slidepoint
May 23, 2012
Más gráficos y más malas prácticas

Ayer durante la cuenta pública presidencial revisé un sitio muy interesante que hace un seguimiento de la gestión pública en términos de cumplimiento del programa de gobierno: “Del Dicho al Hecho”. En específico hicieron un especial para ver cuánto de lo que se propuso en la cuenta pública anterior (21 de mayo del 2011) se había cumplido a la fecha del discurso de este año.

Si bien el trabajo que hay por detrás es muy completo, me quedó solo una duda con un cierto tipo de gráfico que mostraba el nivel de cumplimiento de las  promesas. La representación mostraba la mitad de un anillo como el 100%, por un momento pensé que trataron de asimilar a un “velocimetro” (o rapidómetro) de los tableros de los autos, pero no había una aguja que marcara por lo que creo que no hicieron eso.


El punto es: si uno lee el informe completo, queda claro la intención y se entiende perfectamente. El problema está en que pasaría si alguien toma un solo punto y lo muestra en un gráfico o reporte. Por ejemplo así:

¿Qué nos está diciendo el gráfico? ¿Que se cumplió el 50% del 50%? ¿Que el 25% de lo cumplido corresponde a minería?

No es primera vez que veo este tipo de gráficos en la prensa local. Para este caso lo mejor era usar una simple caja o una barra, o por último una torta completa. Pero si se usa una mitad de un anillo, puede leerse que efectivamente hay otra mitad que no se cumplió o que corresponde al resto de las promesas o queda abierta la puerta para cualquier interpretación.

Justamente Flowingdata hizo esta semana dos notas relativas al uso de los gráficos de torta. En el primero muestran a través de un artículo del WSJ sobre las acciones de Facebook como utilizar correctamente este tipo de gráficos. En el segundo, ponen de ejemplo un gráfico llamado de “pluma” donde un investigador relacionado desempeños e ingresos en la admisión a las Universidades.

Siempre controversial, este tipo de gráficos debe ser uno de los más usados pero con más detractores. Yo creo que si se usa bien, no hay por que sacarlo de nuestros análisis, aunque el gran Stephen Few recomendó hace algún tiempo que: “Dejemos las tortas, para el postre”.

May 2, 2011

10 Ways to Prepare for a TED-format Talk

    |    Nancy Duarte

These 18-minute talks are hard to do. It’s easier to blather on for an hour than talk for a tight 18 minutes knowing that if you go over, you (literally) will get the hook.

The talks I give usually take me a comfortable 45 minutes but I needed to get the insights out in 18 minutes. The culling process forces you to convey only the most important information for spreading your idea. The amount of rehearsal time is inversely proportionate to the length of the talk. The shorter the talk, the longer the rehearsal time. In this case, for an 18-minute talk, we took approximately 18 hours to rehearse. An hour a minute? That’s probably fair for someone who’s a professional presenter like me. A less seasoned speaker may need more!

I delivered one talk at TEDxEast and was thrilled to look up at the clock just as it was ticking down with :06 seconds left on the clock. Victory! Then, I delivered a similar talk at the INK conference in India but was restricted to 15 minutes. Even though I practiced like mad and timed it to a perfect 14 and a half minutes, I was medicated for a severe chest cold and my time somehow spread and I got the dreaded “hook” because I ran one minute over, but would have run two minutes over if I hadn’t had tip #10 in place.

Here are the ten steps I went through in rehearsing for my talks.

1. Print your current slide deck as 9-up handouts. The 9-up format is conveniently the same size as the smallest sticky note. I arranged and re-arranged my message and added sticky notes until I was happy with the flow. I also made sure I cut at least half the slides I use for my 40 minute talk.

I trimmed and trimmed and trimmed until I felt like it was close to 18 minutes. During this process it became clear to me that my big idea could be communicated much more effectively than it had been.

2. Solicit feedback. Assemble a handful of people you trust to give honest feedback on your mini little sticky note slide deck. Verbally run the ideas by these folks (doesn’t have to be a formal presentation.) The purpose for having them look at all the slides at once is you want feedback on the “whole”, not the parts. Have them give you feedback on the content you’ve chosen and whether they think it will resonate with the TED audience. I did this four times–twice each with my ExComm Manager and twice with Duarte’s President. After they added their insights, I was ready to have the slides digitally produced.

3. Rehearse with a great (honest) communicator. In my case, I rehearsed with my ExComm Manager Krystin. She has gotten very good at rehearsing me and became a trusted coach. She would say “When you say it that way, it can be interpreted differently than you intended”, “When you use that term, you come across derogatory”, “I thought that when you said it last time it was better, you said…”. She worked hard tracking phrases and rounds of what was said. Honesty is the best policy. Make sure your coach is not afraid to speak up. 18 minutes goes by fast–you love your material and you want to include all of it–-but for a TED-format talk you need someone you trust to help you murder your darlings.

4. Close the loop. A lot of times, as the presenter, you know your material so well that you think you’re making each key point clear. You might not be. Your coach should make sure you are telling people why. It’s the “why” around our ideas that make them spread, not the “how”. Articulate the why so your audience understands what’s magnificent about your big idea.

5. Practice with clock counting up. The first few times, rehearse with the clock counting up. That’s because if you go over, you need to know how much you’re over. Do NOT be looking at the clock at this time. Have your coach look at it because you don’t want to remember any of the timestamps in your mind. Finish your entire talk and then have your coach tell you how much you need to trim. One minute, three minutes. Keep practicing until you’re consistently within 18 minutes. Your coach should be able to tell you to trim 30 seconds here or add 15 seconds there so that your content is weighted toward the most important information.

6. Practice with clock counting down. Once you’re within the timeframe, begin practicing with the clock counting down. You need to set a few places in your talk where you benchmark a time stamp. Calculate where you need to be in the content in six-minute increments. You should know roughly where you should be at 6, 12 and 18 minutes. You should know the slide you should be on and what you’re saying so that you will know immediately from the stage if you’re on time or running over.

7. Noteworthy. Your coach is there to jot down what you say well and what you don’t. They should work from a printout of the slides and write phrases you say well so they can be added to your script. They should help capture phrases so you can type them into your notes.

8. Don’t be camera shy. Videotape some of your final practices. It doesn’t have to be the best setup ever–we used our Flip camera on a tripod in the hotel–you just need to feel like something’s at stake. It helps you get used to looking at the camera, and you can review the video to look at your stage presence, eye contact, gestures plus identify any expressions that need modification. Also, if you do an especially good practice run, you can go back and listen to the audio and add the best snippets to your slide notes.

9. Do one more FULL timed rehearsal right before you walk on stage. This is where I blew it in India. I practiced fully several times that morning but didn’t feel it necessary to pull out a timer. I confess, I didn’t time it for a week, but rehearsed like mad. It would have been even better if I’d rehearsed via Skype with my coach Krystin. I would have averted a disaster.

10. Have two natural ending points. I wanted to accuse the India show operators of not really giving me a full 15 minutes on the clock. But I was the one who blew it. It might have been the meds I was on for my chest cold, but my timer was *blinking* before I was done. Fortunately, I’d embedded two natural places to end my talk. I had an ending that made the talk complete and I stopped there. What I didn’t have time to get to was the inspirational ending that would have had them on their feet and screaming (well, they did end up on their feet, they just weren’t screaming.)

January 9, 2011
4 Tendencias de las Presentaciones para el 2011

La gran Nancy Duarte, nos habla de 4 tendencias para las presentaciones que deberíamos observar durante el 2011.

Llama mucho en atención la última, donde dice que deberíamos ver durante el próximo año muchos “presentadores desnudos” sin slides ni power points.

  1. La Guerra de las Tablets, determinará el futuro de las presentaciones.
  2. La transparencia y la autenticidad serán la clave para la comunicación.
  3. Presentaciones artesanales, con menos ‘clip-art’
  4. Incremento de las “Zonas de No Slides”

Aquí el artículo completo.

December 19, 2010
Animación - Presentación en 450 slides

Una increíble presentación/animación en 450 slides (y usando Google Docs)

(Source: geek.com)

December 12, 2010
Nunca está de más recordarlo. ¿Qué tipo de gráficos usar en las presentaciones?

Nunca está de más recordarlo. ¿Qué tipo de gráficos usar en las presentaciones?

December 11, 2010
La Mejor Presentación del Mundo

Esta es la presentación ganadora del Concurso organizado por SlideShare y 3M. Que buscaba a la mejor presentación del planeta.

SMOKE - The Convenient Truth
View more presentations from Empowered Presentations, Honolulu, HI.

September 22, 2010
Think it…

Great stories, great planning and great specialists produce ideas not slides, produce scenes not spanapshots, produce cinematic experience (Nancy Duarte)

A greatest way to aplicate surveys. Excelent! (via eDigital Research)

A greatest way to aplicate surveys. Excelent! (via eDigital Research)

September 19, 2010

Present Slides; Distribute Documents:

If you’ve stripped your slides down to solely what the audience needs, some of the content that you lean on to make you feel confident has now vanished. Here’s a simple way to solve that.

http://www.duarte.com/training/tools/