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When
it is appropriate to use a computer slide-show? According
to Brian Taugher of the attorney general's office, presentations
can be valuable aids in group training, firm marketing to potential
clients, personal injury cases in court before a jury, mediations,
and meetings with opposing counsel (especially large numbers of
them). Presentations can allow you to show your side of the story
without interruptions and perhaps provide answers before a question
is posed in a hostile way.
Laptops hooked up to an LCD Projector can be used
to show presentations in Microsoft PowerPoint, Corel Presentations,
or other software programs, to show DVDs, video clips, enlarged
document scans, charts, photos, or to play voice files. Remember
the video of Bill Gates in deposition? When shown to opposing
counsel, damaging evidence such as this might hasten settlement.
Despite technical evidentiary problems, many things seem to "get
by" when shown as a PowerPoint presentation. People (including
judges, juries, and opposing counsel) can be "lulled"
while watching presentation, drifting in couch potato passivity,
allowing the media to pass into their brains without critical
analysis.
Projectors cost around four to six thousand dollars
new, and the key components to look for when shopping are the
brightness (lumens) and the weight. A one thousand lumens bulb
will allow you to run the presentation without turning off the
lights, (which tempts the audience to take a nap). If you only
use a projector in your conference room, then the weight won't
matter a lot, but if you travel with your projector, you'll soon
notice every single ounce. A laptop on one arm, the projector
on the other - saving a pound or two will be worth some extra
money up front. Bulbs themselves cost about $350 each. So maybe
you don't want to buy a projector right away. Commercial establishments
rent them for $300-350 per day. But wait! SLUG members can rent
SLUG's own projector for only $25 per day - a great membership
benefit.
After lining up your projector, you'll need to
set it up. You may want to keep an extra three-prong extension
cord around, since projector cords are notorious for not reaching
that outlet across the room. After inserting the plugs marked
"computer" or "projector" into the ports similarly
marked, and hooking up the electricity, Brian suggests turning
the projector on before the laptop so that the laptop picks up
the projector first off. Other alternatives include rebooting
the laptop later or setting your laptop to "sleep" mode
while not in use. On many laptops, the separate Function key plus
either F4 or F5 (depending on model) will toggle the visuals from
Laptop Only, to Laptop plus Screen, to Screen Only, enabling you
to set up your presentation without your first visual displaying
on the wall in the eternal beforehand. Check the toggles if you
suddenly see the projection on the wall but not on your laptop
monitor.
Equipment set up; you're ready to PowerPoint.
No, I'm not pushing Microsoft, it's just that PowerPoint has become
as innocuous in presentation language as Kleenex is to tissue
- it has also become a verb: I Xerox, you PowerPoint. Brian explained
that the secret of a good presentation depends on the skill of
the presenter, and reading a bunch of slides won't cut it before
an audience. Moving around the room, changing the tone of one's
voice, and some large key words on the screen will get through
to more audience members than cutesy graphics, lots of small print,
and annoying music.
Brian's
Do's and Don'ts
- Don't read your PowerPoint presentation to
the audience. Use key words in your slides and have the supplementing
information in your talk.
- Do use handouts, printing slides or (even better)
a textual outline to accommodate different learning types.
- Don't forget your role as a speaker. Walk around;
vary vocal tones and volume.
- Do have staff assist in the design and creation
of your presentation. You may have people in your office with
a "knack" for the perfect transition - don't blow
400 billable hours trying to find the right graphic if others
can find them quicker for you.
- Don't use small fonts or use too many fonts.
Better to stick to one or two fonts, in large sizes, and have
people be able to read your presentation from the back of the
room. Slides shouldn't have more than seven lines of text on
them in order to be seen.
- Do run through your presentation a few times
at home on the same laptop and the same projector you intend
to use on the "big day."
- Don't turn out the lights. The audience can
sleep on their own time.
- Do buy a book. One lucky March SLUG luncheon
attendee won PowerPoint for Litigators by the National
Institute for Trial Advocacy (NITA).
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