And now it's Sunday morning, you've designed your presentation making sure
that you have a consistent look throughout, your fonts are the right size and
you've checked your spelling and grammar. So now you are ready to run your show,
right? Wrong. Stop and rewind. If Sunday morning is the first time you have gone
through your entire presentation then you can almost rest assured that Mr.
Murphy will be your co-presenter and whatever can go wrong will go wrong.
Once you have finished preparing your presentation you need to run through it to
make sure that you have everything you are supposed to have, and that it's all
in the right place and is doing what it is supposed to be doing. It's only when
you have run the presentation sequentially from the very beginning to the very
end will you know that all the animations and slide transitions are behaving
properly. Make sure that you are following along with an order of service so you
can be sure the various elements and segues are where they are supposed to be.
Unless you prepare your presentation using the digital projector in the actual
environment where your service is held, it's a good idea to run through your
slide show under similar circumstances before the appointed time. The time to
discover that you can't read your text because the sun is hitting the screen is
10:30 Saturday morning, not 10:30 Sunday morning. I've changed the font colors
on thirty-five sermon slides forty-five minutes before the service began and
it's no fun.
Familiarize yourself with your equipment before you actually need it. Make sure
everything is working, meaning the projector is projecting and the computer is
computing. There have been one hundred and sixty-seven hours since the
benediction at the close of last Sunday's service and almost as many
opportunities for things to have gone wrong with your equipment. Don't ask me
how settings can be changed on a machine that hasn't been turned on all week,
but we all know that it happens. You will want to make neat discoveries (like
someone borrowed the power cord from the computer) early enough to find a
solution before the service begins.
If you are using a laptop, make sure your computer is plugged into the power
cord and the power cord is plugged into power. There is a certain feeling of
helplessness that occurs when the low battery warning appears on the screen half
way through your second song.
If you are using a different computer to run your presentation than you used for
your preparation it's wise to check which version of PowerPoint your
presentation machine is using. PowerPoint is pretty much backward compatible
from POWERPOINT 2003 to 95 but not everything designed in 2003 will work in
earlier versions. Hate to keep mentioning it, but the best time to make those
exciting discoveries isn't in the middle of your sermon.
Even though you will be able to open and run a show that you prepared in
PowerPoint 2003 on a machine running earlier releases, that really cool MP3 file
you used will remain silent, some transparent fills will turn to solid colors
and your animated gifs will be less than animated.
PowerPoint 2003 also has many more custom animations than its predecessors, as
well as more choices in how those animations will behave. And the new animations
are not backward compatible. Here's some disappointing news as well; if you use
the pack and go function along with PowerPoint presenter, your show will not
have access to the new features from PowerPoint 2003.
If God's promise to Abraham were made today, instead of promising Abraham’s
descendants that would outnumber the sands on the beach or stars in the sky, he
would have been promised more descendants then there are fonts.
It's not unusual for most computers to have several hundred fonts stored on
their hard drive, but nobody has the same several hundred. Even though the main
body of your presentation should contain simple easy to read fonts you may have
opted for special fonts to match the theme of your message. By running through
the show on the presentation machine you will assure that the X-files font you
hunted so long for will actually show up during your presentation.
Don't assume that all of your fonts will work. Because you know what happens
when you assume? Sometimes you're wrong. If you are not using the same computer
for preparation and presentation, then you need to embed your fonts. (In the
"Save As" menu, click on "Tools", "Save Options", and select "Embed TrueType
Fonts".)
Type “A” personalities have a tough time relinquishing control of anything...
even their PowerPoint Presentations. If you fall into that category and you are
using a remote mouse, be sure to check your batteries. It's amazing how often
your remote can be left on following last Sunday's service. We've discovered
that the easiest way to win the battery game is to purchase two sets of
rechargeable batteries and keep the recharged set close by. Before the service
is also a good time to establish your line of sight to the receiver for the
remote. Even though very few other experiences capture the mystique of watching
someone repeatedly pressing a mouse key while wandering around the platform, I'm
sure your people will discover something equally as titillating to take its
place... even if it's the old standby of finding mistakes in the bulletin.
Inevitably, circumstances arise where your computer operator needs to assume
control of the presentation. There are a number of shortcuts available via the
keyboard which can be used without exiting the slide show.
|
Keyboard Shortcuts For Actions During Slideshow |
| Next slide or animation |
N, Enter, Page Down, Right Arrow, Down
Arrow or Space bar |
| Previous slide or animation |
P, Page Up, Left Arrow, Up Arrow or
Backspace |
| Go to a specific Slide Slide |
number + Enter |
| Display black screen or return to
slideshow from black screen |
B or Period |
| Display white screen or return to
slideshow from white screen |
W or Comma |
| End a slide show |
Esc, Ctrl+Break, or hyphen |
| Erase screen annotations |
E |
| Go To Hidden Slide |
H |
| Set new timings while rehearsing |
T |
| Use original timings while rehearsing |
O |
| Return to first slide |
1 + Enter |
| Change pointer to a pen |
Ctrl + P |
| Change pointer to an arrow |
Ctrl + A |
| Hide pointer (immediately) |
Ctrl + H |
| Hide Point in 15 seconds |
Ctrl + U |
| Display shortcut menu |
Shift + F10 (or right click mouse) |
| Next hyperlink on slide |
Tab |
| Previous hyperlink |
Shift + Tab |
| Execute Hyperlink |
Enter (while hyperlink is selected) |
| Execute mouse-over behavior of
selected hyperlink |
Shift + Enter (while hyperlink is
selected) |
| Help during slide show |
F1 |
Remember that you can't practice too much. The more familiar you are with
your presentation, the less likely you will have to be thinking about it when
you should be thinking about your message. If you are paying too much attention
to your slide show, you will distract your listeners from your spoken word. The
presentation is meant to reinforce your message, not undermine it.
Questions To Ask Before The Show Begins:
- Have you rehearsed your presentation?
- Have you checked the presentation computer and projector?
- Have you confirmed that your fonts are present on the presentation
machine?
- Are the batteries charged for your remote mouse?
- Have you rehearsed your presentation again?
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