From the moment I downloaded PowerPoint 2010, it was truly love at first sight. Finally, Microsoft delivered to us a presentation program that offered both flexibility and style. Don’t get me wrong – I’m not completely trashing the previous versions of PowerPoint. But, frankly, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out how to click inside the box that says “Click to add …” to throw in some text. Add a little color using the small amount of design templates and you were pretty much good to go.
But, that’s all changed with PowerPoint 2010. Suddenly, the stakes have been raised and I’ve yet to meet anyone not drooling at the challenge.
So, aside from watching the Five Rules presentation, here are my Top three things everyone should be doing in PowerPoint 2010. Wait – you haven’t watched the Five Rules presentation? Right now, open PowerPoint, click the File tab and from the Sample Templates group, open the Five Rules presentation. Follow the directions and watch the presentation in Slide Show view. Shoot – that means I now have four things you should do in PowerPoint. We can fix that with some creative numbering:
0. Watch the Five Rules presentation
1. Instantly broadcast your PowerPoint presentations
To broadcast a slide show to up to 50 of your closest friends, or anyone else for that matter, you just need a Windows Live ID. If you’ve already set up a Windows Live SkyDrive to share files with others, have a Hotmail account or use Windows Messenger, you already have a Windows Live ID. If not, you can create one the first time you try to broadcast a presentation.
The good news is that only the person presenting needs to have a copy of PowerPoint 2010 and a Windows Live ID. All your participants need is a web browser and an active Internet connection. To start a broadcast, from the Backstage menu, select Save & Send, and then click the Broadcast Slide Show option. This gives you a big Broadcast Slide Show button. Click that button to get started.
If this is your first time using the Broadcast Service, you’ll need to set it up. If you’re prompted to sign in to your Windows Live Account or create one, this is the place to do it. You only have to do it once. PowerPoint will remember who you are the next time you broadcast a presentation. Simply follow the on-screen instructions until you reach the dialog with the Start Broadcast button.
Copy the link the PowerPoint gives you and send it to those people who will be joining your presentation. You can send this link via e-mail or chat message. At this point, you’re actively in broadcast mode. But, your participants won’t be able to see your screen until you launch either Slide Show view or Presenter view.
The final step is to click Start Slide Show in the second dialog. This starts your presentation in Slide Show view. At this point, your participants can see the view that’s on your screen. If you drop out of Slide Show view and back to Normal view, the people watching your presentation still see the last slide you were on and you get access to the ribbon’s Broadcast tab.
2. Add narration to your slides
Often, slide shows are delivered electronically without the benefit of a live presenter. In the past, you could separately record narration and upload individual audio files to each slide. In PowerPoint 2010, you can record narration directly on each slide. PowerPoint will create individual audio files and attach them to each slide.
To record narration on a slide show, you’ll start from the ribbon’s Slide Show tab. Choose the Record Slide Show option, then choose either Start Recording from Beginning or Start Recording from Current Slide.
In the Record Slide Show dialog, you can choose to include Narrations and the laser pointer. Once started, PowerPoint will record your audio voiceover through a recognized microphone for each slide in the presentation. It also keeps track of the slide timings.
Narration recorded in this way plays automatically the next time you’re in Slide Show view.
3. Take advantage of the Animation Painter
Creating custom animation effects on your slide objects is not always a quick process. And, once you get an object animated just the way you want it with added animation, effect options and timing, it can feel a little daunting to start the process all over again with another object in the presentation deck. This is where you can make good use of a new PowerPoint 2010 feature – the Animation Painter. Its option is located on the ribbon’s Animations tab in the Advanced Animation group.
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