOLS : Customize. Click the Options tab and uncheck "Menus
show recently used commands first." This will not affect the toolbar, only the menu choices.

NOTE: Changing this option will affect each Microsoft Office suite application, including Word, PowerPoint and
Excel.

View

The View Toolbar is located in the lower left corner of the screen and lets you quickly move through different views
of the presentation:

Text

Options on the Text Toolbar allows you to make choices affecting highlighted text.

- 59 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

NOTE: Keep in mind that some options may be hidden. To access those, click the double-headed or drop-down
arrow on the toolbar.

Drawing

The Drawing Toolbar contains the tools (each is described in detail later in this tutorial) to incorporate objects into a
presentation:

Navigating during Development

To navigate through the slides during development, you can use the Scroll Bar on the right of the screen. Press and
drag the Slider to move continuously through the presentation. An indicator shows the slide you are currently
passing and the title of that slide. Release the Slider to move to the indicated slide.

To move one complete slide forward or backward, click the appropriate double-headed arrow at the bottom of the
Scroll Bar.

Another option is to move directly to the desired slide by clicking on the slide itself in the Outline pane.

All AutoLayouts but two (Blank and Large Object) have a Placeholder for Title. The Slider demonstrates one reason
why it is important to always use a layout that contains a Title Placeholder and to always title each slide—the title
helps orient you to the location within the presentation.

In addition, the bottom left corner of the PowerPoint screen shows the current slide, out of the total number of
slides, as well as the name of the Design Template applied to the presentation.

Creating Bulleted Lists

To create a bulleted list from the AutoLayout, choose the Bulleted List layout. Click in the main Placeholder and
begin typing. Each time you press ENTER, the cursor is automatically placed in the next bulleted point. If the text
you type in a bulleted item is longer than a single line, the text will automatically wrap to subsequent lines and
indent appropriately.

Each new bullet appears somewhat "greyed out" or dim prior to you typing the first character in the item. This is
because the bullet will not appear on the slide unless it has accompanying text.

Each slide should contain no more than seven (7) bulleted points. Multiple-line items should have no more than 2-3
lines each. You should decrease the number of bulleted points in proportion to multiple-line entries.

To create subsequent indented levels, make sure the cursor is in the line in which you want the next level to begin,
then click the Demote Tool.

Each consecutive point will remain on the current level until you click the Promote Tool to return to a previous level
or the Demote Tool to indent one level further.

• Bullet Styles

Although you can set Bullet Styles in the Master, you also can change the bullet style on any slide or on any
bulleted point. When you change the bullet style, every subsequent bullet on that slide, whether promoted or
demoted, will have that style until you change back to the default or change to a different slide.

To change the bullet style, make sure the cursor is in the line of text in which you wish to change the bullet, then
choose FORMAT : Bullet.

NOTE: Sometimes it is difficult to remember exactly what the default bullet style was, so pay close attention to the selected bullet
before proceeding with any changes.

You can choose from the selections provided by PowerPoint, choosing both the size (in percentage of text size) and
the color.

Click Character to include any symbol font installed on your system. Keep in mind, however, that if you choose a
font that is not installed on the computer from which you are giving your presentation, the presentation computer

- 60 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

will choose the "closest" font to the one you chose and the result may not be one you like. Both Symbol and
Wingdings font are standard on most computers and should display as you intended.

PowerPoint 2000 also has a number of "Picture" bullets in the ClipArt from which you can choose.

• Adding / Removing Bullets

The Bullet Tool is a toggle. Click it once to place a bullet at the beginning of the current line of text (the one in which
the cursor is flashing). Click it again to remove the bullet. This way you can add bullets to text you have typed
without using the Bullet AutoLayout.

Page Setup for 35mm slides

PowerPoint assumes that you will be delivering an


on-screen presentation. If you are using PowerPoint
for development but will be creating 35mm slides,
you should size the presentation for that medium
before beginning development. 35mm slides are
wider than on-screen presentations; if you develop
slides before setting the page size, you run the risk
of your slides not looking the way you want them to
look.

To size your presentation for 35mm slides:

From the menu, choose FILE : Page Setup.


In the Page Setup dialog box, click the drop-down box beside Slides sized for. Choose 35mm Slides. Click OK.

Creating Action Buttons

PowerPoint 97 includes a set of built-in 3-D buttons for such actions as Forward, Back, Home, Help, Information,
Sound, and Movie. You can click these buttons during a slide show to start another program, play a sound or
movie, or link to other slides, files, and Web pages. Or, you can create your own action buttons.

From the Drawing toolbar, select Autoshapes and point to the Action buttons. Select the action button you want,
and click once on the slide. This will insert the icon. You can then select which action you want to be played: open
up a new document, run a software program, open another PowerPoint presentation or other file, or play a sound
from a list of sounds. You can, of course, enlarge or reduce the size of the icon by grabbing the handles on the
selected icon.

Adding Objects to Slides Using the Drawing Toolbar


An object can be anything PowerPoint allows you to grab and manipulate. Examples include graphics, charts,
tables, images, clip art, and the like.

To add various shapes, be sure to be in the Slide view, and select the Drawing Toolbar. From the Drawing Toolbar
you can add Autoshapes, straight lines, arrows, various shapes such as rectangles or ovals, text boxes, fills,
shadows, Word Art, 3-D, and change the color of text. The Drawing Toolbar is a very useful toolkit, indeed.

If you don't remember how to get the Drawing Toolbar, here's how - go to View | Toolbars | Drawing. Once you've
clicked on the Drawing toolbar, it will appear at the bottom of your screen.

Drawing a Shape

Drawing a shape is quite easy and can add some pizzazz to your presentation if done discretely. Choose your
drawing tool - such as Autoshapes, then Basic Shapes, then select the shape you want. Since the shape is an
object, it will have handles if you click on it. To maintain the aspect ratio, grab a corner handle, and either push in to
make the object smaller, or pull out to make it larger. You can copy the object several times and lay them in where
you get the best effect.

- 61 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

The object will be filled with whatever color you have used in the fill button. To change the fill color, click on the
object, then on the down arrow Fill icon. Either select a color from the existing pallet, or from More Fill Colors. You
can also make interesting effects by clicking on Fill Effects.

To move the object, click in the middle of the object, and, holding the left mouse button down, drag the object into
place.

Adding a Shadow

To add a shadow to the object, click on the object, and then toggle the Shadow on/Shadow off button from the
Drawing Toolbar. When you see the menu of shadow effects select the shadow that has the most pleasing effect.
Don't hesitate to try more than one shadow effect if you're not certain which one you like best. Shadows can be
recolored from the Shadow Settings option.

Create Embossed / Engraved Text and Graphics

It's pretty simple to add or remove an embossed effect from text or an object. Select the object or text you want to
add the effect to. From the Drawing toolbar, click Shadow. The two main effects are embossed and engraved.
Basically an embossed effect forces the image out and the engraved effect depresses the object.

To add an embossed effect, select Shadow Style 17 and to add an engraved effect, select Shadow Style 18. The
shadow effects are not labeled in the Drawing menu, but the number will appear as you slowly draw your mouse
over each of the available styles.

Create 3-D effects with PowerPoint's drawing tools

A 3-D effect can also be added to objects to provide interest and create emphasis. What 3-D effects are there?
PowerPoint provides numerous 3-D effects. You can make boxes of various kinds, including elongated boxes. 3-D
can be used with certain kinds of text, too, although pure text cannot be 3-D'd.

Select the object you want to change such as a WordArt object by clicking once on it. . Using the Drawing toolbar,
click the 3-D icon. (It looks like a rectangular box). Then add a 3-D effect by clicking the option you want from the
menu of options.

To change a 3-D effect, for example, its color, rotation, depth, lighting, or surface texture, click 3-D again, click 3-D
Settings, and then click the options you want on the 3-D Settings toolbar.

This is one tool that you will really need to play with to get a real sense of how it works. Personally I don't care for 3-
D effects, but that's just a personal preference.

Layering Objects

Using Insert | Picture | From Clip Art, insert several objects onto your slide and overlap them slightly. The graphic
that was added last will be on top.

Aside: When working with objects it helps to think of how cartographers used to make maps. They would put one
feature, Say Rivers - on one sheet of mylar, then on another sheet of mylar they would draw streets. These plus any
other features would be layered over a base map. Each of the layers would show through to create the final map.
Objects, like the mylar, are layered or stacked on your slide so that you can stack and manipulate them as you need
to.

To bring an object that is underneath another object to the front, click on the object and from the Draw menu
choose Order, then Bring to

Front. Now the other object is underneath the object we selected.

This ability to layer can be used to put text on top of objects. For example, we might wish to print something
outrageous on the picture of a balloon for a friend. If we did the text first, it would be buried under the balloon. The
Bring to Front feature makes it possible to read the text.

Grouping or Ungrouping Clip Art

Click once in the middle of the ClipArt picture to select it. Select Draw then Ungroup. You will be asked if you if you
would like to convert the clipart to a MS Office drawing and will remind you that all embedded data and linking

- 62 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

information will be lost. If you still wish to continue, click OK. The clipart will be separated into different individual
objects. In fact, all you will see is sections of the image with handles everywhere.

At this point you can recolor the sections you want to recolor or delete out parts and colors until all you have is a
black and white sketch.

To group the now separated sections together, select all of the objects - hold down the shift key and click on them
individually. Alternatively you can click anywhere on the screen, hold the mouse button down, and then draw a
square around the objects. Everything inside the square will be highlighted. Now select Draw and Group or
Regroup. Either one will work. Be aware that the objects will be grouped based on their current location within the
square you just drew.

Cropping/Trimming Clip Art

Use Insert | Picture | From Clip Art to add images to your slide show.

If you want to clip or crop the image, click on the image to select it and from the Picture Toolbar, select the
Cropping tool. (It looks like two xx's side by side). Position the
cropping tool over a sizing handle and drag a middle handle inwards
on the side you want cropped. If you use a corner handle, you may cut
off more than you wanted to because the corner handles maintain the
aspect ratio. Play with the image till you have just the section you
want.

If you discover that you've cut off too much of the graphic, just grab
the same corner and drag out. The original picture will return to its
former size.

Note: If your Picture toolbar does not appear, go to the View menu and
select Toolbars, then Picture. The Picture toolbar is a floating toolbar.

Fill Effects

Fill effects include Gradients where you can select one or two colors of
your choice, as well as the direction and variants of the gradient. Textures are image files similar to web page
wallpapers; you can use PowerPoint's selections or choose an image file from your workstation. Patterns allow you
to choose two colors and the pattern design with which you want to fill the object. Picture allows you to choose an
image file from your workstation; the photograph will center itself within the selected object, hiding any parts of the
image which do not automatically show within the object's shape.

When you choose Fill Effects, you will get three different options like Gradients, Textures, Pattern, Picture. You can
choose either of them as per your requirement.

Line Effects

Each drawing object has an outline the color of the automatic color. The underline under the Line Color Tool is the
current line color.To outline an object with the current line color, select the object, then click the Line Color Tool.

To change the line color, drop down the arrow and make a new selection. Other options with the Line Color Tool
include color and patterns similar to the Fill Tool.

To change line style, dash style, and arrow style, click on these tools, respectively, after drawing the object and
while it is still selected.

Object Effects

To place a shadow or 3D effect on an object, select the object, then click the tool selection.

Advanced Drawing Techniques

Flow Charts

If you're demonstrating the flow of a process or system, you will be delighted to learn that PowerPoint has built in
the elements to create a flowchart on a PowerPoint slide.

- 63 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

To bring up the flowchart graphics use Insert | Picture | Autoshapes | Flowchart. Then select the element you want
by clicking on the image of it. The elements are referred to as nodes and the arrows that join the nodes are called
links. After you click on the node, your cursor turns to a cross-hair. The image is placed on the slide through
clicking the cross-hair on the screen.
To make a link, click on the connection icon, then on the primary node and while holding the left mouse key down,
link the secondary node. This is a very easy process. And it looks fabulous when you are done.

Adding text to a node is easy. Just select it by clicking once on the node and begin typing. You may need to reduce
the size of the type. Keep in mind that your audience can't read type font less than 18 points. If the overall process
was the important thing, and not the stages that were important, then point and discuss - and hand out the slide
with the flow chart as a separate full-sized sheet of paper. Your audience can follow the details on the handout as
you talk.

If your flow chart is complex, try breaking it up into several slides.

Enhancing Flow-chart Objects

You can increase the thickness of the links and on the text box by clicking on the Line style icon and change the
color of the nodes by clicking on the Fill color icon and selecting from the available choices. You have numerous
connectors to choose from. Use them appropriately to enhance the flowchart.

Aligning and Rotating Flow-chart Objects

In addition to enhancing the appearance of your flow chart, you can align the nodes in various ways. For example,
you can align the various nodes with other nodes

By their left edges


Horizontally by their centers
By their top edges
Vertically by their middles
By their bottom edges
Use the Drawing toolbar, click Draw, point to Align or Distribute, and then click Align Left, Align Center, Align Right,
Align Top, and so on.

The drawing toolbar can be used to space nodes equal distances from each other, and align them with relation to a
guide or grid.

Creating Demand Curves

Create your X and Y axes using the Line feature from the Drawing toolbar and add titles. Increase the width of the
line to at least 3 point by selecting the line and clicking on Line Style and selecting 3.

To make an arc for the demand curve, click on AutoShapes | Basic Shapes from the Drawing toolbar and from there
select the arc shape. When you see the mouse pointer change to a cross hair, click where you want the top of the
arc to start and curve your mouse down to the bottom where the arc will end. You now have a demand curve.

Since the arc is likely to be incorrectly positioned, click on the arc and drag it into position. If the arc is facing the
wrong direction (i.e., it should be concave rather than convex), click on the arc to select it (note handles) and click
on the Free Rotate icon. The handles turn green when the Free Rotate icon has been clicked. Grab one of the
handles and drag up or down until the arc is in the correct position. Turn off the Free Rotate icon when you have
the curve where you want it.

Adding Images to the Clip Art Gallery

Many people do not know that you can add images and clip art to the existing Clip Art Gallery. To insert new clip art
into the existing set of images, select Insert | Picture | Clip Art | Import Clips. Now select the subdirectory where the
images are stored and select the file.

Now create a place to put your images in the clip art gallery by selecting an existing section using a check box, or
by creating a New Category. Then OK.
Perhaps even more important is your ability to import Clips from Web. When you click on this button, MS Internet
Explorer opens up enabling you to add clips found on the Web.

Be sure only to use Public Domain images or images for which you have permission.

- 64 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Combining Presentation

You can combine presentations, or copy already existing slides from one presentation into another presentation. To
work with two presentations simultaneously,

Open both presentations.

Choose WINDOW : Arrange All to display both presentations side-by-side on the screen. NOTE: the presentation
that was the active presentation when you made the Arrange All selection will be on the left.
Notice that each presentation has its own Navigation Toolbar in the lower left corner of its respective window. Put
each presentation in Slide Sorter View.
Use the Scroll Bar to navigate through each presentation until you can see the slide you want to copy in the original
presentation and the location in the destination presentation where you want the slide placed.
Press and drag the slide from one presentation to the other. NOTE: You will not be able to drag the slide if the
original presentation is in Slide View and the destination presentation is in Slide Sorter View.

When you press and drag, you remove the slide from the original presentation. If you want to keep the original
presentation as it was, do NOT save it when you close the presentation. An alternative is to right click on the slide
to be moved and choose COPY, then click in the destination presentation
and paste it.

Notice that "transplanted" slide takes on the characteristics of the


receiving presentation, including the color scheme. Any charts contained
in the transplanted slide will be updated to reflect the colors of the
destination presentation.

Creating Original Artworks in PowerPoint

You can paint original artwork directly in PowerPoint 2000 using


the Insert Object feature. Launch PowerPoint, create a new
presentation and choose a slide layout so that you are ready to
begin working.

From the Insert menu, choose Object.

At the Insert Object window, choose Bitmap image from the list
and click the OK button.

A window will appear in the middle of your slide. Use the tools
along the left side and the colors at the bottom to draw and paint
your image.
When you are finished, click on the slide outside of the paint window.

Your picture will be floating in the middle of the slide.

To edit the image, double-click on it to return to the Paint tools and colors and make your changes.

To make changes your picture’s format, click on the image one time.
The Picture toolbar will appear and you will be able to change contrast, adjust brightness, crop and more.

While the picture is still selected, you can resize it by clicking


and dragging the handles that appear on the corners.

The Picture toolbar will appear and you will be able to change
contrast, adjust brightness, crop and more.

While the picture is still selected, you can resize it by clicking


and dragging the handles that appear on the corners.

- 65 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Builds and Transitions - A Review


If you are using your PC & a Multimedia Projector to give a presentation, you can be a little bit more creative with
special effects.

Use the slide sorter view to assign builds and transitions. Transitions are the changes between slides. Builds are
the movement of bullets onto the screen; In other words, how bullets fly onto the screen as you click the left mouse
bullet.

Adding Transitions

Change the view to Slide Sorter view by clicking on that icon on the bottom left of the PowerPoint window. From
the menu, select the down arrow by No Transition. That will cause a drop- down menu to appear from which you
can select the transition you want. After you've selected a transition, underneath each slide will appear a little
transition slide on the left-hand side.

Adding Builds to Your Slides – Making Bullets Fly

To create bullets that fly across your screen, select a slide and click on the down arrow to the right of No Effect.
Another drop down menu will appear. Select the build you prefer, remembering that flying from the left to the right,
or top down is usually better because Americans read from left to right, and from top to bottom and we feel more
comfortable with that. I prefer to choose Random Effect (the last effect in the list) so that I never know which
direction or effect is going to occur. It keeps the talks interesting.

There is a danger in using Random Effect, as some of the builds are very, very slow in flying across the screen. It
will drive you nuts while you wait for that one bullet to finally finish appearing so you can talk about it.

Setting Animation
Animations--effects that make text and other screen items move, appear, and disappear--
can, at the best of times, significantly enhance a presentation and focus the audience's
attention on the point or points you'd like them to be focusing on. Unfortunately, it's also an
inherent quality of animations that they can render an otherwise sober presentation silly,
disrupting the presentation's pace and distracting the audience.

The best way to ensure that your animations are helpful rather than harmful is to set them,
insofar as is possible, at the template level in the slide master. A few animations, such as
those that might be required for individual images that do not appear on every slide will still
have to be set on a one-at-a-time basis, but by setting the majority of your animations at the
template level, you can ensure that your audience doesn't become bewildered by an
inconsistent barrage of differing transitions and motions.

To set the animations at the level of the Slide Master, first make sure that you're looking at the slide master--if
you're not, select View | Master| Slide Master from the main PowerPoint program menu.

Next, right-click over the space allocated for a bulleted list to introduce a context menu, and from this select
Custom Animation.

You'll then see a substantial Custom Animation dialog


appear (see below).

In the upper left side of this dialog, you'll find a listing of


five fields marked Text1 through Text5 . Clicking on any
one of these highlights, in the adjacent preview window,
the particular field that has been selected. As a rule, you
should only set animations for Text2, the field that
represents the bulleted list.

The task of setting the animations for the Text2 field is


relatively easy, although you will have a variety of options
to pick from: begin by putting a checkmark into the
checkbox beside Text2. This specifies that an animation
will be applied.

- 66 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

In the left-most field beneath the heading Entry animation and sound , select the animation that should be used to
introduce bulleted items: you've got quite a range to pick from, but you'll find that the simplest ones (Appear or
Dissolve ) are probably the least distracting and least likely to interfere with the pacing of your presentation. Some
animations allow you to specify the direction of the animation (ie. Fly in from the left ) in the adjoining field. To
preview an animation you've selected, you can click on the preview button on the upper right part of the dialog
window.

Don't set an animation sound. Please don't. Please, please, please don't. Animation sounds are always distracting
and usually irritating.

It is, however, a good idea to set the value in the After Animation field to represent a color that's a faded version of
the color you are using for your text. Doing so will have the effect of making the current bullet always display
slightly more brightly than items that you've already addressed. This can significantly aid your audience in focusing
their attention on the current subject matter.

On the lower right side of the screen, you'll also want to make a few changes: it makes good sense to have the text
introduced all at once, so you can leave that default intact. On the other hand, it is sometimes helpful to have
bulleted items appear one at a time (or grouped according to their respective levels), towards which end you should
set the Grouped by value to represent that level of indentation that you would like the groups to appear in. For
instance, setting this to 3rd would specify that every first and second level bullet would require a separate
keystroke to be introduced, but that all third, fourth, and fifth-level bullets would appear in their respective groups,
all at once.

Since most presentations can effectively be given using the 5th level grouping, that is a logical choice, but it really
does come down to a matter of taste and organization.

Set the Group by value as you see fit, and then click the OK button to close the Custom Animations dialog.

Note: Custom animation effects can also be applied to charts and multimedia components like sounds and videos.
To set animation effects for these elements, you must right-click on one of the charts or media items as you are
creating the presentation, and then select the Custom Animation option from the context menu. The animation
effects for these elements cannot be set at the slide master level. Default animations for individual images or clip
art in your presentation cannot be set at the slide master level either: right-click on the image/clip art item, select
Custom Animation from the menu, and set the properties specifically for the individual image or clip art item in
question.

Saving a Slide as a Graphic File


When you want to convert a slide you created in PowerPoint to a graphics file, you can do so pretty easily and in more than one
graphics format. You may wish to turn an Excel table or graph into an image for use elsewhere. This is how you do it.

Copy the slide to a separate file using Copy in the original file and Paste in a new file. In the new file containing just
the one slide, click on File and Save and give the file a new name in the File Name box. When you click on the Save
File As Type text box, you can either select the .WMF extension (Windows Metafile), or .GIF or .JPG formats. Use
JPG if the slide contains lots of colors and .GIF is the slide is a simple one with few colors or is a black and white
image.

The slide can now be inserted as a graphic image in most programs. It can also be edited with a graphics program
like Pain Shop Pro or Adobe Photoshop for further work.

Organizational Charts
The organizational chart slide allows you to present a view of a hierarchical structure--it needn't be a corporate
organizational structure, and could be anything from a family-tree, to a visual representation of related skills, to a
representation of the inter-relationships between species.

As with most PowerPoint slides, there is a standard title field that should be
filled in, identifying the subject matter of the slide.

PowerPoint has a built-in Organizational Chart Auto layout. From Slide view,
select the New Slide icon, and from that the Organizational Chart Auto layout.
Once selected, it will take a few seconds to load that program. Adding
subordinates, assistants and co-workers is a matter of clicking on the level
then clicking on the box you wish to attach the person to.

- 67 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Organizational charts can also be used to indicate a population and on the next layer, the organization of the
population into subpopulations.

Editing an Organizational Chart

Edit an organizational chart element the same way you would edit any other text box. Change the fill, text font and
size, text color, width of the links and box outlines. Boxes can be shadowed, and the borders changed to fancier
ones. Select Boxes or Lines from the menu to make any changes.

The organizational chart program has quite rich formatting capabilities. Remember not to add too much to one
slide.

File, Update Presentation Name updates the PowerPoint slide. To exit, use Close and return to presentation name.
Now, admire your org chart in your slide.

Showing Off your Presentation at a KIOSK

At a conference or health fair you may wish to set up your PowerPoint presentation as a loop if you need to be away
from the booth for any length of time. Setting up a loop is not difficult but it does require some care to make the
slides stay on just long enough for people to read, but not so long as to bore them.

After creating the presentation, you will need to set the slide timings. You can set a slide show to run by itself with
automatic timings. Select Rehearse Timings from the Slide Show menu item. The time will keep clicking off until
you hit the stop button. Time for each individual slide will appear at the bottom left of each slide as you view it in
Slide Sorter view.

With longer shows, it's probably easier to set the timings manually. In slide or slide sorter view, select the slide or
slides you want to set the timing for. On the Slide Show menu, click Slide Transition. Under Advance, click
Automatically after, and then enter the number of seconds you want the slide to appear on the screen. The amount
of time you leave depends on the number of bullets and the density of information in each bullet. When you have
the correct amount of time, click on apply. Do each slide in turn until you are done with the slides. Each slide time
will be different. To view the timings, click Slide Show.

It's a little tricky getting the timings correct because your tendency is to rush through the presentation when you're
reading it. Do remember that different people read at different speeds and plan accordingly. Your best bet is to get a
friend or colleague to sit down with the presentation and go through it noting where the speed is too fast or too
slow. You can then increase of decrease the timing as required.
Go into the Slide Sorter view and from the Slide Show menu item, select Set Up Show. Then select Browse at a
Kiosk (full screen). Select all slides (radio button) (or the ones you want to show), and Advance Slides using
Timings.

Alternatively, you can set it so users can move through the show at their own pace by using the mouse. Here the
process is the same (Slide Show | Set Up Show | Browse at a Kiosk (full screen) except that you then select
Advance Slides Manually.

If you haven't set up transitions between slides, it helps to do so when creating a loop. It just makes the
presentation much smoother.

- 68 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Annotating Slides
It may be useful to be able to write or draw on one or more of your slides during a presentation. To change the color
of the pen before you begin your presentation, click Set Up Show from the Slide Show menu. From the Pen color
box, select the color you want.

To bring up a pen, right-click with your mouse, and then click Pen. To write, hold down the left mouse button as you
write or draw on your slide. To change the pen color during the presentation, right-click Pointer Options, select Pen
Color and then the pen color you want. This feature appears very transitory.

Keep in mind that the mouse was never intended to be an artist's tool. Your drawings or added text will be clumsy
efforts at best. To erase annotations during a presentation, click on the letter e.

Style Checker

The Style Checker checks for spelling, visual clarity, and case and end punctuation. This valuable tool checks to
see that the case in each of the Title Placeholders match, whether or not you have included end punctuation, and
that each slide is set for maximum readability.

To activate style checker, choose TOOLS : Options. Click the Spelling and Style tab, and make sure that Check
Style is selected. While you can change the options, the default settings are generally the best for a great
presentation.

The Office Assistant automatically checks style as your develop your presentation. You must have the Assistant
enabled for this option to work.

To enable the Assistant,


Choose HELP : Show the Office Assistant.
Right click on the Assistant and choose Options.
Check the Use the Office Assistant.

Style issues are marked with a Lightbulb Icon.

- 69 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Adding a Narration

- 70 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

There might be circumstances in your presentation when you need to record a narration
directly. In those instances where you wish to make an entire presentation available to your
audience and you don't want to have to be there to present it, the Record Narration option lets
you record your entire presentation for playback on a stand-alone computer--on a student's
desktop, in a lab environment, at a kiosk--where PowerPoint is also installed, and where
speakers or a headset are available.

Tip: Save your presentation under a new name before beginning to experiment with the Record
Narration function(s). If you later decide that you do not want the narration after you've applied it,
you'll find it easier to open a previously saved audio-free copy than to remove the audio and
timing settings from the narrated version.

The process of recording a narration is simple: from the main PowerPoint menu, select Slide
Show/Record Narration.

A Record Narration dialog will appear.

In the Record Narration dialog, you have the option to adjust input levels and recording quality or simply to click on
the OK button and get started. It is usually a good idea to click the Set Microphone Level... button to make sure that
the recording levels will give you a good quality recording.

Upon clicking the Set Microphone Level... button, a Microphone Check


dialog will appear, as illustrated below.

Next select the Change Quality… button. The Sound Selection box will
appear. Select CD Quality. This optimizes the audio for CD quality
playback.

Follow the instructions, reading the text into your microphone. As you
do so, the the slider (under the meter bar) will move to the right (to increase the recording level) or to the left (to
decrease the recording level). By the time you have finished reading, the recording level should be optimally set.
Clicking the OK button will subsequently close the Microphone Check dialog.

When you are again looking at the Record Narration dialog, a click of the OK
button will immediately begin the recording process; so make sure that you are
ready to start adding the narration to your presentation. When your first slide
appears on the screen, the recording is underway.

You can choose to either link your narrations (linking the audio wav. Files to
the presentation file in a specific drive of your computer (floppy, zip, C, etc.) or
to embed the audio files.

Leaving the link narrations checkbox unchecked will cause the audio files to
embed into your presentation. As a result your presentation file will be a larger
file size if you embed the audio files.

Linking the sound files (checking the box) will cause the wav. files to be saved separately while remaining linked to
your slides. The presentation file will remain its original size.

Note: Embedding the audio into your presentation will cause


less confusion later when you are viewing the presentation.
The trade-off is that the presentation file size will be larger.

From this point, you can give the presentation as you would
if you were standing before a room of people; as you make
your way through the slides, the "timings" of your key-
presses are linked to the audio track so that, when you've
finished, your presentation is ready to be canned and
delivered pretty much without you.

If you wish to pause your narration at some point during the


recording, right-click on a slide to introduce the following context menu:

- 71 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Then click on the Pause Narration option. To begin recording again, right-click on the slide again, and select the
Resume Narration option (not illustrated here).

After you reach the last slide, you'll see a prompt asking whether you'd like to save the
timings; if you're happy with the narration, click Yes; otherwise, click No, and start the
process again from the beginning.

Once the presentation has been saved with its timings, the entire presentation will play on its
own, with your narration guiding the audience and the slides advancing at the appropriate
moments, in sync with your voice.

Tip: If you want to re-record a narration that has already been added to a slide, view the slide
in PowerPoint's Normal View, and then select Slide Show|Record Narration from the main
PowerPoint menu. You will then be able to record your narration as you did before. When you
have finished re-recording the slide, advance to the next slide and then press ESC to stop the
recording.

If you make a mistake or another error occurs


while recording, you can end the narration by
clicking through the remainder of your slides.
Start the recording process again and the new
audio will replace the earlier version.

- 72 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Extending PowerPoint Beyond

When you complete this chapter you will be able to

Edit Add Ins


Deliver Add Ins
Create templates & Miscellaneous Add Ins
Use Microsoft PowerPoint Animation Player

- 73 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Very few of the millions of PowerPoint users worldwide are aware of the concept of PowerPoint add-ins.

In their most basic form, Add-ins is a small program that can be run only from within PowerPoint. They are usually
integrated with their host program; and more often than not, they add new menus or icons to the PowerPoint
interface.

Further PowerPoint add-ins usually falls in three categories:

Editing Add-ins
Delivery Add-ins
Template and Miscellaneous Add-ins

Editing Add-ins

Editing add-ins usually add new editing possibilities to a presentation. Sometimes these are just complicated macro
routines made simple by a click of an icon; at other times, they provide solutions to PowerPoint problem areas.

Vox Proxy (http://www.voxproxy.com/) is an add-in that adds Microsoft Agent style animated characters to
PowerPoint. These characters speak to the audience from within a running PowerPoint presentation.

Another example is the free PPTools Starter Kit add-in (http://www.rdpslides.com/pptools/FAQ00046.htm) from
Steve Rindsberg and Brian Reilly that provides an arsenal of new routines to PowerPoint. (Included in the CD)

CrystalGraphics (http://www.powerplugs.com) provide add-ins that can do everything from adding new transitions
and animated shapes to PowerPoint. In fact, they have an excellent add-in that provides a single click access to
over 30,000 famous quotations from within PowerPoint!

Delivery Add-ins

Delivery add-ins is related to the distribution aspect of PowerPoint presentations. They usually alter the
presentation itself to accommodate a new distribution format like Flash, Java, Real Media or Windows Media. Other
delivery add-ins creates autorun CDs from PowerPoint presentations.

Impatica (http://www.impatica.com) converts entire PowerPoint presentations to Java presentations that can be
played on any browser—often file sizes are reduced to as little as 10% of the original size. (Included in the CD)

PowerCONVERTER, from PresentationPro (http://www.presentationpro.com), similarly converts PowerPoint


presentations to Macromedia's Flash SWF format. Other PowerPoint to Flash converters include Presedia
(http://www.presedia.com), IceSLIDE (http://www.iceweb.com/site1/pages/iceslide.cfm) and iCreate
(http://www.wanadu.com). (Sample Software Included in the CD)

PresenterONE (http://www.realnetworks.com/products/presenterone) from Accordent can create RealMedia movies


from PowerPoint presentations. Incidentally, you can output entire PowerPoint presentations to the QuickTime
format if you are using PowerPoint on the Macintosh.

To create autorun CDs from PowerPoint presentations, you can look at three choices including Sonia Coleman's
ACDPC (http://www.soniacoleman.com), RunIt! (http://www.creativemindsinc.com) and GST PowerLaunch
(http://www.autorun-autoplay-tools.com/gst-power-launch2.htm).

Template and Miscellaneous Add-ins

Any add-in that does not fall into the category of an editing or delivery add-in is usually classified into this category.

Accent Graphics (http://www.presentation-librarian.com) makes the popular Presentation Librarian and


PowerSearch add-ins that provide PowerPoint with extensive cataloguing and search capabilities.

Slide Converter from Aladat (http://www.aladat.com) allows you to create a new presentation using images of your
slides.

CrystalGraphics PowerPlugs Headings (http://www.powerplugs.com) are a collection of hundreds of alpha channel


imparted visuals that add sophisticated headings to PowerPoint slides.

Hemera includes a PowerPoint add-in that allows a single click access to its Graphicsdesk

- 74 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

(http://www.graphicsdesk.com) clipart subscription service.

If you have the full version of Adobe Acrobat (http://www.adobe.com/), you'll find that the installation of the program
automatically initializes an add-in that simplifies creation of Acrobat PDFs from within PowerPoint.

These are only a few of the hundreds of PowerPoint add-ins that are available. You can find more add-ins using
google.

Add-in Compatibility

With various versions of PowerPoint being used today on the Windows platform, it would be prudent to find out if
an add-in actually is compatible with your PowerPoint version before actually using / buying the product.
Thankfully, many add-ins have trial or demo versions you can test before deciding.

In addition, below mentioned is a website that details add-in compatibility for the three different PowerPoint
versions. Be aware though, that the page weighs around 100 kb and may take a while to load for those on dial-up
access.

http://www.indezine.com/products/powerpoint/addin/compatible.html

Following this information we are now ready to go ahead with add-ins. What about you?

Microsoft PowerPoint Animation Player

Download the PowerPoint animation Player from the Microsoft page

http://www.microsoft.com/office/office/viewers.asp

Open PowerPoint 95, and your presentation

On the File menu, select Save as HTML. Then Next. On the next screen, select, New Layout, then Standard Page
layout. Next. Now select PowerPoint Animation

Use a resolution of 640 x 480 or 800 x 600 and the default width of graphics (1/2 screen)

Add your email address and URL

Select page colors and button look. Either use the default or change the colors. Generally speaking the default is
preferable.

Select one of the three buttons for your presentation

Decide where you want the navigation buttons to go. Most people use bottom, right side or top.

If you have slide notes, be sure to select the Include slide notes in pages check box

Now click Finish

The file will have the same name as the file you are converting but will be in its own subdirectory

A link is automatically inserted to show them where to get the Player

Using this method, the person must have the Player in order to view your presentation. If they don't have the
viewer, the presentation will not display

LINKS

POWERPOINT TEMPLATES

How to Conquer the World. http://www.howtoconquertheworld.com/powerpoi.htm


12 backgrounds. You add the text boxes from another presentation and save them in the new background.

Photographic Specialties
http://www.ezslides.com/pot.htm .
16 zipped backgrounds. Quite nice.

- 75 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Presenters Online Templates


http://www.presentersonline.com/resources/resources_templates.html
Business, education, high tech and general templates.

SOUNDS

Presenters Online Sounds


http://www.presentersonline.com/resources/resources_sound.html
Quite a few sounds at this site.

- 76 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

PowerPoint FAQs

Drawing In PowerPoint

How do I change the default colors?

Each slide has what is referred to as a "color scheme". The scheme colors are the colors that appear in the little
pop-ups for different controls. PowerPoint templates come with multiple color schemes built in, which you can
change by using the Format/Color Scheme menu command. You can also use this to create your own schemes.
Every slide can have a different color scheme. Different color schemes can be used to break out sections of a long
presentation.

What happened to recolor Picture?

It's there, it's just hard to find. The recolor picture command is no longer a menu command, but is now a button on
the "picture" toolbar. From the View menu, select "Toolbars..." and then "Picture". You will need to select a picture
object in order for the recolor picture command to become available.

Is there a limit to the number of guides you can have?

Yes, for some strange reason, you can only have up to 8 guides in each direction. To get more guides, hold down
the CTRL key while dragging on a guide. (You must first turn guides on by using the Guides command on the View
menu.) To get rid of a guide, drag it off the page.

How do I make my own PowerPoint backgrounds? (See Create Templates)

What you're talking about, is creating templates, or "POT" files. First of all, any file can be saved as a POT file--all
you have to do is use the SAVE AS dialog and select POT as the file type, replacing PPT. This action automatically
takes you to the location where the rest of the templates are stored, which is sometimes useful and sometimes not.
As for the file itself, you'll want to do the following things to make a good template: (easiest if you make it in this
order)

Format the slide master, including making a nice background, setting the fonts, bullets, etc.

Create and apply a color scheme to the Slide Master; make sure that desired objects (text, drawings, etc) follow
these colors.

You can create multiple schemes for a single template, but the master will only use one of these schemes at a time.
Later, when actually in use, each slide can use a different color scheme, so sometimes it's nice to make templates
with differing schemes that give each template different looks.

Format the page numbers, footers, as you like, and set them for being visible or not, depending on your wishes.

Go to black and white view, and, by using the right mouse button to click on individual objects, set the way each
object on the page will print until the page resembles the way you want it to look when printed to black and white
printers.

Insert a New Title Master. By doing this after you've done all the rest, it will automatically "inherit" all the work
you've already done, so you've got a good starting place.

Make any changes you want to the Title Master, including changing the color scheme and black and white print
settings.

With no objects selected, from the FORMAT menu, select FONT. Select the font that you want other text and labels
to default to.

Go to slide sorter view and delete any slides that are there.

- 77 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Go to slide view, where you should see nothing. From the FILE menu, select SAVE AS, and in the "save as type"
drop down box select "Presentation Template"
Close the file, and then create a new presentation from this template, evaluating what needs to be changed, and
what bugs need to be fixed. Have fun!

For more details see the Chapter on how to create a template in the book.

How do I create additional pre-set color fills?

There is no way to create two or multi-colored fills that you can get to display in the fill menu. A lame workaround is
to just make a shape with the fills you like (combine shapes to get multicolored fills) and then keep it around and
copy/paste it into your pres.

Pictures and Other External Files


My pictures turned to Big Red X's--what happened?

You are not alone; this is a serious problem that many people are running into. It is due to a file size bug; when
PowerPoint doesn't have enough memory to deal with the size of your file, the graphics get forever replaced with
big red X images. If you can insert the pictures directly from PowerPoint (using Insert/Picture) as opposed to using
copy/paste, the file size sometimes turns out to be much smaller (some applications create links and other exciting
remnants when doing a paste operation). When saving and reopening these files, people find fewer problems. As
for opening files which already have red crosses, Microsoft suggests closing the file WITHOUT saving (as saving
would also save the red crosses), close all other programs to free up as much memory as possible, restart your
computer, and finally reopen your file. We have tested this workaround and it seems to work; problem is that almost
everybody closes the file and saves it. In this case, you must manually reinsert the picture from its original source.

How can I put Flash or Shockwave files into my presentation?

Putting Flash or Shockwave files in PowerPoint is such an obvious idea that it's really too bad the PowerPoint team
didn't think of it. However, it can be done in both PowerPoint 97 and PowerPoint 2000, using the VBA tools. You
don't need to be a programmer to do it, but it is geeky! That said, here's what you do:

First of all, you must install the Shockwave 4 plug-in Viewer on your system. You may download this for free from
the Macromedia web site at http://www.macromedia.com.

Secondly, save your Flash files as SWF (Shockwave) movies, and WRITE DOWN where you saved them. (this will
become clear later). Once that is done, go to PowerPoint (97 or 2000) and make a slide. From the View menu,
select Toolbars/Visual Basic to bring up VB toolbar. Click on USSR Button (hammer & something) marked "Control
Toolbox" -- this brings up another toolbar. In the NEW set of tools you just bought up, again click on the Hammer &
something button that is now marked "Other tools" -- you will get a drop down list. Scroll down this list until you get
to "Shockwave Flash Object" --release your mouse button and your cursor becomes a cross hair: draw out a
rectangle on your slide (you can change the size later). Right-click on the new rectangle with big x, and from the
pop-aside menu select "Properties". (Isn't this EASY?!!) A large, intimidating properties list pops up on the left side
of the screen. Make sure the "Alphabetic" tab is showing. Put on your propeller hat for geeky bits.

Change "EmbedMovie" to True (which makes the shockwave file part of the ppt file, so you can give it to others).
Set "Loop" to False if you don't want the movie to play endlessly; keep at TRUE if you do. After "Movie" type the
absolute path of your file: i.e. c:\desktop\xyz.swf Close the properties box. Your slide will now look exactly the
same. But, have no fear. Go to SLIDE SHOW, and you should see your flash movie play. And, when you return from
slide show, the movie is now displayed on the screen, and you can resize it appropriately.

You can put your shockwave files on the Slide Master and they will animate on every slide. Knock yourself out.

How do I make bitmaps and captures screens display well in slide show?

The trick is that bitmapped graphics only look exactly correct at one particular size. This is most noticeable in
screen dumps, where you want to see a proper pixel for pixel representation. What is happening, is that during slide
show, PowerPoint scales the presentation to fit the size of your monitor, and that the scaling hoses your bitmaps.
To fix this you can do the following. In PowerPoint 97, right-click on the bitmap, select "Format Picture...", go to the
"Size" tab, from the Scale area check the box labeled "best for slide show", and set the resolution to match your
system resolution (available from the Display area of the Windows Control Panel). For PowerPoint 95 and all other
versions, click on the bitmap, and from the Draw menu (or other depending on your version), select the Scale

- 78 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

command. You must then enter a percentage based on the screen resolution of the system on which you plan to
deliver your electronic presentation, using the percentages as listed below:

640x480 = 150%
720x512 = 133%
800x600 = 120%
1024 x 768 = 94%
1280 x 1024 = 75%

This will scale the bitmap to a size that, when displayed in slide show, will appear at its original size. Crazy but true!

Can the WMF format be converted to GIF?

Yes, but not in PowerPoint. The way I do it, is to insert the image you want to use in PowerPoint, Word, or any other
product that accepts vector based graphics, size it to the size you want to see your GIF file display, then copy/paste
it into PhotoShop or some other bitmap editing package, where you can now save it as a GIF file.

Is there some way to prepare photos so they display well in PowerPoint?

There are two things that make bitmaps look bad in PowerPoint. One has to do with the reduction and enlargement,
and the other has to do with colors. To find out about the size issues, look at the question on bitmaps and screen
captures above. As for the color issue, if your computer is set up for more than 256 colors, you shouldn't have any
problems. If not, read on. If you're displaying more than one photo per slide, or a color photo against a multi-color
shaded background, you may experience some color degradation in your photograph. This is due to the fact that
some PC systems are configured for displaying only 256 colors at a time, and photographs and shaded
backgrounds require many colors to be properly rendered. One option is to change your video settings to allow
more colors (you must have a graphics card with 2 or more MB of video ram to do this) by using the Display area of
the Windows 95 Control Panel. Another option is to use a product like PhotoShop to lower the number of colors in
the photograph. Use PhotoShop's Indexed Color feature, and select Adaptive Palette, then keep setting the number
of colors lower and lower until you get a small number that still looks good. Numbers that are powers of 2
(2,4,8,16,32,64,128, 256) will also reduce your overall file size. When you save the file, save as a GIF file, which will
give you the best compression, while preserving the correct palette adjustments. JPEG format has better
compression, but will always save the photo with millions of colors, thus leading to pretty harsh display problems
on 256-color systems.

I'm trying to open *.wmf files, and just gets garbage. What do I do?

WMF files are graphics files, which need to be "inserted" as opposed to "opened." This is a subtle, yet important
distinction to the product. In PowerPoint, start a new presentation (or open an existing one), and then from the
Insert menu, select Picture, then select your file name.

How can I make the background of my logo transparent?

Only PowerPoint 97 (version 8) and PowerPoint 2000 support transparency in graphics, but there are a few ways to
work around this problem. 1) If your logo can be represented in monochrome (one color only), then try scanning it
as "line art", and saving it as a monochrome bitmap. Monochrome bitmaps should come into PowerPoint versions
4.0 and higher with their backgrounds transparent. Note, however, that I use the word "should" ... it doesn't always
work. 2) Set up your design so that the logo is sitting on a solid color, not a shaded part of a background. Use
PhotoShop or the equivalent to save the number of colors in your logo to below 64. Import the logo file into
PowerPoint using the Insert Picture command. Then, use the Recolor Picture command to reassign the logo's
background color to the same color as the background of your slide (or color that the log is sitting on). This will
give you the same feeling as the logo being transparent.

Why are my Excel Spreadsheets getting cropped when I paste them into PowerPoint?

According to Microsoft Tech Support, PowerPoint has an internal limit of 6 x 6 inches for this type of object.
Spreadsheets larger than 6" in height or width will get cropped when they are pasted into PowerPoint. This is
extraordinarily stupid!

What resolution should I scan an image at in order for it to present well in PowerPoint?

If you want an image to look good on the screen in PowerPoint, scan it at the screen resolution: 72. dpi. Higher
does you no good--it only makes the files bigger. HOWEVER, you may find that 72 dpi images are a bit too low-res
for printed output, so you might want to scan at 150, which makes a nice compromise. THEN AGAIN, if you are
outputting to 35mm slides, you're talking a whole another ball game. 35 mm slide output devices are very high

- 79 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

resolution, and you'll want 300 dpi scans. These will make your presentation gigantic, but anything-lower resolution
will look really bad. Some people keep multiple versions going to solve this problem, but that's a pain too. Such is
life.

How can I import DXF files into PowerPoint?

Microsoft Office 2000 does not install or have the option to install DXF filters with the standard CD-ROM
installation. The converter patch can be found at

http://www.microsoft.com/office/ork/2000/appndx/toolbox.htm#outlook

When you get to this page, scroll down until you find the Converter Pack heading and then choose which file you
want to download. The document that explains more about this can be found at

http://support.microsoft.com/support/Office/OFF2K/Converter.asp

Animation and Slide Show


Why won't my branched presentations work when presented with the Viewer?

The Viewer does not support branching. It's not you, it's the software.

Is there a way to go backwards in an electronic slide show?

To go backwards a slide in slide show, you can use any of the following: Page up, Right mouse button, Left arrow
key. For more info, see our Powerpoint Keyboard Shortcut file.

How do I get Animated GIF files to play in Slide Show?

In order to do this, you'll need to upgrade to the new PowerPoint 2000, which does support animated GIF files. You
can even use them as bullets if you want.

Are there any Animation Plug-ins for PowerPoint?

Ravware Software has created a PowerPoint '97 plug-in that allows you to play animated FLC files in slide show. We
have not tried this tool, but if you want to give it a go, check it out at http://www.ravware.com/activex.htm

Why is my slide show playing in a window?

It looks like some how the presentation was set to play in a window, as opposed to the full screen. This property is
set on a presentation basis, so you might see it on one presentation and not others. From the Slide Show menu,
pick "Set Up Show". In the Show Type box, make sure that the option "presented by a speaker (full screen)" is
checked. Most likely this has been changed to "browsed by an individual (in a window)".

How can I make objects flash infinitely in slide show?

There is no automatic easy way to do this. There is a hack that will get you this effect if you really want it. Make a
group of objects that flash once, and then pile on top of it more copies of the same object, each set to flash once.
Set a few seconds delay between each effect, so that it won't all happen to fast. It's not great, but it's the closest
you'll get to that "game show" feeling.

Is there any way to have OLE objects update automatically in slide show?

No.

How can I go "back" in a slide show like I do in my browser?

The next slide/previous slide actions use the "slide show" (one slide after another) metaphor, not the web-space
metaphor (where "back" means "the last slide I saw"). If you're doing a kiosk style or self-running presentation, the
best thing to do is to put buttons on each slide that navigate directly to the places they may want to go. To make a
BACK button:

Draw a button (or use Slide Show/Action Buttons and select the blank button, then draw it out on the screen like
you would a box). Select this button or graphic, and then go to the Slide Show menu, select Action Settings, and

- 80 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

click the radio box marked "Hyperlink to:" and set it to "Last Slide Viewed". This button will behave like the Back
button on your web browser. If you want this on all of your slides, put the button on the Slide Master (View/Slide
Master).

Is there any way to make Right Mouse go backwards in slide show?

From the Tools menu, select Options, and then click on the View tab. There is a checkbox in the Slide Show
section: "Popup menu on right mouse click"--uncheck this box and the right mouse button will make slide show go
backwards.

How can I change the speed of the transitions?

You can't. Some effects are slower than others (fly versus crawl), but the speed is not adjustable.

Can I create links that go to web pages while in slide show?

Yes, but you'll need PowerPoint 2000 to do it.

Why does the speed of animation effects change on different computers?

Animations do run differently on different computers, depending primarily on the processor speed and the amount
of RAM. If you are doing a lot of animation, you want to have lots of both. It may be that the second computer is not
as powerful as the first. Sometimes another problem has to do with screen display speed; laptops with screen types
other than active matrix displays are very slow, and tend to lag in displaying things.

Can you prevent PowerPoint from advancing slides when anything other than buttons are clicked?

For example, on one page there are 12 different action buttons, which lead to 12 different slides. Can you set
PowerPoint to prevent it from advancing to the next slide if you happen to miss one of the action buttons and you
click the background? A good example is if you are on slide 12 and you want to click an action button that moves
the presentation to slide 74, but you miss and the presentation advances to slide 13. The answer to this question
is YES. Go to the slide that has all the buttons on it, and from the Slide Show menu, select "Slide Transition". In
this dialog, UNCHECK BOTH BOXES ON THE LOWER LEFT. This will make the slide so that the ONLY thing it
responds to is clicking on the buttons.

How can I make font animation (like in Microsoft Word) work in PowerPoint?

You can't.

Is there a way to make my own animations and play them in PowerPoint?

PowerPoint 2000 allows you to place animated GIF files (like the ones that you see on web pages) into your pages;
the animations will play in slide show. This does not work in PowerPoint 97. If you want to create "movies" that play
in PowerPoint, you'll have to use something that saves as AVI files: two products I know of are Macromedia Flash
and Adobe Premier. I believe Flash to be a better (easier) product. But beware that AVI files will always have an
opaque background--they play "in a box" so to speak. For true animation, Flash might be a good product for you, in
that you can create self-running animated files that require no player. It's a great product, but not particularly easy
to learn. The on-line tutorial is a must.

Is there any way to seamlessly run slide shows sequentially?

PowerPoint 4 had a great feature called "Play Lists" that allowed PowerPoint to read a text (LST) file with the names
of the presentation files in order, and it would play those files one after another in slide show. This was great for
conferences, etc. Unfortunately, in fact tragically, this feature was lost in PowerPoint 95, and has never reappeared.
Ugly workarounds include creating a DOS batch file, which switches between DOS and PowerPoint between each
presentation (ooh, THAT's nice). A less ugly alternative involves creating an agenda slide that contains jumps to
other presentations saved as PPS files, so that they're launched as slide shows. The third ugly alternative is to put a
button on the last slide of each presentation that jumps to the first slide of the next presentation.
Is there any way to "zoom in" on a picture in slide show?

There are two ways I know that you could do this; both are hacks. The most elegant, but also most time consuming
would be to make more slides with the zoomed-in bitmaps on them. These could be hidden slides, which would
allow you to gracefully skip over them if you didn't want to explore them, or just press the H key while in slide show
to show the hidden slide. Alternatively, you can , when you need to zoom in, ALT-Tab to PowerPoint (regular view),

- 81 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

zoom in to the picture as you like, then ALT-Tab back to slide show when you're done. Preferably, you would turn
off as many toolbars as possible to make this less ugly.

Is there any way to have smooth (aliased) fonts in Slide Show?

This feature is now possible, if you're using Windows 98. From the Windows Start Menu, select Settings, then
Control Panel. Click on the Effects tab, and check the box that says "Smooth Edges of Screen Fonts".

Is there any way to run two different slide shows at once on two different monitors?

Simple answer: no.

Sound and Video


What movie format plays on both Mac and Windows?

At this point, there is no good answer to this problem.

Is it possible to use an Audio-CD soundtrack in my presentations?


Yes, but you'll need PowerPoint 97 (or higher) and there is a bit of a trick to it. Put your Audio-CD in your CD-ROM
drive. For most computers running Windows 95, this automatically starts the Windows 95 CD player and you hear
your music. It is very important to CLOSE the CD Player application before you try inserting the sound in
PowerPoint. If you have the CD Player application running, it won't work properly, so just remember to close that
puppy down! Meanwhile, back in PowerPoint 97: from the Insert menu, select "Movies and Sounds..." an then "Play
CD Audio Track..." This brings up the Play Options dialog. Set things as you like, and then click OK. You should
now see a little sound icon on your presentation. If you go to slide show, you can now click on this icon, and it will
play the sound. If you want the sound to play automatically: 1) click on the sound icon (the one you just inserted) to
select it. 2) From the Slide Show menu, select "Custom Animation..." This brings up the Custom Animation dialog,
which has several tabs. On the "Play Settings" tab, click "Play Using Animation Order"; also click "hide while not
playing" to hide the icon (if you want to, most people do). You can now choose to have the sound play just on one
slide, or across multiple slides by playing with these settings. 3) From the "Timing" tab, click "Automatically".
Otherwise, you have to click to get the sound to play. You can use the arrow buttons to the right of the animation
order box to control the order in which objects "play" on the slide. For example, you might want your title to fly in
first, then have the music play, and then have bullets fly in. To do this, you'd want to make sure your sound clip was
second in the play list.

How do I make my sound files invisible in Slide Show?

After inserting a sound file, you will see an icon on the slide representing that file. Select the icon, then go to the
Slide Show menu and choose Custom Animation. On the Play Settings tab, you'll need to make sure that the box
that says "Hide while not playing" is checked. This will make your icon disappear in slide show. To make the sound
play, you'll need to click on the invisible icon. This can be tricky, so try locating the icon in a corner where you'll
remember it, and/or making the icon much bigger so you won't miss "hitting" it. Note that hidden sound icons do
not play at all when slide shows are configured to run within a window. This is a bug.

How do I get rid of the Virus Alert when playing mpeg Videos in Slide Show?

In PowerPoint 97, disable Macro Virus Protection by selection Options from the Tools menu. In the PowerPoint
2000, set your Office Security Settings to Low via Tools/Macro/Security.

Why do my movies start and end with black boxes?

There is nothing in PowerPoint that would make this happen. Most likely the first and last few frames of your
movie file are black, and that's what you're seeing. You'll need to find some way to edit them out of the movie to get
rid of them.

How can I make PowerPoint load embedded sound files more quickly?

PowerPoint loads the image of the next slide into memory while the previous slide is playing, but I don't believe it
has any way to load linked files until they are activated.

Is there any way to play a Sound and Animation simultaneously?

No.

- 82 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Can I play QuickTime movies in PowerPoint?

Yes and no. You can play QuickTime movies in Macintosh PowerPoint 3, 4, and 98. Windows PowerPoint does not
support QuickTime movies, only AVI files. The trick to know about is that the movies are referenced in the file, but
do not become part of the file. Therefore, you need to make sure that when you play the PowerPoint slide show you
1) have the movie file and 2) the movie file is located in the same relative path as it was when you inserted it in the
first place (best to just keep the movie in the same folder as the presentation). The answer to the next question
about sounds applies to movies as well.

Why don't sounds play when I move my file to another computer?

When preparing a presentation (with sounds) that is to be used from different computers, it is very important to
make sure that all of the sound files are located in the same folder as the presentation that you've created, and that
you insert them from this location. Sound files, because of their large size, don't become an actual part of the
presentation file--a link is formed to the sound file. When the presentation is played, the program goes looking for
the sound at the location described in the link. This works fine on the original creation machine, but as soon as you
move things to another machine, the links don't accurately describe where the files are, and things fail to play.

The first thing to know is that PowerPoint will always look for the sound in the folder that contains the presentation,
so this is the best place to put them. You can't modify the links, so you have to start off by putting the sounds in the
same folder as the presentation, and then inserting them into your presentation. This will create an internal link with
no real address: PowerPoint knows that the sound is in the same folder as the presentation, and will look for it
there regardless of what that folder's name is, or what machine it's on.

Printing

Is there a way to control how slides print in black and white?

In PowerPoint 95, 97, and 2000 you can specify how every object on the page prints, separately from how it will
display on the screen. It's a super-useful but pretty darned hidden feature. In slide view, click on the "B&W View"
button at the far right of the main toolbar. This will show you how your slide will print to a black and white printer.
To change any object, click on the object (or the background) with your RIGHT MOUSE BUTTON and select options
from the "Black and White..." pop-aside menu choice. You can also do this for object on your slide master.

Is there any way to keep some slides from printing?

Sometimes, when building a presentation, you use extra slides to get the animation effects that you want. When you
print, however, you don't want these slides to print. Try making these slides "hidden" slides (the Hidden Slide
button is available from the Slide Sorter View or as a menu command from the Slide Show menu). Once you've
made them hidden slides, when you print you'll want to un-check the "Print Hidden Slides" checkbox in the lower
right corner of the Print dialog. Make sure that you un-hide your slides again before doing your slide show, or these
slides will not show up.

How do I print giant posters from PowerPoint?

Although PowerPoint allows a maximum page size of 56 x 56 inches, you need to find a printer that can print on that
size paper. Some of the slides imaging places have these types of printers. PowerPoint itself has no ability to tile a
page to a printer--it just things of a page as a page. If your printer has the ability to cut up or "tile" a large image
onto many pages than you'd want to set that through the printer settings via the Print dialog. Our printers here don't
do such a thing, but maybe there's one out there that does.

Is there any way to print a catalog of slides with titles and file names?

The best thing that exists is to use the 6-slides per page option in PowerPoint's print dialog, and to set the Handout
Master (View/Masters/Handouts) to have the file name in the header or footer. If you don't want pictures of the
slides, and just want titles, print the outline (again, select this in the Print dialog) and format the Outline Master
(View/Masters/Outline) to have the file name in the footer. For each of these approaches you'll have to print out
each presentation separately.

Why is my bulleted text printing differently from how it looks on screen?

The only time when I've seen something like this happen is when there is an issue with fonts. Sometimes you get
into a situation where either you have screen fonts but no printer fonts, and the printer substitutes a font that

- 83 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

doesn't match with the screen font OR you have printer fonts for which you have no corresponding screen font, so
the computer uses the "closest match" it can find. Again, you have the situation where everything looks great on
the screen, but things print differently from what you see. To see if this is what your problem is, try changing all of
the text to a standard windows font like Arial or Times, and then see if the problem still exists.

Formatting
What to do if one object on your slide is hidden behind another

It's fine to have overlapping objects on a PowerPoint slide. But when you are working with text and images,
sometimes one object will get stuck behind another, preventing you from moving or editing the one underneath. To
fix this problem, right-click on the top object. In the menu that appears, go to Order - Send to Back. Now you
should be able to access the object that was behind it. .

Is there a way to adjust "kerning" or "tracking" in PowerPoint?

No. Sorry!

How can I get Word tables to look good in PowerPoint?

Upgrade to PowerPoint 2000, which re-wrote all the table code so that it works. If you're stuck using a previous
version, DON'T format the table using one of Word's preset styles. While in Word, make all the lines in the table a
different color from the text in the table. Then when you're back in PowerPoint, use recolor picture to recolor the
lines in PowerPoint. There are many problems about Word's use of color and PowerPoint color schemes, and this is
the way I've found that gets around the problem the best. The table code in PowerPoint 97 isn't very good, and has
lots of problems, mostly in the area of columns being cut off. For best results, insert tables while in PowerPoint and
create them from scratch, as opposed to creating them in Word and pasting them into your presentation.

How do I get graphs to look right when the file is transferred to the Mac?

Graphs that are created on the PC in PPT'97 (using PowerPoint's Graphs or Excel Charts) sometimes have
translation problems when these files are opened on the Mac in PPT'98. There is a bug that shows up in build charts
with blended fills. If you experience this bug, try taking the fills out, and the builds should then work properly. Other
chart translation problems can be solved by double-clicking on the chart (in Mac PowerPoint '98), which opens
them up in Graphing module, and then clicking "off" the chart to go back to PowerPoint. This will solve the problem
for the Macintosh file, but alas, if it is a file that PC users want to share with Mac users here and there (and having
two versions is impractical) you are out of luck. Microsoft is aware of these bugs.

Any way to have more than two masters, like Persuasion?

Persuasion users always hate this part of PowerPoint. The answer to your question is "no".

Why do my Org Charts keep falling apart?

The sad truth is that the Org Chart code in PowerPoint just isn't very good. It is common to have charts look
different each time you look at them, printing problems, and strange formatting occurrences. The only good
workaround is to draw your org charts from scratch using PowerPoint's drawing tools, which will not have any of
these problems.

How do I change PowerPoint's ruler from Metric to US?

PowerPoint, like the other Office applications, doesn't store a setting for the ruler, it looks to Windows to provide
this setting. To change the setting, close all open applications, and:

From the Windows Start button, click Settings, then Control Panel.

Double-click on Regional Settings

Click on the tab labeled "Number"

Down towards the bottom of the list is a setting called "Measurement System"; set this to US, or Metric, which ever
you prefer. When you re-launch PowerPoint, the ruler should then obey this setting.

- 84 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Why are all my slides black and white? What happened to the colors?

Check to see that the "Black and White View" button hasn't accidentally been pressed. This is on your main
formatting toolbar, right next to the view percentage readout. This button toggles the presentation's view between
color and what you'll see when you print. While in this view, you can right-click on any object, and by using the
Black and White settings menu, change how each object prints.

Is there any way to change the presentation design of individual slides?

Unfortunately, a template applies itself to every slide in the presentation, so you can only use one template per
show. There is a workaround, however. RIGHT-Click on the background of the slide you want to change, and select
BACKGROUND from the little menu that pops up. Check the box that says something like "omit background
objects" This will cease to display anything from the slide master. Now go to the slide master of the template you
want to use, and copy/paste the objects to this slide. You'll probably also have to change the color scheme as well,
which is tedious.

Is there anyone who makes an Indexing Tool for PowerPoint presentations?

Yes. Check out http://www.accent-graphics.net They are making a tool "designed to automate the storage and
retrieval of PowerPoint slides thereby making existing presentation materials available for the rapid development of
new presentations." I haven't used this tool, but their web site is useful and looks to be worth checking out.

How do I make a new Title Master?

Go to VIEW/SLIDE MASTER; then from the INSERT menu, select NEW TITLE MASTER.

How do I make a slide use the Title Master and not the Slide Master?

Select FORMAT/SLIDE LAYOUT, and pick the title layout.

Saving, Using, Editing And Opening Presentations


Which versions of PowerPoint can open/save which other versions?

PowerPoint 97, 98, and 2000 all use the same file format. All versions of PowerPoint can open the previous
version's files from the same platform. Some versions allow you to down-rev save (lines in red), some allow you to
open directly from a different platform (as shown in lines in blue). See the diagram below for the complete matrix of
what does what. When opening Mac files from a PC, make sure to copy the file on to PC floppy from the Macintosh.

Is there any tools for recovering corrupt .PPT files?

There is one; we haven't tried it, but it does come from Microsoft so we'll let you judge its quality. This is an add-in
that "clones" the active presentation. Supposedly, you can use this add-in to create a corruption free copy of a
presentation that you suspect may be corrupted. You can find this add-in at:

http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/Q193/8/48.asp

Can I save my presentation to HTML?

The answer is a qualified "yes". If you want to do this, upgrade to PowerPoint 2000. In the File menu of PowerPoint
2000, you'll see the "Save to Web" option. This dialog does a lot of things, none of which are obvious.

Clicking SAVE: This saves your presentation as HTML in such a way that PowerPoint can reopen the file, edit it, and
save back to HTML. (Useful if you saw a typo, for example, and you wanted to go back and fix it.) The file created
by this function will be large and will look and work really nicely in IE5. HOWEVER, it won't work at all in any
verison of Netscape. So, this is the classic "Microsoft only" solution. Files are big. All links, action buttons,
transitions, builds, animations, and even Flash files display properly.

Clicking PUBLISH: gives you three alternatives, all of which are one-way only (you can't open these html files back
up in PowerPoint).

Option 1: Publish for IE4 and higher: does the same quality job as above (good, but only for IE); no difference in file
size from SAVE.

- 85 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Option 2: Publish for Netscape Navigator 3.0 and higher: creates a file that doesn't look as good as the IE versions, but
does work for Netscape. You'll find that navigation buttons and links will still work, but all other effects will display
but not work. Files are very small.

Option 3: Publish for both options 1 & 2: essentially, this does both 1 & 2, and people get the best one for their
browser. Files are same size as adding options 1 & 2. While this creates a lot of space on the server, it probably is
your best option if you don't live in an all Microsoft world.

Important Note: If you want transition effects, builds, and animation effects to work in your web pages, you'll need to
change a setting. From the File menu, click on Save to Web. Then click the Publish button, and then click the
button marked "Web Options..." In this dialog, make sure that the box that says "show slide animations while
browsing" is clicked. Otherwise, your animations will not play, regardless of how you save the file.

How can I transfer my presentation to video?

Upgrade to PowerPoint 2000, and then try using the "Presentation Broadcasting" feature.

Is it possible to save a presentation as read-only?

Not really. You can save a presentation as a template (POT) file, which will open an unnamed copy of the template, but these files
contain only masters, and no slides.

Is there a list of keyboard shortcuts somewhere?

Yes, on this very book. Next Chapter PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts has all the available shortcuts mentioned.

How do I get rid of Custom dictionary entries?

These are stored in a file known as custom.dic. If you use the FIND command (from the Windows Start menu) you will probably
find this file in: c:\\office97\office

To edit the file, launch Notepad, and open custom.dic. There you will find the list of words that you've entered into your custom
dictionary. Delete any words you don't want, save the file, close the file, and then restart PowerPoint.

What is the maximum file size for PowerPoint?

There is no maximum file size either in file size or number of slides. The system will barf on the file when you run out of memory,
so buy lots of memory, particularly if you like to use pictures, sounds, and/or video.

How do I completely remove PowerPoint?

Uninstalling PowerPoint does still leave some bits and pieces around on your machine. For a complete explanation of how to get
rid of everything, check out

http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/Q169/7/36.asp

How do I make a PowerPoint file into a self-running executable file?

You can't. For those of you who don't understand what this is, it would be a presentation that would "play" itself, regardless of if
PowerPoint was installed or not. The only products that we know of that do this are Macromedia Director and Macromedia
Flash. But there is an indirect way of doing this: You can convert your PowerPoint file to Flash, and convert the Flash file to a
Standalone Executable file using tools like FlashSee or some other tools. But then the presentation should be properly formatted.
Slide timing should be properly adjusted.

How do I merge two presentations into one?

Start with one presentation, and use the "Insert/ Slides from File" command. You can also copy slides from one presentation to
another, but you'll need to go to the slide sorter view to do it. If you pick up slides from the slide sorter view, then you should get
everything associated with that slide. If you try to copy a slide from Slide view, you just get the objects on the slide, and not the
slide itself.

Can Power Point slides be made into PDF files?

PowerPoint slides and entire presentations can be made into PDF files, but you'll need to purchase a copy of Adobe Acrobat in
order to do it. PDF is a format owned and created by Adobe. Their Acrobat "Reader" is free, and can be downloaded from their
web site at http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep.html. However, to save a file to PDF, you need to buy a full copy of
Acrobat. Once you've done that, you can save any document to PDF, which is very useful. Also, the reader that you get with the
full product has more fun features than the free one. You can find a lot of freeware software in Internet that allows you to convert
PowerPoint presentations to PDF files.

- 86 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Why do I get errors trying to edit OrgCharts in PowerPoint?

It is not uncommon to get the "There isn't enough memory to read MS OrgChart" error. Unfortunately, this part of the product is
just a plain old disaster. It's not you, and unfortunately, there's not much you can do about it. I try to avoid using OrgChart, and
make my charts by "hand" using the PowerPoint drawing tools. It may seem slower at first, but since it actually works, it ends up
saving time.

Is there a way to copy slides into a specific location in my presentation?

In PowerPoint 95 and earlier, you simply go to the slide sorter of one presentation, copy the slides you want, then switch to the
slide sorter of the destination presentation, click in between the slides to set an insertion point, and then PASTE. In PowerPoint
97, however, the ability to set an insertion point mysteriously disappeared. (read: BUG) The way to accomplish this in PowerPoint
97 is to click on the slide you wish the new slides to follow, and then PASTE. This is extremely unintuitive, since in every other
instance of Microsoft programs, pasting into a selection replaces the selection with the pasted items. PowerPoint 2000 fixed this
bug (it allows you to set an insertion point between slides), but still allows you to paste into a selection, for those people who got
used to doing it the "'97 way".

Why is my file still big, even after deleting things?

For some mysterious reason, PowerPoint 97 and 2000 store lots of information in the file that does not get removed when the files
are saved and closed. However, if you save the file as a new name, using the SAVE AS command, you will almost always find
your files reduce in size, sometimes quite dramatically.

Unsolved Mysteries
What happened to PowerPoint 5.0 and 6.0?

This isn't really an unsolved mystery, but it still feels like one to me, so I've put it here. If you have a better, more fun explanation,
let's hear it! The Microsoft Office team was having a very difficult time keeping track of what versions of each product were in
each version of Office, so they decided to bring all of the products up to the same version number. Since Word was at 6.0 already
(while PowerPoint was at 4, and Excel at 5), all the applications made their next release (shipped in Office '95) be 7.0. Office '97 for
Windows then shipped with version 8 of all the applications, and just to confuse things the Macintosh version 8 products (which
shipped in 1998) were called Office '98, because it was just too darned embarrassing to ship a product called Office '97 in 1998. My
favorite artifact of all of this is my Office '96 t-shirt, the shirt for which no product ever existed.

Are there any utilities that will replace bitmaps in bulk in PowerPoint?

So far, we do not know of any such beast. If you do, please let us know.

Is there any way to play ScreenCam exe files in PowerPoint slide shows?

We know of no way to do this. The problem is that if you click on the screen while the movie is playing (as you would to show a
demo) the movie disappears.

Know where to get a copy of PowerPoint to run on Windows 3.1?

Try with your friends. Also search Google. Maybe, just maybe some website is still offering the same. But I am not very hopeful on
the same.

How do you populate List Boxes using VB in PowerPoint?

Answer for this question is still awaited.

- 87 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

PowerPoint Tips

Toolbars

Displaying Keyboard Shortcuts in Tool Tips

If you'd like to see the available keyboard shortcuts for menus, commands, and toolbar buttons, go to
Tools/Customize, click on the Options tab, and click on "show shortcut keys in screen tips".

Preview Fonts in the Toolbar

If you'd like to see previews of the actual fonts in the font selection of the formatting toolbar, go to
Tools/Customize, click on the Options tab, and click "List font names in their font", click Close.

Easily Changing from Caps to Lower Case (or Vice Versa)

If you have text that is in the wrong case,

select the text, and then click Shift+F3 until it changes to the case style that you like.

Clicking Shift+F3 toggles the text case between ALL CAPS, lower case, and Initial Capital styles.

You'll be surprised how often you use this once you get the hang of it!

Saving Your Toolbar Configurations

If you like to customize your UI, move toolbars around, configure toolbars, etc, then you'll want to know that all this
information is stored in c:\windows\application data\microsoft\powerpoint\ppt.pcb

By copying this file, you can move your customizations to other machines.

Getting Rid of Short Menus

Forgetting user reaction to this feature when it was introduced in Word years ago, the Office team decided to try it
again.

Unfortunately, it's still annoying.

To see all of your options when you click on menus, go to Tools/Customize, click on the Options tab, and uncheck
"menus show recently used commands".

Getting Rid of Tri-Pane View

Unfortunately there is no way to permanently avoid this improvement, but you can quickly get rid of it by holding
down the CTRL key when you click on the Slide View button.

Handout Master, Notes Pages and Handout...

You may have noticed the presence, under the "View" >> "Master" menu, also of Handout Master and Notes Master.
What are they for? What is the difference between them and the Slide Master?

Handout Master:
by choosing this option, you will be able to edit or slightly modify the appearance of all the printouts you will get
when printing choosing the option "handouts".

Once you have displayed the Handout Master ("View" >> "Master" >> "Handout") you have four text boxes, in the
four corners, where you can type any additional information you would like to appear ONLY in the handout but not
in the slides or in your presentation. You can add any text info by clicking on any of the four text boxes (the header
and the footer) and type your text, which will be displayed in your printouts.

Check also the following article about "Header and Footer" because it is strictly connected to this.

- 88 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

Notes Master:

what you can do when you select the "Notes Master" is more or less the same as the Handout Master. In this view,
you can add your specific headers and footers by using the same method shown above, and you can also modify
the style of the text that will appear in the printouts of your notes.

When you choose to show the notes in the Notes Page view mode, you have the preview of each slide and some
room below for writing speakers' notes which you can print to help you remember what you have to say during your
presentation.

Therefore the Notes Master can be used to apply headers and footers and also to format, as you would like, the text
which will be printed below the slide preview when printing the Notes Pages.

You also have another Master, the Title Master (not in PowerPoint XP).

Sometimes the Title Master option is there but it is grayed out. That means that you need to create a Title Master
since it is not present yet.

In order to create a new Title Master, you can do the following:


Click on "View" >> "Master" >> "Slide Master"
Click on "Insert" >> "New Title Master"

or alternatively, only if you have PowerPoint 97 or 2000:


Hold down the [Shift] key
Press the "New Slide" icon

The Title Master works as a normal Slide Master. The only difference is that it applies ONLY to those slides which
have a Title layout. Then you can easily use it as a second Slide Master: any time that you want your slides to be
formatted as the Title Master, apply to them the Title layout and they will change according to the Title Master.

How To Create A New Master Slide And Apply It To Your Existing PowerPoint Presentation

Often you will find yourself in front of a presentation of which you want to change the look. This can be easily
achieved by simply going to "View >> Master >> Slide Master" and changing the look of the Master slide. Since this
slide is actually a template for all others, all of the changes done in it will affect the rest of the slides in the
presentation.

Let me remind you that a presentation should always be created in three main steps:

Writing the outline,


Applying the formatting and overall design of the presentation in Master Slide.
Making individual changes on slides (or making them different from the overall design)

Problems arise when you skip the first two steps: When you change the look of the Master Slide the look of the
other presentation slides will not change.

The reason is that PowerPoint will "presume" that you don't want to follow a Master Slide, if you skip the first two
steps of the creation process (Outline > Master Slide) and go directly to edit your presentation in Slide View.

These are the steps you have to follow to fix such presentation:

Open PowerPoint with the presentation you want to fix.

Go to the Master Slide ("View >> Master >> Slide Master") and change its look in the way you want.

Go to the Slide Sorter View and select one slide.

Now Click on "Slide Layout" button (you can also find this option in "Format >> Slide Layout") and click on the
"Reapply" button.

That is it! This is all you need to do when you want to (re)apply your new Master Slide design to slides that were
originally created without a Master Slide.

- 89 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

Repeat the step c) and d) for every slide in your presentation and you presentation will get the new "look" that you
wanted. (Alternatively, you can select all slides to which you want to re-apply a design at once by clicking on them
while pressing the Shift key.)

Saving, Using, Editing And Opening Presentations


To enable the Assistant

Choose HELP : Show the Office Assistant.

Right click on the Assistant and choose Options.

Check the Use the Office Assistant.

Style issues are marked with a Lightbulb Icon.

Zoom

The Zoom Tool allows you to magnify the view of the slide for better close-up work on a portion of the slide. To use
the Zoom Tool click the drop-down box and choose the percentage of magnification you need.

Saving Across Multiple Diskettes

From the File menu, select Pack and Go. This wizard will compress your PowerPoint presentation and copy the file
onto as many floppies as are necessary. Be sure to format a bunch of floppies BEFORE you start the process, and
make sure they are empty.
P.S. This feature requires PowerPoint 95 or higher.

Save Your Fonts with Your Presentation

If you're preparing a presentation that you plan to distribute to others, be sure that you check this option by clicking
on the Tools button in the File/Save As dialog box. This will work for most TrueType fonts on the Windows
platform.

Custom Presentations

You may need to make different presentations based on the same slides to different peoples. Instead of making two
separate presentations, you can create two versions within the same collection of slides.

Click on Slide Show > Custom Shows > New

In the Define Custom Show Dialog box, type a name for the new Show and select the slides that you want for that
presentation by selecting the name and clicking Add.

You can repeat this for the number of custom shows you want.

To Run a given Custom Show, click on Slide Show > Set Up Show and select the required show to play.

Creating a Slide Show from a Previously Made Outline

Type the outline using your word processor. Each line at the far left is a slide.

Change indentations by using the SHIFT and TAB keys.

Use the TAB key to move in a level to the right and SHIFT + TAB key to move out a level to the left.

From the OUTLINE VIEW, select INSERT from the menu, then select SLIDES FROM OUTLINE.

Select the proper drive and file. Click OK.

Creating an Outline in Powerpoint

Open the OUTLINE PAGE from the OUTLINE BUTTON.


Type the outline into the outline window.

- 90 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

Bullets automatically appear at the start of each line after the numbered line.
Change indentations by using the SHIFT and TAB keys.
Use the TAB key to move in a level to the right.
Use the SHIFT + TAB key to the left.

How to Change or Remove Bullets

From OUTLINE VIEW select line to change.


Click BULLETS on the toolbar to add or remove a bullet.
Select FORMAT/BULLETS to change bullet style.

Hidden Slides

You can hide slides within a presentation. Hidden slides remain available as part of the saved presentation and are
accessible to you during development or in future presentations but do not appear as one of the consecutive
presentation slides during a show.

You must be in Slide Sorter View to access the Hidden Slide Tool. To hide a slide, make sure it is the current slide,
then click the Hide Slide Tool.

Hidden slides display in Slide Sorter View with a slash through the slide number. Slide View does not differentiate
between hidden and non-hidden slides, and all are displayed. During presentation, however, hidden slides are
passed over unless specifically chosen by you through the Slide Show Navigator.
Speaker Notes

During a presentation, you can record notes via the Show Controls. The notes you add are recorded on the Notes
Page for that slide. To record notes, from the Show Controls, choose Speaker Notes. Keep in mind that your notes
are visible to the audience while you are typing them even if you have not chosen to print Notes Pages for your
audience.

On-screen Notes

During a presentation, you can "mark" on a slide with the Pen Tool. To create slide "blueprints," from the Show
Controls, choose Pen. You will see the cursor change to a pencil. Press and drag the mouse to "mark" on the slide.
Any markings made with the Pen remain on the slide only as long as it is the current slide.

To change pen colors, from the Show Controls, choose Pointer Options : Pen Color, then choose the color you
want. You must make pen color selections before you select the pen to "mark" on the slide.

You must change from the pen to a regular cursor before the presentation can progress. To remove the pen and
return to a regular cursor, from the Show Controls, click Arrow.

Pausing the Presentation

During a presentation, you may want to pause your presentation for discussions. You have two choices.

To pause the presentation leaving the slide visible, from the Show Controls, choose Screen : Pause.
To pause the presentation blackening the screen, from the Show Controls, choose Screen : Black Screen. Black
Screen focuses the audience's attention on you rather than the content on the screen.

To return to your presentation from either of these two options, from the Show Controls, choose Resume.

To end the presentation prematurely, from the Show Controls, choose End Show. You can also end the
presentation by pressing ESC.

Hiding the Pen

Another option available under the Pointer Options is Hidden. When you choose Hidden, your mouse cursor is no
longer available or visible on-screen. This is beneficial when you are running a presentation in a kiosk mode and
you don't want guests to move the mouse, leaving the show controls visible or making selections. It is also
beneficial if you are giving a presentation and have chosen to use the arrow keys to move through your
presentation rather than using the mouse. To "undo" this option change, press ESC and stop the presentation.

- 91 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

Combining Presentations

You can combine presentations, or copy already existing slides from one presentation into another presentation. To
work with two presentations simultaneously,

Open both presentations.


Choose WINDOW : Arrange All to display both presentations side-by-side on the screen.

NOTE: the presentation that was the active presentation when you made the Arrange All selection will be on the left.

1. Notice that each presentation has its own Navigation Toolbar in the lower left corner of its respective window. Put each
presentation in Slide Sorter View.
2. Use the Scroll Bar to navigate through each presentation until you can see the slide you want to copy in the original
presentation and the location in the destination presentation where you want the slide placed.
3. Press and drag the slide from one presentation to the other.

NOTE: You will not be able to drag the slide if the original presentation is in Slide View and the destination presentation is in Slide Sorter View.

When you press and drag, you remove the slide from the original presentation. If you want to keep the original presentation as it
was, do NOT save it when you close the presentation. An alternative is to right click on the slide to be moved and choose COPY,
then click in the destination presentation and paste it.

Notice that "transplanted" slide takes on the characteristics of the receiving presentation, including the color scheme. Any charts
contained in the transplanted slide will be updated to reflect the colors of the destination presentation.

Formatting
Choosing the Right Colors for Your Next Presentation

Keep your color choices simple

You're working on an important slide presentation. You've followed all the steps on your PowerPoint template:
You've organized your information, created headlines and positioned your charts and graphs. All the elements
seem to be in order, but the slides are lackluster. No, dull. Even you are bored with them. What's your audience
going to think?

You decide what your slides need is color, lots of bold, bright color. Color that will make your information stand up
and be noticed. Color that will shout out your message. Color that will hit your audience over the head and grab
their attention, whether they like it or not.

You add red, green, some blocks of blue. And orange. You've always liked orange. By the time you're done, your
slide presentation looks like a circus. Instead of livening your slides and emphasizing your message, you've wound
up with a muddled mess.
What went wrong?

Most people -- or at least those of us without an art background -- don't understand that the colors they choose are
not as important as the relationships they create. Some colors work together, others fight against each other.
Establishing sound relationships is key.

Color is never viewed in isolation, but is always judged in its environment. It is influenced by its neighboring colors.
For example, place a bright yellow ball in a child's nursery, and it will fit right in. Place that same ball in a
boardroom, and it will stick out like -- well, a bright yellow ball in a boardroom.

So how are you supposed to know what colors work well together? How do you select ones that will get your
message across with the appropriate tone and style? And how do you establish these successful relationships?
The solution is as simple as turning your head and looking out the window.

When you think of creating a color palette for your presentation, think of nature's palette. (OK, if you're working in a
high-rise, you may have to use your imagination here instead of looking out your window.) Think of a summer
coastal scene -- how the crisp blue-green of the ocean cedes to the rich stands of deep green fir trees that smack
vivid against a cornflower-blue sky. Or imagine a field in early winter -- the dull yellows and golds, the muted greens
and the flat, somber sky. These colors all work together in harmony, look appropriate together. There's nothing
showy or shouting about them -- and yet, they evoke a feeling and create a mood. There's a sense of balance and
order. They work together.

- 92 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

And that should be your goal when making your color choices. Selecting color should never be arbitrary or merely
subjective. "I like it" is not sufficient criteria for creating a palette. You need a plan.

Where to start? The first thing you need to decide is the feel you want for your presentation. Color has thermal
qualities of warm and cool. Colors close to red-oranges are warm (think of "red hot"); colors close to blue-greens
are cool (think of "icy blue").
Start by selecting either a warm or cool hue. ("Hue" is simply another word for color.) Choose only one or two vivid
hues. And then, if you want to expand your palette and create visual variety, use a broader range of those colors.
You do this through the use of tints and shades.

A tint is a hue mixed with white, and a shade is a hue mixed with black. For example, pink is a tint of red and brown
is a shade of orange. By experimenting with tints and shades, you can create palettes that range from direct and
playful to serious and somber.

You can create a mood or feeling that will get your message across in the appropriate tone. Plus, you open up the
color options before you, rather than painting yourself into a corner of clashing colors.

The best rule to follow when selecting color is keep it simple. With color choice, more is not better. It's the color
relationships you create that will make or break your presentation.

Remember, choose only one or two vivid hues and use their tints and shades to broaden your palette. This will keep
your slides clear, elegant and to the point. Follow these simple rules, and your presentation will be a color success.

That is, providing you don't wear an orange tie with that blue suit.

TAB key inside tables

You may have noticed that pressing the [TAB] key alone doesn't work to obtain a tabulation when you are inside a
cell in a table (this is valid for Word as well as for Word tables inserted inside a PowerPoint presentation).

If you still want to use the [TAB] key, press it while holding down the [Ctrl] key as well. It will give you a tabulation
that you can use to align or indent text inside a single table cell.

How to Fix and Adjust Text

Overflowing Text
Eliminate some of the text.
Split the text into two slides.
In SLIDE VIEW, determine where you want to split the slide.
Return to OUTLINE VIEW.
Add a heading for the new slide.
Use SHIFT+TAB to move the heading as far to the left as it will go.
Use the TAB and TAB+SHIFT key to adjust the outline in the new slide.
Reduce the type size from SLIDE VIEW.

How to Move Text on the Slide

From SLIDE VIEW, click on the text.


A shaded box (PLACEHOLDER) will appear around the text.
Click on the PLACEHOLDER, line and handles will appear.
Click and drag on the handles to re-size.
Click and drag on the shaded outline to move the PLACEHOLDER and its text.

Creating Pages with Slides and Descriptive Text

If you want to create printable pages that have notes or descriptive text associated with each slide, PowerPoint has
a feature designed to do just this called Notes Pages, or Speaker's Notes (depending on which version you're
using). To view the Notes page for any slide, go to the View menu and select Notes Pages. You will see an image of
your slide there, and a placeholder for adding your script, notes, or any other text you wish. You can cut-and-paste
text from Word here if you like. To print these pages, bring up the Print dialog, and at the bottom of the dialog where
it says "Print What:", select Notes Pages. These pages were originally designed to be used as audience hand outs
(with space for the audience to take notes) but were also used by many as speaker's notes: the text block would
have the script of the presentation, to be used by the speaker, or for sales binders to educated sales people.

- 93 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

Do you need to have only one slide of your presentation displayed with a different orientation (e.g. portrait instead
of the usual landscape)?

Do you need to have a presentation where you have some slides which have horizontal orientation (landscape) and
some other who have the vertical (portrait) one?

Well, PowerPoint does not allow you to change a different slide orientation within the same presentation.
The basic trick is this:

You can create any "invisible" object (no fill color, no line color) and place it anywhere on any slide, and then
assign to it with any link to any other slide or action.

I am sure you will find plenty of uses for this great trick.

In the case exposed in that article, the empty rectangle has to be created on the Slide Master, thus creating invisible
hyperlinks to specific areas of the slides which would redirect you either forward or backward.

Soft Shadows

You can create "soft" shadows for square or round objects that sit on a solid color background.

Make a copy of the object, then change its fill to be shaded from black to the background color, with the shading set
with black going from the center out to the background color at the edges.

Make this object about 150% bigger than the original object, and put it behind the object.

This will give you the effect of "soft" shadows.

Subliminal Messages

These can be pretty hysterical in the right circumstances. Create a text object. With the text object selected, click on
the Animation Effects button on the tool bar (the one that looks like a yellow star), and then click on the "flash
once" button. Go to slide show and see the message quickly flash and then disappear.

Setting the Default Text Style

If you want to change the style of the text that appears when you type things that aren't the title or the slide body,
do the following:

Make sure no objects are selected.


From the Format menu, select Font. Make all the changes that you want there, and click OK.
From that point on, new text will be created in that style.
To Set the formatting for the title or slide body objects, go to the Slide Master and format these objects on the
master.

Discover how to take control of the bullet symbols

Have you ever wanted to select presentation bullets that would fit with your taste, the topic of the presentation, the
audience, and so on?

Have you ever wondered how and where to find more appropriate icons for your presentation bullets?

Microsoft PowerPoint also assigns, by default, different bullet styles for the different levels of indentation:

For the first level of bullets, you find a normal black dot.

For the second level, the sub-bullets, you get a dash (hyphen).

The third level of indentation, the sub-sub-bullets, has again the same black dot as the first level, but smaller in
size.

The fourth level, even if I am pretty sure you are not likely to use it really often, has again the dash (hyphen).

- 94 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

These are the standard symbols used by default any time you choose to have a bulleted list.
If you want to customize the bullets, and you want to do it for all the slides and not only for one slide, do the
following:

Go to "View" >> "Master" >> "Slide Master".

What you can do here is customize the single bullets:

Move the mouse pointer on top of the bulleted area, and click just in front of the line whose bullet you want to
modify: first bulleted line for the first level of bullets, second bulleted line for the second level and so on.

Once the cursor is blinking in the right line, go to "Format":

For PowerPoint 2000, select "Bullets and Numbering...". You will obtain a dialog box with different options:

You can choose whether you want numbers, letters or symbols.


You can set the size of the bullets in relation to the size of the text
You can change the color of the bullets.
But most of all, by clicking on "Character..." you have the option to change the type of bullet. You have different
font families that you can browse to search for the right bullet for your presentation.

For PowerPoint 97 you should click on "Format" >> "Bullets..." and then directly choose the font style, the symbol
to use, the size of the bullets and the color of it.

I would suggest you to choose among these fonts:


Symbol
Webdings
Windings
Monotype Sorts
ZapfDingbats.

You will find plenty of different icons and symbols that will replace your default bullets. The additional advantage,
choosing one of the above fonts, is great compatibility:

According to our article #1, you should keep in mind that not all the characters available to you in PowerPoint will
be properly displayed in a different operating system, printer or browser. But any of the symbols chosen from the
above list is universal, standard, and can be found also on different computers.

You will avoid any bad surprise of having another computer replacing automatically any unknown symbol with a
default bullet, usually a simple black dot, sometimes an empty white rectangle.

Tips to improve text readability and effectiveness

- How much data can fit on a slide?


- How many table rows, columns, organigram boxes, and words per line are acceptable?
- How many relevant elements can a slide have?

The amount of information that can be packed on a slide is limited by the requirements for readability and easy
comprehension.

A presentation which is difficult to read will not only loose in audience comprehension but will also increase the
chances that the audience will be distracted and annoyed.

Testing all slides on a projector and standing back at the same distance that the audience will be is essential not
only for correcting font size and styles, but also to see how the colors used are affected when projected.

Remember not to take the monitor as an example of how the presentation will finally look. If worse comes to worse,
squeeze your eyes and stand back about ½ a meter from the monitor to have a close idea of what your most distant
viewers will see.

Below are some key points to remember:


- Font sizes should be at least ½ cm for every two meters distance the audience is viewing from.
- Line spacing should be at least 1 to 1½ times the height of the font used.
- The width of the projected image should be at least 1/6 of the distance between the screen and the last person at
the back of the room.

- 95 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

- The height of the projected image should be a little higher than that of the audience so to remain visible should the
room become crowded or if people are standing.

Titles & Text:


Max title lines: 2
Max bulleted items: 5-6
Max words per lines: 6-8
Max reference elements: 2-3
Spreadsheets:
Max rows: 7
Max columns: 7
Organigrams:
Max elements: 14-18 cells
Tables:
Max rows: 7
Max columns: 7
Overall Relevant Items:
Max number: 7

How Can I Replace or Modify Fonts?

In case you have a short presentation (2-3 slides) and you want to replace some of the fonts used, you can just do it
manually, by replacing the fonts slide by slide.

This method doesn't work when you are dealing with a 10 or 20 or even more-slide presentation.
There has to be a simpler way.

One way is to make use of the Slide Master: whenever you want to modify a font style used in all the slides of your
presentation, replace that font on the Slide Master.

To do so, go to "View" >> "Master" >> "Slide Master".

Now that you have displayed the Slide Master, click on the box whose text style you want to modify (titles? bulleted
lists?) and assign a different font style choosing it from the drop down list.

Doing this, will modify all the slides of the presentation, ensuring consistency of the overall design and saving you
time.

Another way of modifying the font style is by clicking on

"Format" >> "Replace Fonts".

In the first line, "Replace what" you have a dropdown list with as many entries as the font styles you have been
using inside your presentation. Select here the one you want to modify. Then on the "Replace with" dropdown list
just select the new font that should replace the old one. As soon as you click "OK", all the slides in your
presentation will reflect these new changes.

In a few clicks you will have changed all the fonts.

This is a good method because it lets you modify the font styles selectively, and you can modify just one or all the
different styles in use in your presentation.

In case you want to play around with the letter cases, you can use another option you find under the "Format"
menu: "Change case".

From this dialog box you can change in one shot the case of words, phrases or entire slides or presentations.

Just select first the text whose case style you want to modify.
Then click on "Format" >> "Change Case" and select the one that better fits your needs.

This method is not different at all from the same option you have in Microsoft Word.

You can use this option also if you are formatting the styles from the "slide master".

Shift+F3 is a keyboard Shortcut which also allows you to do this

- 96 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

How to modify a PowerPoint .PPS file

A .pps file is just a PowerPoint Show file, that is, a normal presentation file which will open up in full screen mode
as soon as you double-click it. In this way, you don't have the possibility to modify it or to discover the tricks which
lie behind apparently.

Yes, because if you want to modify and edit a .pps file, you can do the following:

Right-click in the file icon holding down the shift key (if you have Windows Millennium you will not need to hold it
down).
Choose "Open with..." from the context menu
Select "PowerPoint" from the "Open With" dialog box

Otherwise, you can also

right-click on the file icon


choose "Rename"
replace ".pps" with ".ppt".

As soon as you press Enter, your new presentation file will change icon and will become a normal PowerPoint
presentation file.

If you want to know another trick, do this:


Open PowerPoint first
Click on "File" >> "Open"
Browse for the .pps file, select it and click on "Open"

PowerPoint will open the .pps file without any problem!

Making Auto-Fit Text Stop Auto-Fitting

Turn this feature off by going to Tools/Options, click on the Edit tab, and uncheck "autofit text to text placeholder",
click OK.

Legibility: rules to determine best font size

My first suggestion is to be careful about the use of the right fonts

On this matter there is something more: the rule of the X-height.

You probably have noticed that some fonts may have the same point size (e.g. both 12 points) but have a smaller X-
height. The X-height is the product of the number of lowercase letters (such as "a", "e", "c" and so on) for the
physical height of those lowercase letters.

I explain: Arial or Helvetica, for instance, have a greater X-height than Garamond or Times New Roman, so the latter
will be less readable at the same size. In this case, you are recommended to increase the font size of those fonts
which have a lower X-height.

To end with what people like the most, a scientific rule about font size compared to screen size and projector room
size.

This rule is called "8H" rule. It states that, calling H the height of the projector screen, the maximum distance of
your last viewer in the audience should be 8H, that is 8 times the screen height. Meeting this requirement, and
assuming that the image projector is the best possible, the room light is good (not too dark) and the average viewer
has no viewing handicaps, you will be sure that the ones who sit in the last rows will be able to easily read your
text.

But the rule says something more: so far, you have set the right distance between the screen and the last rows.
Now you have to deal with font size within the screen.

Considering the height of the PowerPoint slide show you can safely choose a font size that is not smaller than 1/25
of it. How can I make it easier? I will explain it to you step by step with also some examples.

- 97 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

Calculate the height of the slides

Keep in mind that each centimeter corresponds, approximately, to 28.25 points

Multiply the height of your screen in centimeters for 28.25 points and you will obtain the height in points

Divide the height in points by 25 and you will have found exactly the minimum size, in points, of your fonts.

An example?

To determine the slide's height, go to "File" >> "Page setup..." and you will see that the standard height for an "on-
screen show" is 19.05 cm

Multiply the height (19.05 cm) for 28.25 points (obtaining almost 540 points)

Divide 540 points by 25 and you will obtain almost 22, that is the minimum size (in points) to use for your
presentation.

In inches, a typical PowerPoint slide is 7.5 inches, so it results that an inch is approximately 72 points.

Going back to our "8H" rule, and having set that:


the maximum distance between the screen and the last viewer is given by 8 times the height of the screen
the minimum readable font size is given by the height of the PowerPoint slide divided by 25.
we can conclude that a 22-point font size will be readable by an audience which is not farther than 8 times the
height of the projector screen.
Thus, in case you notice that the projector screen is at a greater distance from the last row, you should increase the
font size to compensate this. For instance, if the last row is at 16 meters from the screen which is only 1 meter tall
(the maximum distance should be 8 meters), you should double the font size in your presentation.
The last trick comes from PowerPoint. There are some rules you can set about minimum font size which will help
you not to use smaller fonts.

Click on "Tools" >> "Options" and click in the "Spelling and Style" tab. Now, click on "Style Options" and then click
on the "Visual Clarity" tab.

Here you can set some rules such as the minimum title and body text size, the number of bullets per slide and the
number of lines per bullets. Check it out, it will perform these tasks automatically.

How to use an image as a background

Did you ever want to utilize a cool picture that you had as a background for you slides? You tried to insert it, but
then you realized that the strong color contrast did not allow you to type any text on top of the image, and you did
not know what font color to use to have it displayed in a readable way.

There is something we can do to have a picture as a background and still be able to read the text we place on top of
it.

Before explaining in detail what you have to do, I'd like to remind you a few tricks to insert images into your slides.

- If you have your picture on your hard disk, in a floppy or on a network drive, the best way is to:

go to Insert >> Picture >> From File... and then browse your folders to locate and select the picture you want to
insert
click "Insert" and it's done

- If you find a nice photo on the Internet and you want to use it for your presentation, you can do one the following:

right-click on the image and choose "Save Picture As". This way you are going to store the picture and you can
insert it at any time using the classical method seen above

right-click and choose "Copy" (option available only if you have Internet Explorer). Doing this, you can then paste
this image on your slide right away, just pressing "Ctrl+V" or choosing Edit >> Paste

- 98 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

press the "Print Screen" key on the top right of your keyboard and then go back to the slide and press "Ctrl+V" to
paste the image. This is called "screenshot", and it allows you to paste into PowerPoint anything that you have
displayed on your screen.

By doing any of the previous steps, you will be able to insert a picture on any slide. In case you want the image to
appear on all the slides, as a background, you have to insert it on the Slide Master (View >> Master >> Slide Master).

Here's the trick to resolve the issue of readability of the text on top of a picture.
Once you have pasted your image either on a single slide or on the Master Slide, follow these steps:

click on the picture to select it


go to View >> Toolbars >> Picture, and be sure to display the Picture toolbar
here click on the second icon from the left, "Image Control"
choose the last option in the drop-down menu, "Watermark".

Your picture will be set as watermark, that is, you will still be able to see the shapes on the image but all the colors
will be muted and lightened, so you will be able to use any dark color (blue, brown, black, green) to type text on top
of the image.
If you want to obtain a perfect watermarked picture, after having applied the "watermark" effect try to increase or
decrease the Color Contrast and the Color Brightness (using the apposite icons on the Picture toolbar) until you
find the right combination.

In this paragraph we have seen so far how we can use images that we find on the Web. What about nice
backgrounds? When browsing the Web, have you ever found a Web site with a nice background? Maybe you have
also thought that it would have been nice to be able to use that exact background in your presentation.

It is definitely possible, and I will explain you the proper way to do it.

First of all, let me remind you the difference between a picture you can find on a Web page and the background
itself of the Web page: you can be sure that what you are right-clicking on is a picture if you see the option "Save
Picture As...". Otherwise, if the image is a background, as you right-click on it you will see the option: "Save
Background As..."

The main difference is that an image can be inserted into PowerPoint and then manually stretched to cover the
entire slide; a background needs to be inserted using a different way, since the image used as the background can
be difficulty stretched manually.

Moreover, remember that some images or backgrounds may be copyright-protected. In any case, if you want to be
honest and respectful, find the email of the Webmaster - usually at the bottom of the page - and write him/her an
email asking permission to reproduce the image for non-commercial use. Most of the times he/she won't even
waste his/her time to answer you, but at least you won't be liable for anything).
right-click on the background (be sure you are not clicking on a single image, you need to right-click exactly on a
portion of background)
choose "Save Background As..."
save it anywhere you like (e.g. in your preferred folder)

Now, open your PowerPoint and:

select Format >> Background


click on the little down arrow in the "Background Fill"
select "Fill Effects"
click on the last tab, "Picture"
click where it says: "Select Picture..."
browse your folders to locate the background you have previously saved
once you find it, select it and click "Insert"
click "OK" on the Picture tab
click "Apply to all" on the Background box and it's done.

Using Different Backgrounds within one Presentation

Users of PowerPoint 2000 and lower will only have two background designs automatically supplied with the
Masters (counting both the Slide Master and the Title Master). However, you can have any design you want on any
slide. From the Format menu, select Background. Check the box that says "omit background items" and this will
make the slide ignore the Slide Master's design. You are now free to add whatever design you want to this slide. If
you want to do this to many slides at once, go to the Slide Sorter, select the slides, and then use the Format menu

- 99 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

command. Remember though that if you choose to do something like put a photographic background on many of
your slides instead of doing it once on the Master, that your file size may increase dramatically.

PowerPoint 2002 supports multiple background masters.

Using More than One Guide

If you like using guides, but wish there were more, you can create additional Guides by simply holding down the
CTRL key while dragging on an existing Guide. This will create a new guide. To get rid of guides, just drag them off
the edge of the slide.

Using Guides to Measure

Make the Guides visible by using View/Guides. Then, hold down the SHIFT key while you click-and-hold a guide;
the tooltip for the guide will display 0:00. As you move the guide, the distance the guide covers from the beginning
of the drag will be displayed in the units of your ruler. In this way you can measure distances between objects,
place guides at specific places, etc.

Using Ctrl-Drag to Copy

You can quickly make a copy of any object by holding down the CTRL key while you drag on the object. You will
then "drag off" a new copy.

Why should I use the shadow effect in my text?

The purpose of the shadow is to increase the contrast of characters around their edges with the purpose of
increasing readability and visual impact from distance.
Text shadows can be used both to improve usability as well as for content design reasons such as to create more
emphasis for a certain text or title.

In some cases, when the contrast between the font color and the background color is not enough by itself to ensure
readability, one can add a shadow effect on the text, as to sharpen the edges, and create a better contrast between
text and background.

Text shadows should be used only to create such contrast where the shadow color is darker than the background.

Do not use text shadows that are lighter in color than the text they support.

Visual results generated by such solutions look invariably unprofessional.

The same holds true for text shadows that are lighter than the background color.

A simple way of getting a shadow effect to your text is to select the text you want to apply the shadow to and click
on the big "S" (for "shadow) in the "Formatting" toolbar, just besides "B" for bold, "I" for italic and "U" for
underlined.

Unfortunately, in this way you will obtain only a default light shadow: its color may be gray and its effect mediocre
at best.

If instead you access the "graphic" shadow feature in PowerPoint, you can completely customize the shadow,
changing its color and moving its orientation.
Let's see how to do it:

1. Select the text you want to apply the shadow effect to


2. On the Drawing Toolbar, click on the second last icon, "Shadow"
3. Select the last option "Shadow Settings..."
4. You will obtain a small floating window with some icons:

a. The first one from the left is "Shadow On/Off". This icon turns on or off the shadow effect
b. The second block of 4 icons are to "nudge" shadow up, down, left or right. These are useful
options since you can customize the visible portion of your shadow: you can decide how much
shadow you will display and in what direction it will appear.

- 100 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

c. The last icon, the "Shadow Color", is a drop down list that will let you chose exactly the color you
need for your shadow. You even have the possibility to apply a semitransparent shadow to your
text.

By using these tools you will be able to apply any type of shadow to your text. What is more important, you will be
able to change the shadow color according to the background and text color you have chosen.
Just make a few attempts and see the result full screen. The purpose is to gain in readability, not in fanciness. As
long as you use sober colors and try to focus on readability, your results will be great.

How To Find Out The Size Of A PowerPoint Presentation

With the development of computers, the variety of file types that you can view, record or edit has grown
exponentially. One thing is notable there; all these new files require more space.
The sizes of the files have grown tremendously since the computers entered the business world. Examples are
many, but the most common one is in the case of written (text) documents.

If you open a simple text file (my_memo.txt) that contains one sentence - "Hello World!" - in Microsoft Word and
then save it as a Word document, you will notice that the file saved in Word (my_memo.doc) is now thousands (!)
times bigger than the original text file (my_memo.txt). I did this little experiment and obtained 12 bytes for the TXT
file and 24,064 bytes for the DOC file.

File size can become a problem when you have to save your file on a Floppy disk. Many companies tried to push a
new standard, more appropriate for the size of today's files, and more or less they all failed. This practically means
that floppy drives will be around for at least couple of more years. Since on the floppy disk you can fit only 1.44 MB
of information (1MB=1,024KB=1,048,576 so a floppy of 1.44MB is 1474KB or 1509949 bytes in size) it becomes
important to know how big is your PowerPoint presentation files are if you want to successfully save them on
floppy disk.

You can easily find out the size of your presentation most easily by checking the presentation properties while you
are working in PowerPoint:

a) Open your presentation in PowerPoint.

b) In the Menu bar go to "File >> Properties" and click. A Properties window will open. It has five tabs
named "General", "Summary", "Statistics", "Contents" and "Custom".

c) Click on the "General" tab in the Properties window. This tab lists main data about your
presentation: its name, type, location and finally, the size. If your presentation is lighter than 1
megabyte (MB), the size is represented in kilobytes (KB). As soon as your presentation file
exceeds 1024 KB, which corresponds to 1 MB, its size will be represented in MB units.

Therefore, seeing the MB acronym should alert you that maybe the file will not fit on a floppy disk. As long as your
file stays under 1.44MB, you are fine.

If your file exceeds 1.44MB, which happens if you have used images and sound extensively in your presentation,
you will either have to size it down in order to fit it on one floppy disk or you will have to distribute the presentation
over more than one floppy disk.

The so-called Pack-And-Go technique allows you to save the presentation on more than one floppy by splitting it
into blocks, which can be automatically reassembled later.

How To Quickly Reduce The Size Of A PowerPoint Presentation That Contains Many Uncompressed Images

Most of the times you will find problems in PowerPoint presentations that are big in size. The computer simply
freezes. Your presentation may contain uncompressed bitmap images.

You can avoid this problem by using compressed images (e.g. .jpg) when you create your presentation. However, if
it is too late for that because you are already in the middle of your live presentation in front of your audience you
can apply a "quick & dirty" solution that can help you to present the material at least fluently and without hiccups.
The solution is saving the slides that contain images in .jpg format and than re-inserting them back into the
presentation.

1. Open PowerPoint and the presentation that you need to modify (in my case: "mexico.ppt").

2. Save the presentation under different name (in my case:

- 101 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

3. "mexico_modified.ppt"). This allows you to modify a copy of your presentation (i.e. "mexico_modified.ppt")
while keeping the original ("mexico.ppt") safe.

4. Go to "File >> Save As...". From the list box called "Save as type:" choose "JPEG File Interchange Format
(*.jpg)" and save your presentation in a folder that you can easily find again.

5. This folder will contain all your slides in a compressed .jpg format. The slides will be labeled Slide1.jpg,
Slide2.jpg etc.

6. Open the copy of your original presentation again ("mexico_modified.ppt") and delete the slides that
contain uncompressed images (in my case those were the slides 3 to 38). You can quickly do this when you
select the slide sorter view. Select all the slides you want to delete by clicking on them while holding the
Shift key. Then delete them.

7. Now create a new blank slide in your presentation ("mexico_modified.ppt") in the place where you want to
insert the .jpg version of the slides you have just deleted.

8. Go to "Insert >> Picture >> From File..." Select the folder in which your slides are saved in .jpg format and
choose the first that needs to be inserted. (You need to remember which are the slides that originally
contained the uncompressed images) In my case, it is the Slide3.jpg that I will place in the newly created
slide. Now create another slide and insert the next .jpg image (Slide4.jpg) and so in.
9. Following this procedure you will be able to size-down your presentation relatively fast. My presentation
went from 70MB ("mexico.ppt") to a more acceptable 4MB ("mexico_modified.ppt").

10. Alternatively, you could save your presentation as an HTML file ("File >> Save As HTML...") to obtain a
similar effect. The problem with saving in HTML format is that you loose transitions and pseudo
animations. Another problem is that you will not be able to present in Full Screen mode - your slides will be
probably smaller than the Screen space.
I do not recommend these methods for everyday use since there are better ways to keep down the size of a
presentation while it is created. The presented methods should be applied only in case you need to fix your file
quickly for the presentation.

Making Presentation Files Smaller

Prior to PowerPoint 97, there was no internal file compression code inside of PowerPoint, and files could get pretty
big quickly. The most common cause of large files is the addition of large bitmaps. PowerPoint 97 compresses
these bitmaps, but previous versions do not. To keep your presentations as small as you can, try reducing the
resolution of your bitmaps, which will bring their size down tremendously. For viewing on screen, the bitmaps don't
need to be more than 96 dpi; they won't print nicely until they're up around 150 or higher, but the screen always
displays at 96 dpi, so if the primary viewing medium is the screen, there's no point in having the bitmaps be a
higher resolution. Also, the bitmap format can make a big difference to your file sizes. JPEG and PNG both have
good internal compression code. GIF has some, but not as good as JPEG. BMP files are the largest; TIFF files will
also be very large.

Sometimes, as you're working on a presentation, you'll notice that the file seems to get bigger for no reason. To get
rid of this "bloating", save the file using "File/Save As" and give the file a new name. This can reduce the file size
up to 50%.

Maintain Proportions while resizing objects

Resizing images in their positions while retaining proportions relative to one another is often required. To do this:

1. Select the objects one at a time, keeping the (Shift) key pressed.
2. Drag the object to the desired size and PowerPoint will automatically scale them all.

Use Curved Text

WordArt allows text to be styled and twisted in various ways. For


using curved text in PowerPoint

1. Click on Insert > Picture > WordArt.


2. Choose the style that you want to apply to the text and click OK.
3. A dialog box will prompt you for the text to be placed in the given format.
4. After the WordArt object has been generated, select it and click on the WordArt shape button on the
WordArt toolbar. Here you can choose the style in which you want the text to be bent.

- 102 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

Create Semi-Transparent Objects (Say a Watermark)

1. Select the object you want and then Ungroup in by clicking Draw > Ungroup from the Draw toolbar.
2. Once the object is ungrouped, regroup it by selecting the Group option again from the Draw Menu. This will
convert the picture to a Microsoft Office drawing object.
3. Click on Format > Object. Under the color and Lines tab check the semitransparent box. Click OK..

Fill Colors

When you draw solid objects (squares and circles), they fill with the automatic color. The underline under the Paintbucket is the
current fill color.

To fill an object with the current fill color, select the object, then click the Paintbucket Tool.

To change the current fill color, drop down the arrow beside the Paintbucket and make a new selection. There are also additional
options under Fill Effects, including choosing no fill color at all.

Fill Effects

Fill effects include Gradients where you can select one or two colors of your choice, as well as the direction and variants of the
gradient. Textures are image files similar to web page wallpapers; you can use PowerPoint's selections or choose an image file
from your workstation. Patterns allow you to choose two colors and the pattern design with which you want to fill the object.
Picture allows you to choose an image file from your workstation; the photograph will center itself within the selected object,
hiding any parts of the image which do not automatically show within the object's shape.

Line Effects

Each drawing object has an outline the color of the automatic color. The underline under the Line Color Tool is the current line
color. To outline an object with the current line color, select the object, then click the Line Color Tool.

• To change the line color, drop down the arrow and make a new selection. Other options with the Line Color Tool include
color and patterns similar to the Fill Tool.

• To change line style, dash style, and arrow style, click on these tools, respectively, after drawing the object and while it
is still selected.

Object Effects

To place a shadow or 3D effect on an object, select the object, then click the tool selection.

Bullet Effects

The Text Preset Animation Tool controls how bulleted points appear on the slide during an on-screen presentation. You must be
in Slide Sorter View to access the Text Preset Animation Tool.

To animate bulleted points, the slide containing bulleted points must be the current slide. Then click the drop-down box and
choose the animation effect you desire.

Transitions & Animations


How To Best Use Transitions and Effects Inside Presentations

Presenters are greatly attracted by facilities in their presentation program providing the ability to add visual effects,
transitions and animations to their slides.

The heritage of such transitions comes from the movie and television industry who have first conceived and built
inside their visual language an effective and appropriate use for them.

Visual transitions have been born out of the need to create smooth transitions for the opening and closing of
movies and cartoons, as well as for blending the passage from a scene to the next in a way that would add a new
layer of communication.
Cross-fades, dissolves and wipes were never conceived to attract people's attention but were indeed designed to
create an extra layer of narrative inside the visual language of film and television images.

- 103 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

In this light, it is your responsibility as a presenter to use transitions and effects to serve your communication
needs and not to provide further visual pizzaz to your presentation.

Animate Your Slide Show

Switch to the Slide you wish to animate.

Click Slide Show > Custom Animation > Order & Timing
Check the objects you wish to animate from the list of objects

Choose the animations from the effects tab for each object.

Click OK to save the animation

How to Do Text Animations or Builds

From SORTER VIEW click the gray BUILD button.

Select DIM PREVIOUS POINTS.

Select EFFECT.

From the drop down menu, choose the effect you want.

Click OK, click SLIDE SHOW.

Click or space bar to advance each slide.

At the effects or animated slide, click to bring up each line of text.

Templates
How To Create A Blank PowerPoint Presentation Template Or How To Turn Off Any Template Applied To A Presentation

So many people get bogged down by this problem, which it is very useful to explain how to go about this issue.
Once a template has been applied to a PowerPoint presentation, there is indeed no easy way to "undress" the
presentation.

One can only change the template but one cannot say "no template".
To get out of this fastidious loop, do the following:

Create a blank presentation with a blank slide.


Use the command File -> Save as... to save the presentation as a PowerPoint template inside the very folder where
all other PowerPoint templates are (should be:
(C:\programs\Microsoft Office\Templates\Presentation Design).
Name the file BLANK.

Now, this new template will be available among all other PowerPoint templates, and it will work as expected. Once
called up it will "undress" any PowerPoint presentation off the template it is using.

How to customize PowerPoint templates?

Step-by-step guide to modify standard templates and more

Let's start assuming that you have already created the content of your presentation by typing it into PowerPoint,
preferably using the Outline View mode.

What should your next step be?

Deciding a consistent and effective look to apply to all of your slides.

You have usually two ways to do it:

- 104 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

You can create your own design, by using the Slide Master (View >> Master >> Slide Master): here you can apply a
background color, use the drawing tools to create the layout. Draw boxes, rectangles, lines and fill them with the
appropriate colors. You can then modify the position of all titles and text boxes, and format the font style, size and
color.

But to do this you need fantasy and some kind of "designer disposition", this is why a lot of people don't even try to
create a look on their own.

The second solution, easier but not less effective, is to use the templates that you can find both in PowerPoint itself
and on the Web and customize them, by adding your "personal touch".

Let's see the steps you should follow to achieve this result:

From any View mode you are in, click the icon on the top right corner in the Standard toolbar that says:

"Apply Design" (you can obtain the same by clicking on Format >> Apply Design Template).

Microsoft uses two different words (design and template) to mean the same concept: a uniform "look" that you can
apply to all of your slides, a visual dress that you can use to give your presentation a uniform appearance.

In the "Apply Design" dialog box, you will see on the left half of the window the different templates you can choose,
while on the right hand side you see a small preview of the selected template.

Select one of the proposed templates and click "Apply". In a few seconds, all your slides will have the same
background, the same font style, size and color and the same overall layout design.

What is saved in a template?

When you apply one of The Microsoft ready made templates ("Format" >> "Slide Design..." in PowerPoint XP,
"Format" >> "Apply Design" in the previous versions), what are you actually applying to your presentation?

Or when you decide to save a presentation as a template, what kind of information are you actually saving inside
that file?

In a few words, what type of information, settings and format are stored and saved in a PowerPoint template file?

Well, a template contains the following info:

Slide size and orientation


(which you can change from "File" >> "Page layout")

Color Scheme:
(including colors for default fill, line, shadow, text etc.) - which you could modify (in PPT 97 and 200) from "Format"
>>
"Slide Color Scheme"

Text Styles:

(e.g. Title and Body Text placeholder formatting) - which you can then modify from the Slide Master

Defaults for text and AutoShapes objects:

Fill and Line color and styles, shadowed, etc. - these options can then be modified by right-clicking on any
AutoShape object and choosing "Set AutoShape Defaults".

Printer settings for slides, notes and handouts:


Which can be modified from "File" >> "Print..."

Initial view:

Slides, Notes Page, Slide Sorter, etc.

Now you know what type of settings you are saving every time you save a presentation as a template or you use
any ready-made templates saved as *.pot files.

- 105 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

Animating PowerPoint Design Templates

You've learned a great deal about creating an effective PowerPoint presentation. Here's the piece that will separate
your presentation from all the rest: animating PowerPoint's own design templates.

Drawing upon your knowledge of using Slide Masters, of grouping and ungrouping objects, of re-coloring objects,
and animation, you can add your own personal touches to PowerPoint's own Design Templates.

For the most effective animation, choose those designs that contain concrete objects, such as twinkles, tropics,
and theater, rather than blended and shaded designs.

To animate template designs,

Choose VIEW : Master : Slide Master.


Click in an empty place on the slide (not in a text box).
From the Drawing Toolbar, choose DRAW : Ungroup.
Press ESC to deselect all the objects.
Click on the object you wish to animate (remember you can group objects to have them function as a single entity.)
Choose SLIDE SHOW : Custom Animation.
Choose your animations options.
Animate any other objects you desire.

Drawing In PowerPoint
Differences between text boxes and AutoShapes (e.g. rectangles)

What is the difference between using a normal text box and using a rectangle from which you have removed the fill
color and the line color?

Apparently, there's no difference, they both work well.

If you draw a rectangle, and you start typing on it, the text will be automatically centered, and it will be more
complicated to move it around. Also, by default, if the text is bigger or longer than the rectangle (or any other
shape), it will go outside of the shape. To avoid this, you can:

Right-click on the rectangle.

Choose "Format Autoshape..."

In the "Text Box" tab, place a tick mark besides: "Word wrap text in AutoShape".

The text box will be particularly useful in case you want to type something on top of a drawing you have created,
and want to position this text elsewhere other than in the middle.
In this case, my suggestion is to create the shape before, and when you want to type in it, use a text box and place
it where you like, instead of typing inside the shape you have created.

Editing Drawings

Anything you draw with the pencil tool, you can edit. To get the object into "points mode", either double-click on
the object, or select it then hit the Enter key. You will then see points at every vertex, which you can move. You can
add points by holding down the shift key and clicking, you can subtract points by holding down the ALT key while
clicking and you can of course just drag points around.

Nudging Objects

You can use the arrow keys to move objects very small distances. This is a big win for those laptop users who no
longer have mice.

Select the object, then use your arrow keys.


Each press of the key will move the object on "grid unit" (1/12th of an inch, don't ask why);

- 106 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

if you hold down the ALT key while nudging, or if you have the grid turned off, you can move the objects one pixel
at a time.

Copying charts from different applications

Open the chart you want to insert and do the following:

Click outside of the chart area


Click again, but only once, on the chart
Right click on the chart and choose "Show picture toolbar"
The 4th icon from the left is the "Recolor Chart"
Select this one and click "None" to the message: "Chart colors follow".

By clicking "OK" you will lock this chart format and colors in a way that will not be influenced by existing Master
Slides or other settings that you may inadvertently set in the destination file.

Whenever you insert this chart into another presentation, it will keep its specific colors and format and not follow
any slide color scheme.

Pictures and Other External Files


Clip Art - Is It Possible To Customize Clip Art?

Tips and suggestions on how to customize Clip Art in unique ways

Have you ever played around with Clip Art?

Clip Art are color images that you can insert into any slide to enhance the content of your presentation, to visually
explain a concept or to add more colors to your slides.

Do you have any idea about how many million people in the world have been using Clip Art in their presentations?

I don't, but I bet they are millions...


Have you noticed that most of the times your colleagues use the same typical Clip Art images in their slides?

If you still want to use Clip Art, but you want it to be more unique and give it your "personal touch", there are two
ways you can do it.

Follow these easy steps, and no one will be able to recognize your Clip Art!
Method A - If you only want to change the colors of any Clip Art image, do the following:

Place the desired Clip Art into your slide by clicking Insert >> Picture >> Clip Art...
Ensure the Clip Art is selected (if it's not, click on it once)
Right-click on the Clip Art image and choose "Format Picture..."
Go in the "Picture" tab and click on "Recolor"

At this point you have an easy way to modify, one by one, all the colors used in the original Clip Art. You can put a
tick mark on the color you want to modify, and choose from a drop-down list under "New" the new color you want
to apply. As soon as you change the colors, you will preview, on the miniature on the right, how the Clip Art image
will look like.

Do all the necessary changes, then click "OK" on the two little windows to close them.

Does your new Clip Art image look different? It does, and this way you can change the colors of all the Clip Art in
the gallery.

Method B - In case changing the colors is not enough to personalize a Clip Art, you can even modify its shape,
remove some elements, add new ones, and mix two or three different images together.
Let's see how you can do this:
Insert the Clip Art (see previous paragraph)
Ensure it is selected otherwise select it by clicking on it
Go to Draw >> Ungroup

- 107 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

Your Clip Art will be ungrouped, and you will now be able to click outside the slide to deselect all the elements, and
then select only the ones you want to modify.

What's the purpose of ungrouping a Clip Art? What can I do now?

Well, it's up to your fantasy, but there are plenty of changes you can now make:

You can increase or decrease the size of some elements inside the Clip Art

You can modify the single colors

You can remove some elements or even add new ones, by making copies of the other elements

You can even modify the shape of all the objects, by using an advanced drawing feature we will see later on (at the
end of this paragraph).

Once you have personalized your Clip Art, I recommend selecting all the elements and group them again, so you
will be able to resize and move them as a whole.

*Remember that most Clip Art images have been grouped several times, so if you want to be able to access all
individual elements of an illustration, try to ungroup them several times.

I explain: once you have ungrouped it the first time, there might still be some elements grouped, so go back to Draw
>> Ungroup, and try again.
You will know that the "nested" groupings are ended when finally the "Ungroup" option will be grayed out.

*Tip: if you find several Clip Art that may fit your needs, you can mix them together and then group them as a
whole.

**Advanced Tip (as promised under point "d"): you can modify the shape of some objects that make up a Clip Art
(useful when correcting maps borders or facial expressions) by:

Selecting the ungrouped object inside the Clip Art

Going to Draw >> Edit Points (you can access this menu choice only if you have previously ungrouped all the
elements of a Clip Art)

You will see that the usual little white squares called "control points" become now black squared dots

Clicking on them and dragging them to modify the shape of the selected object

Clicking on the lines and dragging, and this will create a new black dot that you can edit.

This way you can modify any shape that has been created under PowerPoint. Once you are done with the editing,
go back to Draw >> Edit Points and deselect this feature to turn it off.

How to type on top of the pictures

There is something you can do to your pictures when you want the text that lies on top of it to be more readable.

The text you have on top a picture is either a text box or a text placeholder that comes from the standard layouts. In
both cases, these objects (both text boxes and placeholders) can be filled with color.

To apply a fill to them, click on them once and then click on their border (or [Shift] click on them). Following that,
move into the Drawing toolbar and choose your color by clicking on the bucket icon (Fill Color).

Once you have chosen the desired color from the hexagonal color palette, put a tick mark in the bottom where it
says "Semitransparent".

This way, the fill color of your text box will not completely cover the shape of the picture that is behind.
Nevertheless, your text will definitely be more readable and contrasting with the background.

Another nice use of the semi transparency of color boxes is to display pictures that cannot set as watermarks
because you would like them to be clearly seen by your audience.

- 108 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

In this case, you can do the following:

Insert a picture on a slide and make it as big as the slide or something smaller.
Make a copy of this slide.
In the copy, draw a rectangle on top of the picture that is a bit smaller than the picture.
Remove the border line ("Line Color" >> "No Line") and choose a dark color for the fill.
Set this color as "Semitransparent".

Now insert a normal text box and type your text there, using a light text color such as white, yellow or gray.

If you want a better effect, apply a transition between the two slides, like "Wipe right".

Rehearse your show and see the effect.


Your audience will first see the picture clearly, without anything on top and with no watermark effect.

Then a colored but semitransparent box with some text on it will appear partially covering the picture, displaying
your content and allowing the audience to continue to see the picture in the background.

This is definitely a great effect when you don't want to watermark a picture, but you still want your text to be
perfectly readable.

Instead of a rectangle with a dark background, why not try to apply a semitransparent white or light gray color
instead? It will look kind of "watermarked"...

Selecting Small Objects

Hit the ESCAPE key to insure that nothing is current selected, and then repeatedly hit the TAB key, which will
toggle you through a selection of all of the objects on a slide. This is useful for selecting very small objects, or
objects that are covered up by other larger objects.

How to Make Documents Linked Inside a PowerPoint Presentation Open Up In a Foreground Active Window

QUESTION: When I create a Hyperlink to an existing Word or Excel document and then run the slide show, I cannot
get the hyperlink to consistently open the linked document to view on screen - i.e. it opens in the background and
one has to exit the slideshow to view the linked document. This does not happen each time but I cannot work out
what makes the difference. This is no good if one wants continuity with the presentation.

ANSWER: If another application (Word, Excel) is open in Windows, the hyperlink will open the requested document
in that application, but while leaving it in the background.

On the other hand, if the application is not open, then the hyperlink will open the document as a new active window,
which is what you want!

Import Outlines from Word

Open the document in Word

Click on File > Send To

Select Microsoft PowerPoint to export the outline to PowerPoint

This will help to have the outline property formatted with Word heading styles.

Printing
How can I print handouts useful for review by others? OR
Print options for handouts and print materials

First of all, let me spend a few words about the "Print" icon that you find in PowerPoint.

Like in other Office products, if you click that icon when you want to print, you print all the slides in the
presentation and you don't have the option to customize your type of print.

- 109 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

Instead of using that "Print" icon on the left side of the Standard toolbar, I suggest you get the habit of clicking on
"File" >> "Print" and then selecting in the "Print" dialog box all the custom options you need: current slide, all the
slides, number of copies and so on.

This way you have a better control of what you are printing, even if it takes a few seconds more.

Once you get the "Print" dialog box, let's see in detail all you can do.

First, make sure that you are printing to the right printer.

You may have more than one printer connected, maybe you also have a color printer, so here is where you select
the printer you will be using. Click on the "printer name" drop-down list and select the appropriate printer.

Second, you can choose the "Print range": do you want to print the whole presentation? Or do you need just a few
slides? Maybe you only need the current slide, so here is where you can change it, saving time and trees in case
you really don't need to print the entire presentation.

Third, at the bottom of the dialog-box, you can finally select what you can print.

By clicking on the "Print what:" drop-down list, you will be able to choose:

a) Slides
b) Handouts
c) Notes pages
d) Outline view

a) Slides

If you choose this option, you will print each slide on a separate A4 (or maybe "letter" for US users) sheet. The slide
will fill completely the paper. This option may be useful in case you want to show your presentation to someone to
have feedback on the graphic and visual aspect of it.

If you have a 50(or more)-slide presentation you probably don't want to use this option to deliver printouts that have
this format.

Reasons may be:

a. very costly in terms of toner/ink used


b. uses of a lot of paper
c. time consuming

Remember also that, in case you have been using "pseudo- animation" effects

You may end up having an incredible number of slides used to create the "cartoon" effect. It's pointless to print
them all.

b) Handouts

When you select handouts, you will have more sub-options that will let you decide how many slides you want to
print in one page. You can choose 2 slides per page, 3 slides per page (very versatile option since PowerPoint will
place, besides each slide miniature, some blank lines where you or your colleagues can add notes or comments), 4
slides per page, 6 and even 9 slides. The more you choose, the smaller they will be, thus reducing readability.
Regardless of which one of these options you will choose, this is the best print solution when you want to deliver a
printed handout to your colleagues for their feedback.

c) Notes pages

This option lets you print one slide per page, reduced to half of its size, with the second half of the sheet reserved
for the speakers note that you have typed in your presentation.

Printing this way can be useful for you, so your colleagues can have a visual reference and see your notes.
Remember anyway that a 50-slide presentation, printed this way, will give you 50 sheets, and you will not be able to
fit more that one slide per page.

- 110 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

d) Outline view

Printing the outline is a great idea when you want to share it with your colleagues and you are not interested in the
graphic aspect. It's easier to focus on the content and besides you do not waste ink. You can also deliver an outline
to your colleagues, in case you think that they should not focus on the "look" of your presentation but just on its
content.

Making Slides Print Correctly

PowerPoint has certain defaults to determine how it prints each object on the page. You can see over-ride these
defaults. Go to View/Black and White; this will show you a gray-scale preview of how your slide will print. To
change the print settings for any given object, right-click on it, then click "Black and White", and then choose the
appropriate print option for that object. Master objects can be selected by going to the Master page View.

PowerPoint Mysteries
Check Out the People Who Made PowerPoint (2000 only)

Click Help > About PowerPoint.

Hold Down Ctrl + Alt + Shift and click on the background of the text box.

This will show the team responsible for making PowerPoint.

How can I send a presentation to others to see, if they don’t have Powerpoint installed in their machines and I want
the fonts, transitions, etc to look the same.

PowerPoint has some great features for sharing presentations.

If you want to simply run the presentation over a LAN, you can simply click Slide Show > Online Broadcast > Begin
Broadcast.

However, with this everyone viewing the presentation must have PowerPoint installed.
A simple solution to this is to use the PowerPoint Viewer. This is a small installation just for viewing PowerPoint
slide shows. You can have your presentation carry the fonts used along with it, if the fonts do not have license
restrictions. Click File > Save As to save the presentation. In the Save As dialog box, click Tools > Embed TrueType
Fonts.

The best way to distribute presentations is to use the Pack and Go feature. This creates a self-extracting archive of
the presentation so that it can be sent by mail and you can optionally include the viewer along with it as well as
embed fonts. Click File > Pack and Go and simply run through all the screens.

If you don’t have PowerPoint Viewer, download it from Internet where it is available freely.

How To Create An Effective Information Graphic

To make a good information graphic is not an easy thing. It is fundamental to know what purpose it serves and to
whom it is addressed, but it's also convenient to follow a coherent process in order to correctly make it.

In this issue we describe this process.

Recently I had the opportunity to prepare and give a course on information graphics for a financial entity. The
subject of the course was to explain what you have to take into account when preparing a graphical presentation,
especially when the data is quantitative.

So the idea wasn't to explain how to make business charts with Excel or PowerPoint, even though we should use
these ubiquitous tools to build them, but what techniques we should use in order to make the charts clearer and
easier to understand.

Surprisingly enough there is very little literature on the topic. (At the end of this article you can consult a list of
interesting books). The available books and information can be divided (in a rough approximation) into two
categories.

- 111 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

Catalogues of types of graphics and charts commonly used.

Information on the theory and aesthetics of quantitative charts.

It's difficult to distil elementary but general principles that summarize the best practice in performing business
graphics or, in general, graphic presentations. And this is so for several reasons.

The audience.

You cannot unlink the charts from the audience they address.

It's quite different making a chart show the evolution of sales for a meeting of sales people than presenting a
marketing campaign to the board of directors, even though the data can be the same.

The objective the chart hopes to achieve.

Information graphics can be done for several reasons. Among them we can highlight the following ones. To
transmit or communicate a message. Sales have improved but we are still behind budget...

To present large amounts of information in a compact and easy to understand way. A road map is an archetypical
example of this type of objective.

To reveal the data.

Discovering cause-effect relations, knowing what's happening. It appears that in the business environment people
think more about information graphics in order to show what is already known rather than discovering what is still
unknown.

To periodically monitor the evolution of certain parameters. For example the evolution of stock exchange, sales,
budget...

*The process of making an information graphic*

It appears that the pressure of everyday work and the little time that we have means that when we are about to
perform an information graphic we adopt the tactics of immediacy. We start Excel, throw in some data and select a
chart type, accepting the terrible colours that Excel gives us by default.

The process is divided into three parts:

1) What is it for?

The reason why we make the graphic representation . This determines the type of data to gather and about which
we have to ask what type it has to be (quantitative, sequential categorical...) and more importantly: are they relevant
for what we want?

2) How?

In what way we will represent the data. A fundamental aspect of this section is that information graphics are
interesting because they reveal differences. For this reason refining them and representing the data derived from
their statistical treatment often reveals aspects that otherwise would result confusing. Once data is refined we have
to choose the most effective visual metaphor. Sometimes, for a little data, a table or even a sentence can be clearer
that a chart. In certain occasions changing the colour palette or the type of chart can clarify the situation
enormously.

3) Does it work?

We can obtain a nice and elegant chart but, if it doesn't fit the goal that we have defined in the first step, we will
have failed. The key resides in revising and experimenting with what we have done until we find an improvement.

Varying the colours, reducing the saturation of what is less important and increasing it for the most relevant data,
modifying the typography, the size of fonts, eliminating everything that doesn't contribute to showing and clarifying
the data (irrelevant grids, redundant data, and unnecessary labels) without losing relevant information sometimes
provides surprisingly improved results.

- 112 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

In the end, making a good information graphic consist of facilitating the understanding of complexity, instead of
complicating what is simple. And this cannot be achieved without the clear understanding of what goal we pursue,
who our audience is and a good deal of work and reflection.

by Juan C. Dürsteler
InfoVis.net
http://www.infovis.net/

MasterView International
by Luigi Canali De Rossi

Powerpoint Add Ins


How can I e-mail my presentation if the file is too big?

Use online collaboration and exchange services

In case you need to send the entire presentation as an attachment to your e-mail message, you may run into
troubles if the presentation file is too big.

In general, organizations and companies have custom limits on the size of email that can be sent or received. Also,
most users have a precisely set "quote" of space in their email inbox. If they go over it, following email will be
bounced back until the assigned file space is freed up.

You will find plenty of tricks to compress any file, split it, or to anyhow reduce its size.

I would like to remind you here the versatility of an online free service like Yahoogroups, that allows you to upload
files in a private Web area (each group has 20 Mb of space available) and to be able to access them from anywhere
in the world by anyone who you have elected to be a member of that private Web "group".

The good advantage of using Yahoogroups for online collaboration and file sharing, in general, is that you are not
overloading your email box with heavy messages, but you can upload a file in the yahoo "Files" area and have your
colleagues download it only if and when they need it.

Nevertheless, the limit of this "File" area is 5 Mb per file, for a maximum of 20 Mb.

A new service that you can use, for free, is called "SmartGroups". It is similar in its features to Yahoogroups, and
its file size limit is 4 Mb for a maximum of 20 Mb of total space.

The URL of this free service is http://www.smartgroups.com; you only need to register, and it's done. You can start
using its services right away.

In case 4/5 Mb are still too small for you, I can suggest you another good service, though is not for free. Its name is
WhaleMail, and its URL is http://www.whalemail.com

With yearly fees that vary from $75 to $750, you can purchase from 100 Mb to 1 Gb of space you can use to upload
files and send email.

It works like Yahoogroups since you can upload files in a dedicated space in their service, send a notification to the
recipients and then have the recipients download the file without file size restrictions. There are also customized
corporate accounts that you may want to check.

NXPowerLite is a software which compresses your presentations upto 60% of the original size. You can use it to
compress your presentation and send it.

- 113 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

PowerPoint Keyboard Shortcuts

Text Formatting
To do this: Windows Keyboard:
Change Font CTRL+Shift+F, then use up/down arrow keys, click Enter when done
Change Point Size CTRL+Shift+P, then use up/down arrow keys, click Enter when done
Increase Font Size CTRL+Shift+>
Decrease Font Size CTRL+Shift+<
Bold CTRL+B
Underline CTRL+U
Italic CTRL+I
Superscript ALT+CTRL+Shift+>
Subscript ALT+CTRL+Shift+<
Plain Text CTRL+Shift+Z
Spelling Checker F7
Center Paragraph CTRL+E
Justified Paragraph CTRL+J
Left-Aligned Paragraph CTRL+L
Right-Aligned Paragraph CTRL+R
Change Case Shift+F3 toggles selection through lower case, upper case, initial caps with each press of keys
Create Hyperlink CTRL+K

Deleting and Copying


Delete Character Left Backspace
Delete Word Left CTRL+Backspace
Delete Character Right Delete
Delete Word Right CTRL+Delete
Cut CTRL+X
Copy CTRL+C
Paste CTRL+V
Undo CTRL+Z
Create a copy of the text CTRL+Drag

Navigating in Text Blocks


Character Left Left Arrow
Character Right Right Arrow
Line Up Up Arrow
Line Down Down Arrow
Word Left CTRL+Left Arrow
Word Right CTRL+Right Arrow
End of Line END
Beginning of Line HOME
Paragraph Up CTRL+Up Arrow
Paragraph Down CTRL+Down Arrow
End of Text Block CTRL+END
Start of Text Block CTRL+HOME

Navigating and Working With Objects


To Previous Object TAB
To Next Object Shift+TAB
Select All Objects CTRL+A
Drag and Drop Copy CTRL+Select and Drag
Create a Duplicate Object CTRL+D
Create another Duplicate with same offset as first Duplicate CTRL+D, move new copy to desired location, then use
CTRL+D repeatedly to create more copies

- 114 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Outlining, in All Views


Promote Paragraph ALT+Shift+Left Arrow or TAB from beginning of Paragraph
Demote Paragraph ALT+Shift+Right Arrow or Shift+TAB from beginning of Paragraph
Move Selected Paragraphs Up ALT+Shift+Up Arrow
Move Selected Paragraphs Down ALT+Shift+Down Arrow

Outlining, in Outline View


Collapse to Titles ALT+Shift+1
Expand Text under a heading ALT+Shift+Plus
Collapse Text Under a Heading ALT+Shift+Minus
Show All Text and Headings ALT+Shift+A
Display Character Formatting Keypad / (numlock off)

Selecting, in Text
Character Right Shift+Right Arrow
Character Left Shift+Left Arrow
End of Word CTRL+Shift+Right Arrow
Beginning of Word CTRL+Shift+Left Arrow
Line Up Shift+Up Arrow
Line Down Shift+Down Arrow
Select All CTRL+A or F2
Select Any Text Drag with left mouse button depressed
Select Word Double-Click
Select Paragraph Triple-Click
Drag and Drop Select and Drag
Drag and Drop Copy CTRL+Select and Drag

Working with Slides and Presentation Files


New Presentation CTRL+N
Open a Presentation CTRL+O, CTRL+F12
Save CTRL+S, F12
Save As F12
Print CTRL+P
Find CTRL+F
Replace CTRL+H
New Slide (menu) CTRL+M
New Slide like last one, no
menu Shift+CTRL+M
Exit/Quit CTRL+Q or ALT F4
Move from Title to Text CTRL+Enter
Move from Body text to Title of Next Slide CTRL+Enter

Working with Presentation Windows


Go to Previous Window CTRL+Shift+F6
Go to Next Window CTRL+F6
Size Presentation Window
(Un-Maximize) ALT+F5
Maximize Application Window ALT+F10
Maximize Presentation Window CTRL+F10
Restore Presentation Window to Previous Size CTRL+F5
Put Presentation in its own Window CTRL+F5

Drawing & Formatting


Show/Hide Guides (toggle) CTRL+G
Switch from Normal View to Master View Shift+Click Slide View Button
Group CTRL+Shift+G
Ungroup CTRL+Shift+H
Regroup CTRL+Shift+J
Resize while Maintaining Proportions Shift+Resize

- 115 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Resize from Center CTRL+Resize


Resize from Center while Maintaining Proportions CTRL+Shift+Resize
Rotate in 15 degree increments Shift+Rotate tool
Rotate from Corner CTRL+Rotate tool
Rotate in 15 degree increments from Corner Shift+CTRL+Rotate tool
Extend Line along same angle Shift+Resize
Make Straight Segment while Using Curve Tool CTRL+ALT+click (using curve tool)
Nudge object one grid unit Arrow Key
Nudge object one pixel CTRL+Arrow Key
Temporarily Release Grid/Guide Snap ALT
Create Multiple Guides CTRL+Drag Guide

Controlling Slides in Slide Show


Go to Slide <number> <number> ENTER
Black/Unblack Screen B or Period
White/Unwhite Screen W or Comma
Show/Hide Pointer A or =
End Show ESC, CTRL+Break, Minus, END
Erase Screen Annotations E
Advance to Hidden Slide H
Advance to Next Slide Mouse Click, Spacebar, N, Right Arrow, Down Arrow, Page Down
Return to Previous Slide Backspace, P, Left Arrow, Up Arrow, Page Up

Getting Help & Programming Tools


Help F1
Menu and Dialog Explanations Shift+F1
Right Mouse Click without Mouse Shift+F10
Bring up Visual Basic Editor ALT+F11
Macro Recorder ALT+F8

- 116 -
Blueprints for a successful presentation

Microsoft PowerPoint is a
powerful tool to create
presentations and slide
shows. These
presentations are typically
laid out in a storyboard
fashion, where individual
slides are created &
formatted with text &
images. Microsoft
PowerPoint allows you to
create amazing
presentations either from
scratch or by using the
easy-to-use wizard.

This book is a step-by-


step guide on creating
business presentations. It
also tells you things about
PowerPoint that you
always wanted to know,
but did not know whom to
ask.

- 117 -

S-ar putea să vă placă și