Filed under Creation

Hand-Drawn Presentation

A few months ago, we started adding to our Product Management group at my day job. Previously, I was the only Product Owner, and I was swamped. Many people were confused about how we were going to structure our group and how they would work together with us. I created a presentation to explain how things were before our change, and how we expected them to become with the additions to our group.

I decided that the presentation should be one that I enjoyed creating, and hopefully everyone else would enjoy seeing as well. I grabbed a couple introductory images for each section, but then hand-drew all the rest of the images. There are almost no words in the slide deck, and it purposely does not stand on its own. This is not a slideument—a term coined by Garr Reynolds to describe a slide deck that is really a document. Without my presenting, the slides alone don’t make sense. Although I only included a few example slides here, the half-hour presentation contains almost 200 slides. Instead of creating complicated builds and animations on a few slides, I constructed the builds over the course of a few slides, and move through them quickly. The result is a deck that I enjoy and has been effective in explaining our organization and process.

Presentation Creation

Neighborhood House Presentation

As part of a community-university partnership, I was part of a group that did an evaluation of the Neighborhood House in preparation for accreditation review by NAEYC, the National Association for the Education of Young Children. We were asked to present to the teachers as well as the parents about our efforts, and these are some slides from the presentation I created.

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