If you frequently present in PowerPoint, here is a selection of apps, tools, and technologies designed for speakers that could prove useful for you.
Presentation timer
A new PowerPoint add-in called TalkTime calculates the total time PowerPoint slides will take to present—even as speakers add or delete slides. It calculates the length of a presentation based on times assigned to individual slides. Speakers can either copy PowerPoint rehearsal times into TalkTime, enter them manually for each slide, or record timings from a typical slideshow.
Remote for slide shows
Logitech’s Spotlight Remote combines a sleek design with impressive functionality. An advanced pointer system allows speakers to precisely highlight areas of focus or magnify for high detail. The on-screen cursor can open links and pause or play videos with no need to break the presentation flow by moving to a mouse or laptop. The remote also enables speakers to manage their presentation time, setting milestones within the app and sending vibration alerts directly to the hand. The remote connects via USB receiver or Bluetooth, is fully rechargeable, and has a 100-foot operating range.
Audience interaction technologies
Sendsteps allows speakers to ask audiences questions using PowerPoint, with audiences responding via text on mobile devices or through a website. Speakers can create trigger questions or challenge participants to take a quiz. Groups can vote with their tablets or smartphones, with results appearing instantly on-screen.
Poll Everywhere transforms one-sided presentations into two-way conversations. The audience response system enables speakers to embed interactive activities directly into a presentation, with audiences responding via SMS text on phones or tablets. Results are summarized instantly on screen. The platform offers a large variety of polling activities, including multiple choice, open response, live word clouds, clickable images, rank order, and more. Questions can be written in 30 languages.
Presentation slide management
Shufflrr keeps presentation messaging consistent across a company, allowing users to share presentation files easily and create slide decks quickly. The platform tracks usage by slide, file, user, activity, shares, likes, and comments. Slides once lost on a network after a single meeting are now stored, categorized, and easily accessed for future presentations.
Immersive technology
Inscale Interactive develops next-generation corporate presentations, augmented reality, virtual reality (VR), and mixed reality solutions to engage audiences in new, immersive, and meaningful ways.
VirtualSpeech has a tool that can help prepare you for Toastmasters meetings and improve your career skills. The app can be used to improve your communication skills in realistic virtual reality scenarios and works with mobile VR headsets.
(For other companies offering immersive technology products, see the article “A New Era in Presentation Technology” in the February 2018 issue of the Toastmaster magazine.)
Graphics, videos and icons
Pixabay is a community of creative professionals that shares more than 1 million copyright-free images and videos. All content is covered under Creative Commons CC0, which makes them safe to use without asking for permission or giving credit to the artist—even for commercial purposes.
Explore more than 9,000 professionally designed, editable graphics created in PowerPoint through eLearning Brothers. All graphics are import-ready. Integrate data into tables, charts, and graphs or use animations and graphics to enhance your presentations.
The Noun Project features more than 1 million royalty-free icons created by a global community for use in presentations. Find the icons you want, change their color and size if desired, and insert them into your slides or documents.
Dave Zielinski is a freelance writer in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and a frequent contributor to the Toastmaster magazine.