But calls-to-action are both really important and processes – they motivate your presentation audience to actually take a next step and mean your presentation ends with a bang instead of a whimper.
Hardly memorable, or meaningful. Instead, we can transform it into something like this:
Here we have a journey that shows phone number usa how the two steps work together sequentially, and then we use the flag and the mountain to show that once these two steps have been completed, the client is headed for bright things!
Processes in training
A lot of training tends to be process-driven. In these cases you’ll need a really clear process graphic so that it sticks in the minds of learners. Follow the same steps to collapse stages to make everything more streamlined at the high-level view, or why not make an interactive map that you can click around to learn more about each stage? Learn more about creating interactive eLearning in PowerPoint.
Explaining a complex process in an animation
If you’re creating an explainer video around a process or journey, you’ll likely have more dynamic content to keep your viewers engaged. Consider using a process visual that you keep coming back to as a breadcrumb or way-marker. You could also have a complex visual that you move around, zooming from the big picture to the individual steps. Sound complicated? Did you know both of those effects can be done with just a few clicks using PowerPoint’s morph transition.