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So over the course of this

Posted: Mon Dec 23, 2024 4:56 am
by ritu2000
The visual communicates a huge amount without you having to explain either as voiceover, or as text on the slide. And what does that all mean? Well you can get to the point faster, and your audience isn’t distracted by trying to read and figure out the accidental puzzle you left them.

article, I’m going to show you how to identify and visualise four key relationships, and then what to do if you have multiple relationships in one slide. Read the whole thing, or skip to your favourite:

In this day and age we’re certainly more phone number south korea reliant on GPS to get us places (some may say over-reliant), but you’d be surprised how often we forget to signpost a journey – or process – to our audiences. Whether it’s how you onboard a new client, the steps in a new system you’re selling, or even just the next steps the audience member needs to take after they leave the meeting, processes and linear journeys are really common in presentations.

So taking those three examples, how do we go about creating a process slide?

Simple steps

Let’s start with something simple and linear (at least you’d hope so): a new client onboarding process. Clients and prospects want these processes to be as simple as possible, so we should make them look as simple as possible. Clean, minimal design goes a long way here, as does only a few easily defined steps.

Consider the following: