Now updated through PowerPoint 2016 and Office 365.If you’ve been studying English for a while, you probably know that there are two basic ways to say thank you. “101 Tips Every PowerPoint User Should Know” is for everyone who never took a course or read a book about PowerPoint! These tips will fill in the gaps, speed up your work, make presentations easier, and help you get better results. Plus bonus theme, template, sample slides, and 5 short video tutorials to make implementing the principles easy.Updated for PowerPoint 2016/365. “Slide Design for Non-Designers” shows you, step-by-step, how to easily get the results you want. Learn easy principles and techniques that designers use. What do you think? How is the answer different in different situations and for different types of content? See my earlier post, “What goes on the last slide?” for a related discussion. Why should they thank you when you’re trying to sell them something? If your CEO gave you some of his precious time to hear a pet proposal of yours, of course you should thank him or her. If you’re giving a sales presentation, you would always thank the audience. For example, I might say, “Thanks for your attention and remember that you CAN present complex data clearly!” I do like the idea of not making “thank you” your last words, though, and leaving the audience with a final, uplifting point. Who does anything equivalent in the business world? (Madam) Toastmaster and a handshake at the end.
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