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13 Zoom Presentation Tips to Ace Your Next Online Meeting

13 Zoom Presentation Tips to Ace Your Next Online Meeting

Written by: Mahnoor Sheikh

zoom presentation - header wide

Now that more people are working from home, online presentations using tools like Zoom have started to become the norm.

But giving a Zoom presentation is very different from presenting in person. The lack of physical presence and body language can make it difficult to engage and inspire your audience.

If you’re still getting used to presenting on Zoom, this article has some great tips to help you succeed and make an impact in your next meeting.

Preparing Your Zoom Presentation

Getting ready for your Zoom presentation is just as important as giving the actual presentation. There are tons of potential issues you can face, like a faulty microphone or your dog walking in right in the middle of an important slide.

By preparing well, you ensure your presentation is as smooth and error-free as possible. After all, you only get one chance to make a great first impression and get a great ROI .

Here are some tips to help you get ready to deliver a powerful Zoom presentation.

1 Design a Great Online Presentation

The first thing you need to do is make sure your presentation is designed to look its best on your audiences’ tiny computer screens.

Follow these three rules to create an effective Zoom presentation.

zoom presentation - The-Anatomy-of-a-Killer-Online-Presentation-Infographic_full

Keep it simple.

The best online presentations are simple and straightforward.

You don’t want your audience to be squinting at their screens trying to navigate through a tangled web of text, colors, graphs and other content.

You need them to look at a slide and get the point at a single glance.

Use a plain background for your slides, preferably white, and focus each slide on only one point or idea. Don’t stuff too many bullet points or text into your slides.

Also, make sure you center your text in case the edges of the slides are cut off for some of the participants.

Lastly, use a large and bold font that doesn’t require participants to strain their eyes, even if they’re viewing your slides on their phone.

Use relevant visuals.

Visuals make information much easier to digest and retain than plain text. And let’s face it—they keep things entertaining.

Here are some types of visuals you can use to make your Zoom presentation more engaging:

  • Charts and graphs. Visualizing data can bring the most boring numbers and statistics to life. If you’re using research findings to show a trend or back up your point, consider presenting them in the form of a bar graph or pie chart. Not only will it add some color to your slides, it will make it easier for your audience to interpret the data.
  • Maps.  If you're presenting geographic data, you can easily visualize it in the form of maps. In Visme, you can add interactive maps for a single country or the world.
  • Icons and illustrations.  Adding creative graphics like icons and illustrations can break up walls of text, make your information look more visual and interesting, and help explain your point better.
  • Videos. Adding videos into your slides is a great way to make your presentation more engaging. Videos can help you explain a point more clearly, show a product in action or give some background information on your subject. You can embed YouTube or Vimeo videos into your slides or upload them directly.
  • Stock photos. If used intelligently, stock photos can add value to your slides by helping you set the tone, tell a story or visualize an idea. You can also use relevant stock photos in the background with text overlay to add some color to your slides.
  • GIFs and Memes. Make your online presentations fun and engaging by adding relevant memes and GIFs into slides that would otherwise look quite dry. Be careful not to overdo it, and only use humor if appropriate. You don’t want to risk looking unprofessional.

Here's a presentation template from Visme with just the right balance of visuals and text to help you get started. Simply customize it to use for your next Zoom presentation.

export powerpoint visme - 40-Work+Biz-Pitch Deck-Presentation Template

Using visuals in your online presentation is great, but this doesn’t mean you should stuff all your slides with images. Make sure the visuals you’re using add value to your content and emphasize your point instead of taking attention away from it.

Make it interactive.

It can be tough to keep your audience engaged when you’re not interacting with them face-to-face.

So, why not do the next best thing? Make your slides interactive!

If you’re creating your presentation in Visme, you can access a bunch of interactivity tools to spice up your slides:

  • Animation. Add beautiful slide transitions, or animate objects separately. A good tip is to animate bullet points to appear one at a time to draw focus to each one. You can also choose from pre-animated illustrations, icons and characters to make your Zoom presentation more engaging.
  • Links. In Visme, you can link any text or graphic element to a web page, or a slide or object inside your presentation. Get creative with this tool to add interactive quizzes, slides and more to your Zoom presentation. For example, you can link two text boxes together so when you click on the question, the answer appears.
  • Hover effects. If you’re linking one object in your slide to another, you can enable it to show up on either click or hover. If you’re creating a quiz, for example, you can link two text boxes together so when you hover on the question, the answer appears.

A healthy dose of interactivity can make your audience feel more involved with your Zoom presentation.

2 Tidy Up Your Background

If you want your audience to take you seriously, clean up any clutter behind you.

A messy background can make you look unprofessional and distract people from focusing on your presentation. Ideally, your background should be a plain wall.

If you can’t manage to find a clean, empty background, consider using a virtual Zoom background. There are tons of different styles out there, so make sure to pick one that looks realistic and professional.

3 Draw Attention to Your Face

An online presentation can quickly start to feel distant and impersonal, like watching a pre-recorded video.

To remind your audience that they’re interacting with a real human, you need to draw focus to your face and expressions as you present.

Make sure you’re presenting in a well-lit room, where the source of light is in front of you. If the light source is directly behind you, you might end up looking like a dark blob.

4 Check Your Equipment

Make sure you check all your technical equipment to see if everything is working properly. This will help minimize issues like awkward camera angles or a malfunctioning microphone.

Here are a few things you should take care of before your presentation:

  • Check internet connection. No one wants to listen to a presenter with laggy audio and video. Use a reliable, high-speed internet connection to ensure a smooth Zoom presentation.
  • Test audio and video. Check if your camera and microphone are working properly by joining a Zoom test meeting . You can also test out your equipment from inside the Zoom app by clicking on Settings → Audio or Settings → Video .
  • Ensure your laptop is plugged in. Imagine if your laptop dies out in the middle of your presentation just because you didn’t plug it in properly. Don’t let that happen.
  • Adjust your camera level. Make sure your audience is looking at your face instead of the top of your head. Decide whether you want to sit or stand during your presentation, and adjust the webcam so it’s at eye level.

Keep in mind that technical issues can arise unexpectedly, even if you do everything right. Doing tech prep beforehand, though, keeps the chances at a minimum.

5 Minimize Potential Interruptions

Whether you’re giving your Zoom presentation at home or in a nearby cafe, there are tons of potential interruptions that can disrupt your flow and make you look unprofessional.

During your prep, your goal should be to minimize these interruptions as much as possible.

Find a quiet area to begin with, and lock the door so no one comes in unexpectedly. It’s a good idea to inform your family members or roommates that you’re going to be busy prior to the presentation.

Another tip is to close all other open applications and windows on your computer. Notifications and sounds can interrupt your meeting and distract you. You can also use the “Do Not Disturb” mode on MacOS or “Focus Assist” on Windows 10 to mute notifications.

6 Stick Your Notes in the Right Place

Just like when you’re presenting in person, you’d likely want to keep notes or pointers nearby in case you forget something important.

During a Zoom presentation, though, you need to be careful about where you place your notes. It can look very unprofessional and awkward if your eyes keep moving away from the camera when everyone is staring at your face.

Avoid keeping a notepad next to you or pasting them on the side of your monitor. A better alternative is to stick a post-it right below or next to your webcam. So, even if you take a peek, you will still be looking somewhat directly at your audience.

If you’re using Visme to create your Zoom presentation, you can simply use the presenter notes feature and skip all the hassle of keeping physical notes.

zoom presentation - Stick-your-notes-in-the-right-place

While you’re presenting, your presenter notes will open up in another window, so you can look at them while presenting without even letting your audience know.

7 Ditch the Pajamas

We get it. Nobody wants to get dressed when they’re at home.

But really, if you’re giving a professional presentation, it’s a good idea to ditch your PJs and wear something presentable .

Even if everyone knows you’re at home, you don’t want to look sloppy while sharing important information. This can prevent your audience from taking you seriously.

Plus, dressing up can help you feel more confident and motivated. Wear something that not only looks smart, but also makes you feel good about yourself.

8 Rehearse Before the Presentation

Never walk into a presentation unprepared. This is especially important for Zoom presentations, as it can be even more difficult to wing it when you’re not interacting in person.

Plus, rehearsing is a good idea if you want to overcome the fear of being on camera. Do a demo Zoom meeting with a friend or family member, or just practice alone before the presentation.

Delivering Your Zoom Presentation

Now that you’re all prepped up to give your Zoom presentation, here are some tips to help you make the most of your time while you’re presenting.

9 Start With a Bang

Did you know that people take as little as five seconds to judge how charismatic a speaker is?

Figuring out how to start your presentation is one of the most important parts of your Zoom presentation. It can either get your audience to sit up in their seats or prepare to doze off.

Here's an infographic on some tried-and-true ways to start a presentation that keeps your audience hooked . Keep reading for an explanation of all seven points below.

zoom presentation - 7-Ways-to-Start-an-Online-Presentation-Infographic_full

  • Reveal a shocking statistic. A relevant and powerful statistic can set the tone for your presentation and show your audience the importance of your message.
  • Tell a relevant joke. Humor is a great way to break the ice and keep your audience engaged. A boring presentation can quickly cause the listener to zone out.
  • Ask a question. Get your audience involved by asking them a question relevant to your presentation topic. The more you interact with them, the more likely they’ll be to listen to what you’re saying.
  • Quote an influential person. A powerful quote can often motivate or inspire your audience to sit up and listen to what you have to say.
  • Tell a short story. Stories are personal and can evoke emotions. Telling a relatable story that also gets the audience curious to know more is a great way to start your presentation.
  • Use an interesting prop. Using a prop can break the monotony of your presentation. Using motion and a visual object can also help attract your audience’s gaze.
  • Show a captivating visual. Pictures speak louder than words, which is why using a powerful image that tells a story or shows the importance of your topic is an effective way to start your presentation.

Along with starting impressively, you should also try to end your presentation in a way that it drives your audience to take action or think about your message. A good idea is to end with a powerful statement or a thought-provoking question.

10 Make Eye Contact With the Audience

While you’re speaking, it’s just as important to make eye contact with your audience as it is during a face-to-face presentation.

The problem with Zoom presentations, though, is that you often end up looking at your own video or at the video of your audience.

To make eye contact online, however, you need to look directly at your camera. To make things easier, you can place the video boxes of your audience at the top of your screen, directly under your webcam.

11 Regularly Pause to Engage

Online presentations can get monotonous really quickly, and it’s common for people to zone out in the middle of it.

If you want to ensure your message hits home, take regular breaks throughout your Zoom presentation and engage your audience in conversation.

You could pause to ask them questions, or simply ask what they think about a certain topic. You could also try switching up the pace of your presentation, show a short video clip or tell an interesting or humorous story that helps bring wandering minds back.

cta presentations powerpoint import visme

12 Use the Chat Feature to Your Benefit

Zoom’s chat feature is a great way to get your audience involved without disrupting the flow of your presentation.

You can use Zoom chat to your advantage in several different ways:

  • Questions. Ask your audience questions and let them answer through chat, or get them to ask you questions in the chat.
  • Feedback. Let your audience know beforehand that they can leave their feedback and comments related to your presentation or topic in the chat. For example, if someone comments that they can’t hear you properly you can try fixing your mic or raising your voice.

Get creative with your use of the chat feature to keep your audience engaged. Ask them to send a hand emoji if they can relate to something, or ask what they want to see first in your presentation.

13 Record Your Presentation

The best way to improve your Zoom presentation skills is to learn from your past mistakes. Thankfully, Zoom lets you record your presentations so you can revisit them later and analyze your performance.

zoom presentation - Zoom-Shot-of-Recording-Screen

Are you using too many hand gestures? Are you walking around too much? Are you speaking at a reasonable pace? Understanding how you did can help you do even better in the future.

You can also send your Zoom presentation recordings to a friend or family member so they can review it for you. It always helps to get the opinion of someone you trust.

How to Share Your Visme Presentation on Zoom

Thinking of creating your Zoom presentation in Visme? Great choice!

The best part is that you can easily share your Visme slides with your audience without needing to download the presentation on your computer.

Of course, you can still download your presentation in PowerPoint or PDF format if you need to.

Follow the steps below to share your Visme presentation on Zoom without downloading anything.

Step 1: Publish your presentation.

When you’re finished designing your presentation in Visme, navigate over to the top right corner of your screen, and click on “Share”.

Next, click on “Publish for Web” on your left, type in a title and description for your presentation, and click on “Publish and get my link”.

Step 2: Click on the Present button.

Once you’ve published your presentation, you can go back and click on the “Present” button at the top right of your screen. This will open up the Presenter view.

If you want to access your presenter notes, click on the video camera icon at the bottom right corner of your screen, and your notes will appear in a new window.

Step 3: Share your screen on Zoom.

From your Zoom meeting window, click on “Share Screen” and select the window with the Presenter view of your presentation.

zoom presentation - Share-your-Screen-on-Zoom

That’s it! You’ll now be able to look at the presenter notes on your screen while your audience views the slide open in your Presenter view window.

Alternatively, you can also download your presentation as a PowerPoint or PDF file, and share your screen in Zoom to present your slides.

Ready to Give a Memorable Zoom Presentation?

If you’re still getting used to the idea of presenting on Zoom, this article will help you prepare well and deliver an impactful presentation that people won’t be able to forget any time soon.

Remember, while Zoom presentations are different from presenting in person, you still need to be just as confident, dress to impress and make eye contact.

The only difference is that you need to put more effort into engaging your audience and keep them from dozing off in front of their computers.

Design a beautiful Zoom presentation and present online using Visme’s presentation maker. Sign up now for free and take it for a test drive!

Create beautiful presentations faster with Visme.

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About the Author

Mahnoor Sheikh is the content marketing manager at Visme. She has years of experience in content strategy and execution, SEO copywriting and graphic design. She is also the founder of MASH Content and is passionate about tea, kittens and traveling with her husband. Get in touch with her on LinkedIn .

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15 Tips for Engaging Zoom Presentations + Examples

featured images for 15 Zoom Presentation Tips

Your next Zoom presentation is a week away. And your mind is racing.

What presentation software should you use?

What if the other attendees can hear your neighbor’s loud music?

Will they find your presentation boring?

Relax and take a deep breath.

You don’t have to figure out the answers to these questions by yourself. This guide will cover everything you need to know about planning and delivering engaging Zoom presentations without stress and anxiety!

After reading this article, you’ll be brimming with confidence and competence on your next Zoom presentation.

Table of contents :

The science behind your Zoom presentation anxiety

  • Downloadable Zoom presentation checklist

Part 1: Tips on how to plan and prepare for your Zoom presentation

Part 2: tips during your zoom presentation.

  • How to share your Piktochart slide deck on Zoom
  • Present with ease on Zoom using Piktochart presentations

meme about zoom presentations

Before we get into all the other Zoom presentation tips, perhaps the most important is to deal with your Zoom presentation anxiety. And you’re not alone – anxiety over Zoom presentations is more common than you think . 

A  2021 paper  on why students have difficulties learning during synchronous presentations over Zoom found that 80 percent of the students polled experienced anxiety and trouble focusing during their virtual classes. But what causes this worry? In a peer-reviewed article, Professor Jeremy Bailenson, founding director of the  Stanford Virtual Human Interaction Lab , highlighted the  results of their research  and cited four primary reasons behind Zoom fatigue, stress, and anxiety:

  • Your brain interprets excessive amounts of close-up eye contact during video chats as an “intense situation.”
  • Like looking at the mirror, you become more critical of yourself as you see yourself on camera.
  • Limited movements while you’re chained in your chair and table.
  • Video chats require a higher cognitive load than face-to-face presentations. 
“You’ve got to make sure that your head is framed within the center of the video. If you want to show someone that you agree with them, you have to do an exaggerated nod or put your thumbs up. That adds cognitive load as you’re using mental calories in order to communicate,” shares Bailenson.

Finally, you have to consider tech troubles and presentation software fiascos, as well as dealing with the pressure of public speaking.

15 Zoom presentation tips and tricks to help you own the room like a pro

Now that you understand why Zoom presentations give you sweaty palms, let’s go through 15 actionable steps to prepare for the slides.

We created a checklist of the Zoom presentation tips so you can cross off each task.

a downloadable infographic showing 15 tips to engaging Zoom presentations

Prefer video learning instead? Watch the video below.

The success of your Zoom presentation is the result of thoughtful planning and preparation.

Get ready for your online class, product webinar, or job interview on Zoom with the following pre-presentation tips:

1. Decide on the scope of your Zoom presentation

Before presenting on Zoom, ask yourself — what one particular idea or insight would you want your audience to learn from you?

“Defining the scope is the most critical step. What are the boundaries, what are the deliverables, what is the topic that you are covering?”, recommends Linda Parry Murphy , CEO of Product Launchers, Inc.

Trying to cover every subject will only make you more nervous.

Remember the Stanford study earlier about too much cognitive load as one of the reasons behind Zoom presentation anxiety?

Limiting the scope of your presentation can significantly reduce your cognitive load while keeping your audience focused on the key points.

2. Plan for the structure of your online presentation

It’s important to master the sequence and structure of your presentation as part of your preparation. Creating a framework guides the meeting participants so they understand what the data means, why it’s important, and what the implications are in this situation.

A solid structure in place also makes it easier to go back to what you’re saying. As a result, you will feel more confident because you can keep track of your talking points with a quick glance at your outline if you lose your train of thought.

Matt Abrahams, a lecturer in Organizational Behavior and author of Speaking Up Without Freaking Out , recommends the following examples of presentation structures that you can use:

  • Past-Present-Future – review a process or share a timeline
  • Comparison-Contrast – show the benefits of a certain idea, insight, product, or service
  • Cause-Effect – explain the rationale behind a decision
  • Problem-Solution-Benefit – motivate or convince your audience
  • What?-So What?-Now What? – convince people to do a specific action after your presentation

Another simple presentation structure you can work on is to start with an introduction, the meat of your presentation where you can highlight 3 points, and wrap up with the summary and call-to-action.

3. Prepare your presentation visuals

Plenty of research and evidence shows that including images is more effective in getting your message across than written text or oral communications alone.

For instance, a captivating visual is  four times more effective  in conveying information than words alone. People remember 80 percent of what they see and do, compared to 20 percent through reading and 10 percent through hearing, respectively.

If your goal is to convince your audience during your Zoom presentation, you’ll also be delighted to know that using visuals can help you become more persuasive.

A Wharton School of Business research found that around a third of the audiences they polled felt that presenters who used visuals were more persuasive.

So remember that well-chosen images, even stock photos, can do wonders to augment your slides.

When making visuals for your presentation, use these questions as your guide:

  • Is there an icon, illustration, or image that could represent your point in a more meaningful way?
  • What types of diagrams , such as a timeline, flowchart, pie chart, arrows, or graphs, will help get your point across to your audience?
  • Who are my target audiences? When choosing visuals for my presentation, are there certain cultural taboos or inappropriate humor that I should be aware of?

One more thing – consider using bullet points if you find slides with walls of text. They’ll be easier to digest without taking the focus away from you.

4. Eliminate clutter in your surroundings

konmari meme remove clutter during virtual meetings

Staying in one place with no room to maneuver probably doesn’t spark joy for anyone. KonMari your environment by eliminating clutter on your desk and in the space around you. This means extra keyboards, unused notebooks, pens, food boxes, and books can go.

Eliminating clutter gives your brain the impression that there’s more room for you to move around during your Zoom event.

If the space you’re presenting in makes it difficult to clear off clutter, you could find a plain wall to present against. And if that’s not an option, you can use a clean virtual Zoom background . Keeping your surroundings out of sight means it’s out of mind for you and your audience; one less thing to worry about while presenting.

5. Do a tech prep

Presenting in Zoom while you’re at home or traveling is a technological wonder in itself. But technology can be frustrating at times too.

Spending some time optimizing your Zoom settings by clicking in the toolbar while you’re in a Zoom meeting. Under video settings, you’ll find a few options that can help with the visuals, such as focus assist.

Before your presentation, double-check the following:

  • Make sure that your laptop, computer, lighting, headset, webcam, microphone, and internet connection are working. Have backup equipment if possible.
  • Familiarize yourself with the Zoom app and other relevant software you’re going to use during the presentation.
  • Close unnecessary browsers, applications, or software before the presentation. Turn off your laptop or desktop notifications. The goal is to optimize and speed up the device to have a smooth presentation.
  • Prepare a PDF version of your presentation slides and have an extra copy of your presenter notes in case of technical mishaps with your slides. It also makes sense to have a short link to your presentation that you can share with the audience.
  • Position your notes in the right spot so you know where to find them while presenting.
  • Check Zoom settings and do a quick audio and video check.

6. Rehearse your presentation

After taking care of your surroundings and equipment, the next step is to prepare yourself.

Practicing your Zoom presentation in advance can help boost your confidence. Here are some tips to help you rehearse well for your presentation:

  • Screen record yourself. Afterward, check your recorded video for technical issues, your body language, and whether or not your voice is audible or not.
  • Practice with a family member or friend who can give feedback on any distracting nonverbal communication habits like too many hand gestures.
  • Rehearse in the same room where you’ll be presenting. Use the same lighting, computer setup, and everything.
  • Practice speaking to the camera, not your computer screen.

If you’re not used to face-to-face presentations, you could record your presentation and watch it back. I know, I know – it can feel so uncomfortable watching yourself. But a quick analysis will reveal if you use too many hand gestures, that can be distracting, and also if you need to reposition your camera so it shows your upper body while presenting.

The time has come for presentation day! You already know the ins and outs of your presentation, and you’ve practiced your Zoom presentation skills to a T. A couple of checks you can do before you start are:

  • Make sure you’re in a quiet area to minimize any potential interruptions.
  • Do a test call with a friend to check the internet connection and if you’ll stay connected.

Take note of the following tips and hacks to make your Zoom presentation engaging and anxiety-free during your webinar or talk:

7. Dress the part

Wear clothes that are appropriate for your presentation and audience. It also helps to be more mindful of your accessories and hairstyle. The outfits and accessories you wear during your Zoom meeting will speak volumes about you as a person.

For example, if you’re presenting to your coworkers, wear work clothes. If you’re pitching to a group of angel investors, wearing a tie can help convey that you’re serious and trustworthy. However, this may not be a good idea if you’re presenting to a group that is more open to change and tends to be more relaxed when it comes to conventional standards.

Another benefit of dressing the part is what you wear actually impacts how you think. Wearing formal clothes can improve abstract thinking and give you a broader sense of perspective, which is influential in helping you make better decisions.

8. Ditch the chair

Standing up when presenting in Zoom rather than sitting down helps you become more confident because you’re not hunched down on your chair.

Standing straight with your shoulders back also enables you to breathe easily, making your voice sound more powerful and confident. Finally, it allows you to move more and make explanatory gestures which is a charisma boost.

The more confident you appear in your presentation, the more confident you’re likely to feel.

“When your mind starts to feel more confident and powerful — it starts to see those challenging situations not as threats but as opportunities,” shares Harvard psychologist professor Amy Cuddy.

If you can’t stand up during your presentation, try to sit straight in your chair and back up your camera a little to show your upper body and not just your face.

9. Have a memorable introduction

Vanessa Van Edwards' tips on the ISSAAQQ method in opening a presentation for your zoom meetings

National best-selling author and founder at Science of People Vanessa Van Edwards specifically recommends opening your presentation with IISSAAQQ to make it more memorable. IISSAAQQ stands for: 

  • I cebreaker
  • I llustration
  • S hort story
  • S tatistic or surprising fact
  • A nalogy or metaphor

Bonus points if you can weave in humor with some background information with a relevant fact. Research found that more popular talks used humor 12.92 times, whereas less popular talks used humor only 3.92 times on average.

You don’t have to force a joke – humor could just be a play on words or surprising the audience with a funny image or meme that contrasts with a statement. Nothing breaks the ice better than laughter.

10. Look your audience in the eye (or rather your webcam)

Looking your audience in the eye is easier during face-to presentations than Zoom presentations. It can be a little tricky during online meetings because we tend to look at people’s faces on the computer screen. Maintain eye contact by looking into your webcam.

“A good idea is to lower the monitor camera a little so that you don’t have to tilt your head back to gaze up at it. If you can’t help looking at someone’s face on the screen instead of their camera, it helps to move the Zoom window to the part of the screen nearest to the camera so at least you’re looking at approximately the right place when you’re looking at their face,” shares Carol Kinsey Goman , Ph.D., executive coach and international keynote speaker.

You could treat the camera as if you were doing a face-to-face presentation. This way, it’ll be a bit simpler to hold eye contact with your audience when you’re not looking at your notes.

11. Think happy thoughts

Find ways to boost your mood before your presentation. Aside from helping you feel good (which in turn can boost your confidence), you’re also likely to smile often with happy thoughts. 

When you smile at your audience, they will also likely “mirror” your action and think happy thoughts. 

“Mirroring is relevant to our tendency to be empathetic. When I see you smiling, my mirror neurons for smiling fire up, and I get your state of mind right away. I feel it as you feel it. We need that mirroring in order to create a full empathic response to other people,” describes Marco Iacoboni , author of  Mirroring People  and UCLA professor. 

When you’re having a good time and sharing enthusiasm with your audience, they’ll reciprocate through their nonverbal communication. This means fewer folded arms and blank stares and more nodding along and smiles.

12. Delegate the chatbox

Have someone else take care of Zoom chat or manage the waiting room to keep you from being distracted. This person could be the meeting host, a colleague, or someone you trust who has your back during your presentation.

13. Engage your audience

A boring presentation is when there’s no interaction, and you’re being spoken at (hello, university lectures). You’ll be able to tell from everyone’s body language in the meeting room.

Make your presentation a two-way street. Here are some ways to encourage interaction and participation amongst your audience during your Zoom meetings:

  • Ask questions. For example, if you’re presenting a team productivity software in Zoom, ask your audience about their top productivity problems at work. You can also use this time as an opportunity to transition to your next presentation slide.
  • If you have a small audience, remember each person’s name and address them using their first names.
  • Use visuals like illustrations, infographics, or a short video clip in your slide show. Tool recommendation : Use Piktochart Video to transform a long video into short clips.
  • Use interactive quizzes while presenting online to change the pace and keep your audience engaged.

14. Talk like a human and avoid too much jargon

Alright, what does talking like a human mean in Zoom presentations?

For a start, avoid talking too much jargon and corporate speak. It makes you more relatable, keep your audience’s attention longer because your points will be easier to understand, and also helps you stand out from other presenters.

Just because you’re presenting in virtual meetings doesn’t mean you’re not talking to people. The only difference is you’re sharing your presentation in front of your camera instead of in front of the lecture room.

Next, improve your visual storytelling skills . Your presentation will be more memorable if you briefly share a story and pair it with visuals. Sign up for our free visual storytelling course . Check out the teaser video below.

15. Slow down

When you’re anxious and not too confident about your Zoom presentation, you’ll tend to speak fast, which in turn will make you more nervous. It’s a vicious cycle.

When presenting in Zoom, be mindful of your pace. Slowing down will not only take the edge off your nerves but also make you appear more confident.

Don’t be scared of pauses or gaps between your statements. Sometimes, you might need a sip of water to hydrate your throat. Other times, you could use the pauses as extra emphasis to drive key points.

Slowing down and changing up your talking pace will help you deliver an impactful presentation because you’ll have more control and be better able to drive the point home.

5 presentation examples and templates

To make presenting your Zoom presentation easy, here are some presentation templates and examples for inspiration.

Quarterly finance update

Have a big meeting coming up where you need to share sales performance and revenue figures? We’ve got you covered with this template.

It’s equipped with graphs where you can easily drop your revenue figures in and share performance with customizable graphs. There are also template slides for customer feedback and if your team is planning to introduce new processes.

financial update template

Marketing strategy plan template

This marketing strategy slide deck is perfect if you’re onboarding a new client and want to walk them through your research, analysis, and proposed actions.

marketing strategy plan template

Group project

Presenting your collaborative project in a Zoom meeting to your classmates? Take the worry off so you can focus on sharing the results by using this science group project template .

Despite the name, you can use it for any kind of school or university project because the structure works for any type of research presentation. The template has slides for:

  • Group introduction
  • Your hypothesis/basis for the project
  • Your theory
  • How you tested the theory
  • Key takeaways

piktochart template of science group project

Buyer persona template

The customer buying journey is always evolving, and you might need to present a case study to leadership or your team on recent findings. Our template makes it simple to share your customer’s story, as the template has slides for:

  • The customer profile
  • Motivations/goals
  • Personal insights
  • Responsibilities

Piktochart template for buyer personas

Team update in the all-hands meeting

It’s common for managers, or project leads to update the company with their results in company meetings. In these cases, you might just need a single slide to share your progress.

This work breakdown structure template does the job, giving you space to share what your team’s objectives were, what the key results were, who was involved, and what the shipping date was for these goals.

single-slide work breakdown structure template for online presentations

How to share your Piktochart slide deck on Zoom 

Step 1 : On the Piktochart editor, click Share to get the link to your presentation. 

By default, your presentation is not publicly visible.

Step 2 : Copy and paste the link into your browser bar. Then, click the Show Presentation button. This will launch in fullscreen presentation mode, and now you’re ready to shine. 

Step 3: Click Share Screen on your Zoom account and choose the browser with the Piktochart link.

For a visual demonstration, watch the short tutorial below with detailed instructions.

Ready to deliver your presentation? 

That’s it for our Zoom presentation tips; now over to you.

You have a brilliant idea or insight to present, and you need to share them with your audience in your next Zoom presentation. It’s high time you nail it with the virtual presentation tips we outlined in this guide. 

Take Piktochart for a test drive  today and create your next presentation slide minus the stress using our free presentation maker .

Kaitomboc

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Easy PowerPoint Zoom Tutorial (Free Templates & Examples)

Sara Wanasek

Sara Wanasek

Easy PowerPoint Zoom Tutorial (Free Templates & Examples)

Tired of navigating your slides in a chronological order? Looking for ways to spice up the way you interact with your presentation and engage your audience?

Transform your boring presentations into something more engaging and captivating with PowerPoint’s Zoom feature. PowerPoint Zoom allows you to create dynamic, non-linear presentations. Think of it as building a Prezi inside PowerPoint. Jump from one point in your presentation to the next seamlessly by creating links to the different sections of your presentation.

By utilizing PowerPoint’s Slide Zoom, Section Zoom, and Summary Zoom, you can easily create an entertaining and engaging presentation for your audience. There are many different ways to add these to your presentation, so read on to learn how to use PowerPoint Zoom and implement it in the best ways!

Table of Contents

What is powerpoint zoom.

PowerPoint’s Zoom feature is a tool that allows you to create interactive PowerPoint presentations . It enables you to zoom in and out of specific sections or slides, creating a more dynamic and immersive experience for your audience. With PowerPoint Zoom , you can easily create links or “zoom areas” on your slides such that when clicked during a presentation, can allow you to navigate to specific slides or sections and focus on the content that is most relevant at any given time—there’s no need to be stuck with whatever slide is chronologically next.

Why Use PowerPoint Zoom?

PowerPoint Zoom lets you present in a more flexible and interactive way. For instance, you can create a dynamic menu that allows your audience to help you choose which topics to cover first. With just a click, you can jump to that slide or section and relay that information.

PowerPoint Zoom is also particularly useful for storytelling , guiding your audience through a series of complex information without being restricted to a traditional linear slide progression.

No need for hyperlinks, tedious work, or coding—PowerPoint Zoom allows for a seamless setup and flow of your presentation.

Let’s dive right in and discover how to make a zoom effect in PowerPoint!

How to Make a Zoom Effect in PowerPoint?

PowerPoint’s Zoom feature consists of three different options: Slide Zoom, Section Zoom, and Summary Zoom. While their setups are similar, the reasons for using each one vary.

How to Make a Zoom Effect in PowerPoint?

Below we will delve into each of these PowerPoint Zoom options in depth.

Download our FREE PowerPoint Zoom template to follow along! 👇

Slide Zoom PowerPoint Templates

Turn your PowerPoint into an interactive experience today with this Slide Zoom template!

When to use Slide Zoom? ⏲️

Slide Zoom, as the name suggests, allows you to create links and “zoom in” on the content of another slide without following the traditional slide-to-slide progression. This comes in especially handy when you want to direct your audience’s attention to a particular image, chart, or piece of information on a slide instantly.

How to use Slide Zoom? 💻

1. Select the Main Starting Slide : To use PowerPoint Slide Zoom, first select the starting slide where you intend to apply the Zoom effect. In our example, we are using the Iceberg Model illustration as our starting slide. We want to zoom into the different description slides from our Iceberg Model slide.

2. Access the Slide Zoom Feature : Next, click Insert > Zoom > Slide Zoom . From here, choose the slide, or slides, that you want to zoom into. Click Insert and a thumbnail or thumbnails of the slides will appear on your current slide.

powerpoint slide zoom

3. Rearrange the Thumbnails : Rearrange the thumbnails on your slide to match your design and layout.

4. Test the Slide Zoom: Now, in presentation mode, when you click on the slide thumbnails, you can zoom into the particular slides!

With a smooth Slide Zoom effect, you will notice that transitioning from slide to slide has become significantly more engaging!

Zoom Option: Zoom Background

Zoom Background

Notice the thick outline of each slide you added to Zoom? Let’s remove that for a cleaner, more professional look on your slides. 

To do that, click on the added Zoom slide thumbnail , then click the Zoom tab in the PowerPoint ribbon. Now, click on the Zoom Background option to hide the default background and match the background of the thumbnail to the background of your current slide.

Zoom Option: Return to Zoom

Another customizable option is the Return to Zoom feature.

With the current setup of Slide Zoom, once you click on the Zoom thumbnail and navigate to the zoomed in slide, you cannot return to the main starting slide. In other words, you will move on to the next slide in a linear order, with essentially an added zoom transition.

On the other hand, by applying Return to Zoom, you will be brought back to your main starting slide every time instead. This way you can click change the order of your slides. For example, with Return to Zoom enabled, when I can click on next slide after clicking on the “Phase #3 The Structure” slide, I will be brought back to the main starting slide instead of the “Phase #4 Mental Models” slide.

Return to Zoom

To make this happen, after selecting each of your Zoom slide thumbnails, simply click on the Return to Zoom option from the Zoom tab. 

Section Zoom

When to use section zoom ⏲️.

While Slide Zoom allows you to zoom into one slide at a time, Section Zoom allows you to zoom into a specific section containing multiple related slides of your presentation. This is especially helpful for longer presentations or presentations with multiple topics. 

How to use Section Zoom? 💻

Here, we have a deck about the Solar System. Each planet has its own section with a couple slides underneath each section. Our main slide has an overview of the whole Solar System. In this case, I would like to be able to click on a planet, then be able to learn more about that planet. You can easily do this with Section Zoom!

1. Select the Main Starting Slide : Similar to PowerPoint Slide Zoom, you have to select a starting slide where you intend to apply the Zoom effect for Section Zoom. Here we are using the Solar System slide as our main starting slide where we can zoom into the different planet sections.

2. Access the Section Zoom Feature : On the overview slide, click Insert > Zoom > Section Zoom . Then choose the sections you would like to Zoom into and click Insert . The thumbnails of the first slide of each section will appear in your current slide.

Zoom Option: Change the Image

Don’t like how the different thumbnails are making your slide looks cluttered, fret not, you can change the thumbnail image of your slides for easier viewing. 

zoom presentation examples

To do this, right-click on the zoom slide thumbnail and select Change Image . Then, substitute it with an image or screenshot from your device. For instance, you can take screenshots of the different segments in your slide to “hide” the zoom slide thumbnails underneath these screenshots.

Now, when you enter presentation mode, instead of clicking z zoom slide thumbnail, you can click on a planet to zoom into a desired section! Watch this video to learn exactly how to do it! 

Summary Zoom

When to use summary zoom ⏲️.

The third and final PowerPoint Zoom feature is Summary Zoom. It lets you create a summary or overview slide that acts as a hub for your presentation. It is perfect for those times when you want to give your audience a quick recap or provide them with a visual roadmap of your presentation.

Similar to Section Zoom, Summary Zoom contains links to specific sections or slides in your presentation, allowing you to navigate to the most relevant parts of your presentation. The main distinction lies in the fact that the Summary Zoom feature will automatically generate a summary slide containing thumbnails of each section or slide for your convenience.

How to use Summary Zoom? 💻

1. Select the Main Starting Slide : Similar to both PowerPoint Slide Zoom and Section Zoom, you have to select a starting slide where you intend to apply the Zoom effect for Summary

2. Access the Summary Soon Feature : To use PowerPoint Summary Zoom, click Insert > Zoom > Summary Zoom . This will create a new slide that displays a summary of your presentation, with thumbnails of each slide.

zoom presentation examples

3. Customize Appearance : You can customize the appearance of the Summary Zoom slide by selecting the Format tab. Here, you can choose from various layouts, fonts, and colors to make the slide visually appealing and aligned with your presentation’s theme.

During your presentation, easily navigate to any slide by clicking on the different Zoom slide thumbnails. It’s a great way to give your audience an easy-to-follow roadmap and ensure they stay engaged and focused throughout your presentation.

Real-World PowerPoint Zoom Examples to Engage Your Audience

Here are some real-life examples of how to use PowerPoint Zoom to create engaging and immersive presentations: 

  • Sales Pitch

Create interactive slides with zoomed-in images and key features for your products or services. By allowing the audience to explore products in detail, you can generate more interest and engagement during a pitch.

  • Educational Lecture with Organised Sections

Similar to our Solar System deck, you can organize your presentation into sections so that students can go through the presentations at their own pace starting with what interests them the most.

Add interactive questions to the presentation using ClassPoint , to make it even more engaging. 

  • Team Meeting Roadmap

Create an engaging team meeting with Summary Zoom. Highlight key milestones and deliverables in a visual and clear roadmap to help the team stay focused and engaged throughout the meeting.

  • Interactive Visuals 

Use maps and charts as your overview slide and add zoom slide thumbnails of added information to showcase further data, information, and analytics. 

  • Virtual Tours or Walkthroughs

Simulate a virtual tour or walkthrough using images on your slides. Add the Zoom feature to replicate “moving” from one “location” to another.

PowerPoint Zoom FAQ

Here are some common FAQ’s about this powerful tool:

What are the differences between the PowerPoint Zoom Options? 

Slide Zoom zooms from one slide to the next while Section Zoom zooms into a whole section of your presentation before bringing you back to the overview slide. The Summary Zoom option provides you with a Table-of-Contents-like slide for an easy overview of your whole presentation. 

How to make Prezi in PowerPoint? 

You can make a PowerPoint that looks similar to Prezi with PowerPoint’s Zoom feature. With your selected slide to Zoom into, click on the Insert tab, Zoom, and select Slide, Section, or Summary Zoom.

Can I use PowerPoint Zoom on any version of PowerPoint?

PowerPoint Zoom is available on PowerPoint 2019, PowerPoint 2016, and PowerPoint for Microsoft 365. Make sure you have the latest version to take advantage of this feature.

Will my audience need any special software to view the Zoom features?

No, your audience does not need any special software. The Zoom features will work seamlessly when you present your PowerPoint file on any device with PowerPoint installed.

Can I use Zoom in combination with other PowerPoint animations and transitions?

Yes, you can! PowerPoint Zoom works well with other animations and transitions, allowing you to create a truly immersive and engaging presentation.

Can I edit or remove Zoom features from my presentation?

Absolutely! You can easily edit or remove Zoom features from your presentation at any time. Just follow the steps outlined in this blog post to make any necessary changes.

Yay! You now can create an even more engaging presentation with PowerPoint’s Zoom feature. 

The versatility and impact of PowerPoint Zoom can be used in various settings. By incorporating this feature into your presentations, you can captivate your audience, enhance information retention, and create a memorable experience for your listeners. 

Experience the power of PowerPoint Slide Zoom firsthand! Begin by exploring our templates and seamlessly integrate this feature into your upcoming presentations.

About Sara Wanasek

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  • Presentation Design

Zoom Presentation Tips for an Effective and Professional Online Meeting

Camille del Rosario

Camille del Rosario

zoom presentation examples

So many of us have transitioned to a work-from-home setup. We’ve pretty much gotten used to the reality of “going to the office” remotely — but still, it’s hard to shake off the culture shock of giving presentations and holding meetings online.

Zoom is one of the most widely chosen platforms for video conferences because of its simple user interface — you just “enter” a “room” full of people and take part in the conversation. Sounds easy enough, right?

But in the past year or so, we’ve seen a lot of Zoom fails — mostly relatable, but sometimes unforgettably embarrassing.

From people forgetting to unmute themselves before speaking to children or puppies showing up in the middle of an important meeting … the possibilities are, unfortunately, endless.

But while Zoom fails can be a great way to lighten up a conversation, it’s not ideal when they happen during your presentation. Here are a few Zoom presentation tips to help you create an effective and professional online meeting.

How to Prepare for Your Zoom Presentation

We can all agree that virtual presentations are a challenging new landscape. But with the right preparation and techniques, you’ll be well on your way to holding a successful Zoom presentation that drives your point home and leaves a lasting impression on your listeners.

The best way to avoid mistakes — and epic fails — is by simply anticipating them. Design, preparation, and even your desk set up all play an important role.

zoom presentation examples

Design a Stunning Presentation

Before you start trying to navigate the Zoom platform and send invites to your audience, first things first: you need to create your presentation . And if you think that this is an easy task that just requires slapping some text on a plain white PowerPoint background, think again.

How your presentation slides look can make or break your entire talk track and spell the difference between your audience listening to you or getting distracted with something else. You can check out some of the hottest presentation design trends for inspiration. Meanwhile, here are some tips on designing a stunning presentation:

Keep it Simple and Straightforward

Because your talk is virtual, you need to fight harder to keep your audience focused on you and not their Slack feed.

In a virtual setting, the best practice is to keep your slides simple and minimalist. Avoid too many elements that can make your audience dizzy. Remember that they’ll be viewing your slides from their computer screens, so you don’t want to use colors and text that can strain the eyes.

Use large text so your viewers don’t have to squint to read your slides. And minimize the amount of text — never require your audience to read too much, because they should be watching and listening to you more.

Choose Your Visuals Carefully

Keeping it simple doesn’t mean you can’t add visuals to your presentation. Visual cues such as illustrations, graphs, charts, and images play an important role in keeping your audience engaged and allowing them to understand your message better through image association.

zoom presentation examples

There are many types of visuals that you can incorporate into your slides. Among these include:

  • Charts & Graphs. Information in charts and graphs is much easier to understand than plain enumeration. Help your audience understand numbers and statistics better through data visualization.
  • Maps. Just mentioning or writing down a location is forgettable and uninteresting. Using a map can make relevant locations more memorable.
  • Videos. Videos should be used sparingly, because remember, your presentation itself is already a complete audiovisual presentation. Use short clips that will help explain a point, provide instructions, or give background information about your topic. When adding a video to your deck, use only one video per slide.
  • Icons & Illustrations. Often, you can reduce your word count by replacing them with easy-to-associate icons instead. Plus, they look great!
  • Stock Photos. You can emphasize your information with stock photos or use full-screen images as backgrounds. Make sure all stock photos are high-quality and relevant to your topic.
  • GIFs & Memes. If you want to add a lighthearted and fun nature to your presentation, you can consider adding relevant GIFs and memes. Cool motion graphics can catch the attention of your audience. But don’t overdo the memes — stay professional and keep to the point.

Be careful not to flood your slides with too many visuals to avoid distracting your audience. Also, add only visuals that are relevant to the topic or that provide value. If the visuals are unnecessary, it’s best not to include them at all.

Q: How can I add interest to a boring presentation?

A: You can make your presentation more engaging for your audience by following the best design practices and implementing them in your deck. Use visuals that are striking, embrace data visualization, and use less text.

It will also help to practice your delivery and speak in a friendly and captivating manner. Your speaking speed, intonations, and tone of voice all matter when it comes to keeping your audience engaged. Also, make your presentation more interactive and involve your audience in the conversation.

Q: How can I make a Zoom presentation more interactive?

It’s much harder to make your presentation more interactive when you’re alone in a room and talking to people on your computer — but it’s not impossible. And it all starts with your presentation slide design .

Some interactive elements that you can add include:

  • Animation. You can incorporate animations into your deck in the form of slide transitions or animating each bullet point to appear one after the other. The latter also helps keep the focus on each important item.
  • Links. Slides can be more dynamic with links. You can set up specific slides to lead to other elements, another slide, to an external web page, etc.
  • Hover effects. Hover effects can give dramatic suspense before you reveal certain key points or answers to interactive quizzes. By programming hover effects, boxes in your slides can disappear to reveal text or images when you move your mouse above it.

Do Your Homework

Zoom is popular because it’s not too demanding on your internet connection and — most importantly — it’s pretty easy to use. But that’s not to say that you don’t need to take some time familiarizing yourself with them.

zoom presentation examples

Zoom has various features that you have to be familiar with finding, enabling, or disabling to suit your presentation and preferences. It’s understandable for beginners to be overwhelmed — but don’t be. All you have to do is a bit of research.

Learning how to properly use and maximize Zoom beforehand can go a long way in turning a meeting from a yawn-inducing, error-filled meeting to a professional and effective presentation. Here are some keyboard shortcuts you may need to use:

  • Muting your audio: ALT + A for Windows/ PC; CMD + CTRL + A for Mac
  • Pausing your video: ALT + V for Windows/ PC; CMD + CTRL + V for Mac

Plan Thoroughly

Adequate planning is key to a successful Zoom presentation. You need to consider various matters beforehand, such as your schedule, your team’s schedule, where you’ll be holding the presentation, the materials that you need to prepare, if any.

Make a checklist of every non-negotiable thing that you need come presentation day and tick off items one by one as early as possible. Planning can help you ensure that you won’t encounter any problems, and if they do, you’ll be able to solve them easily and quickly.

Set Up Your Desk and Background

Your presentation is likely to be recorded — in fact, it better be, so that absent (or absent-minded) teammates have the chance to watch it again later. But remember, everything that is captured by your camera is noticeable. Any faux pas can be replayed! Your background can make or break your ability to keep your audience focused on you and the topic you’re discussing. So build it wisely.

Set up a desk in an area with a clean background that doesn’t have too many elements or potential distractions. Positioning yourself in front of a clean, solid wall is a good option.

But you can also allow your backdrop to add interest or facilitate your story. For example, a shelf of relevant awards can support your authority and professional acumen.

On the other hand, a nature-oriented background — like a window overlooking your garden or the trees in your background — can create a calmer impression that won’t intimidate your audience. (With a setup like this, though, just avoid placing yourself against the light!)

If you can’t find a spot with a good enough background for your presentation, Zoom has a selection of backdrops that can be integrated into your video. However, the downside here is that they don’t always detect your features well, which risks a low-quality appearance.

Check Your Presentation Equipment

The last thing you want is for your equipment to malfunction during your presentation. This is not only awkward — it’s also disruptive and unproductive. Check your equipment at least a day before your scheduled presentation. On the big day, enter the Zoom meeting room early and test out your equipment again.

zoom presentation examples

Here’s a list of the things you need to check on:

  • Internet connection. A lagging video or audio can be frustrating for you and your audience. A tried-and-tested strong connection is good on its own, but having a backup connection is a great bonus.
  • Laptop performance and battery life. Empty your recycle bin and do a quick performance check. If you’re on a laptop, you also need to make sure your battery life can last until the end of your presentation. Better yet, keep it plugged in and charging.
  • Camera placement. Enter your Zoom presentation room before everyone else arrives to find the proper camera placement. It should be at eye level so your audience will see your face — not any higher or lower.
  • Working audio and video. Audio and video problems are more common than ideal in Zoom presentations. You can test these by starting a Zoom test meeting or opening the Zoom app and going to the audio and video settings.

Use a Quality Microphone

The built-in microphone on your laptop or PC can work for regular day-to-day meetings or team huddles. But for important presentations, you might want to look for better-quality options.

Built-in mics tend to make your voice sound muffled and distant, which can be a challenge when delivering important points. A high-quality external microphone that can deliver the best sound and allow your audience to hear you better and more clearly — so consider investing in one.

There are mics that can be plugged into your laptop’s USB port and set as the audio source. Getting noise-canceling headphones may also be a good idea for interactive presentations so you don’t have trouble hearing your audience’s questions or clarifications.

Take Precautions for Potential Interruptions

As much as possible, don’t hold your presentation in a public place, such as a cafe or restaurant. You want to minimize distractions and potential interruptions.

Go to a quiet area, lock the door, and instruct your housemates not to disturb you for the next hour or two. Be aware of any scheduled maintenance or renovation activities in or around your building.

Aside from physical interruptions, your laptop or computer notifications can also disrupt your meeting. Turn off or mute all notifications. In macOS, you can set your laptop to “Do Not Disturb.” On a Windows PC, toggle on “Focus Assist.”

Put Your Notes in the Right Place

For online presentations, it might not be a good idea to have hand-written or printed notes to serve as your guide. This can cause you to lose eye contact with your audience when you look way from your screen too often. Here are some ideas for note placement:

  • Written, printed out, or in a separate window outside Zoom. Use real sticky notes or your system text editor for your cheat sheet. Place the notes on your screen without obstructing Zoom’s UI so that you can keep your chin up and face your listeners while glancing at your guide.
  • On a second monitor. Use a second monitor to present your slide decks to your audience, while being able to glance at it every time you need to.
  • In-app features. You also may want to consider using the Presenter View feature on PowerPoint and Google Slides, which privately displays your next slide without you having to click on it. This is visible only to you and not your audience, allowing for a smooth transition between topics.

Or better yet, show off your command for the subject matter by skipping the external notes! Create your presentation slides in a way that helps you remember your points for discussion.

Wear a Professional Outfit

If you think you can get away with wearing formal attire on your upper body and not changing out of your pajama bottoms, think again. We’ve seen too many epic Zoom fails where people absentmindedly stand up during the meeting and reveal that they’re not completely dressed!

zoom presentation examples

Wear appropriate and professional clothing, like a well-pressed shirt and some actual pants. Not only does this help you appear more credible and professional, but it also gives you the confidence to deliver your presentation, whether or not your teammates see the whole outfit.

Q: How do I look more professional in my Zoom presentation?

A: The night before your Zoom presentation, scour your closet for your best business attire and lay it out. A collared polo and slacks work best, but smart casual outfits can also work, depending on the theme of your presentation (and your workplace culture).

We know it can be tedious to go the extra mile dressing up when you’re just at home. But think of this Zoom meeting as if it was being conducted in person. Dress to impress — your audience will appreciate it.

Q: What is the best color to wear in a Zoom meeting?

A: Computer screens can show colors differently, which is why it’s important to pay attention to the color you wear to your presentation. As a general rule, choose a shade that contrasts well with your background — a light shirt for a dark background, or a dark shirt for a light background.

You also want to avoid loud patterns and prints as this can make your video look cluttered and distracting. But bold, deep, or bright colors can be an impactful and positive statement — for example, a striking red, a glamorous fuchsia, or a brilliant turquoise.

Rehearse Your Presentation to Get Ready

Rehearsing your speech is different from memorizing it entirely. You don’t want to sound like a robot. The most interactive and memorable presentations are natural, authentic, and open to audience participation.

Presentation rehearsal is more about internalization than memorization. Deliver your presentation in front of a mirror, or perhaps to a friend or family member, to get a better sense of how your speech will flow.

You (or your practice audience) might be able to catch important oversights in your presentation — things you need to mention, issues you need to address, or technical information you need to elaborate on further.

Focus on practicing your tone of voice, the pace of delivery, and body language. Research thoroughly about your subject matter — try to be more knowledgeable than your audience so that you can answer relevant questions. On the day of your presentation, you’ll be able to say with confidence, “I can do this! I’ve done it before.”

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Deliver on the Day Of: How to Present Your Zoom Presentation

Of course, preparation is just the first step of the presentation process. There are still a few things you need to do on the day of your presentation. Below is a list of the best practices you should remember and apply when delivering a speech via Zoom.

“Spotlight” Your Video

By default, Zoom displays the video window of whoever is speaking. While this is beneficial in team huddles to put a spotlight on the speaker, it’s not ideal for presentations.

In this case, you are the key speaker, so you need to set your meeting room to display only your screen throughout the entire presentation.

You can do this by spotlighting your screen — a built-in Zoom feature. Once you’re in your meeting, go to your video window, click the three-dot menu icon and select “Spotlight Video.”

“Make Eye Contact” by Looking Into the Camera

It can be more difficult to maintain eye contact in an online presentation because, well, you technically can’t do that.

Everyone you’re talking to shows up on a little thumbnail in different parts of the screen. Naturally, our eyes gravitate towards the eyes of the person we’re talking to, just like in real life.

But the dynamic is a little different in a Zoom meeting. When you look at your audience’s individual boxes in a Zoom meeting room, you actually appear to be looking down on the screen. And that’s not a good thing if you want to keep your listeners engaged.

A little bit of adjustment is required here: Train yourself to look straight at your built-in or external camera while speaking. Even if you can’t see the faces of your audience, they know that you’re “looking” at them and maintaining eye contact.

Start With an Ice Breaker

You’re about to give a helpful, valuable, informative presentation. But before you start, you want to set the tone of your presentation first. And the best mood to start with is, of course, a positive one.

Your first few words are the most important parts of your entire talk. It will take less than five seconds for your audience to decide whether you’re charismatic, powerful, interesting, and overall worth listening to. So you want to get that good energy going as early as possible.

Lighten up the energy in the meeting room with a little icebreaker. Here are some ideas you can get inspiration from:

  • Tell a joke.
  • Reveal a shocking fact or statistic.
  • Ask a question.
  • Use interesting props.
  • Show a captivating visual.
  • Start with a quote.
  • Tell a short story.

Engage Your Audience Frequently

You’re not in an empty conference room — you’re in an online meeting, and as the speaker, you’re competing with the different real-life distractions that each of your audience members may have, wherever they are.

So now and then, your audience may need a little extra help getting their focus back during your presentation. Take a short break every five to 10 minutes and use the opportunity to check in with their audience. How are they doing? Do they have any questions? Start a conversation that will prompt them to think or provide their own input.

Q: How do I engage with my audience in a Zoom presentation?

A: To engage your audience during your presentation, you can ask them questions, tell a story, or encourage them to share their thoughts about the previous topic. You can also design your deck in a way that captures attention every one or two slides by breaking them apart with engaging videos or animations .

Don’t Forget to Record Your Presentation

Everyone in the Zoom meeting will be able to gauge how well you did — except you. It’s a good idea to record your presentation so that you can rewatch it and spot points for improvement. You can also send the recording over to the attendees in case they need it as a resource.

zoom presentation examples

Remember to save the chat log in case there are members who prefer to ask their questions using the built-in chatbox. The chat history usually gets deleted after the meeting, but it may contain valuable information that you can refer back to in the future.

To automatically save the chatbox, go to your Zoom settings and access the “In Meeting (Basic)” tab. Hover to the Chat section and toggle on the setting for automatically saving in-meeting chats.

Ready to Ace Your Next Zoom Presentation?

Holding a presentation on Zoom is a new and often challenging experience. But with these tips in your arsenal, we have no doubt you’ll ace your presentation and provide real, actionable value to your audience!

For more information about perfecting your next online presentation, check out this article about presentation do’s and dont’s .

And if all this seems like a lot of work … well, we kind of agree. On top of everything you have to do as a presenter, you also need to come up with beautiful, on-brand slides. Worry not — Design Pickle is here to help. With Design Pickle’s Presentation Design services, you can impress your colleagues (and yourself!) with engaging, well-designed presentation designs.

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Zoom presentation tips to bring human connection into virtual meetings

Get your team on prezi – watch this on demand video.

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Līva Luriņa November 01, 2021

Gartner has acknowledged Zoom as a leader in meeting solutions for the sixth year in a row. That’s well deserved, as it’s pretty challenging to find a person in the digital world who’s never joined a Zoom meeting.

In a sea of countless Zoom presentations , it’s crucial to stand out in order to succeed. But what’s the best way to tell your story, engage your audience, and avoid virtual meeting fatigue ? Through personal connection.

Read on to learn the nine best Zoom presentation tips to help you build a human connection in the era of virtual meetings and discover 11 handy Zoom hacks to advance your Zoom presentation skills.

Zoom Presentation

1. Do your homework

The most important Zoom presentation tip is to think about your audience before thinking about the slides. You need to understand their expectations to bring value and build a real connection.

Consider things about your audience such as:

  • What do they need or want from your Zoom presentation?
  • Challenges or fears they face
  • Tone of voice or vocabulary that is the most appropriate to use
  • Examples or stories can they relate to

Once you’ve answered these questions, you can design your presentation accordingly. It’s a good idea to modify your presentation each time you face a new group of people.

2. Tell a story

There’s no better way to create an emotional connection with the audience than telling a story. Including storytelling in presentations will also help them better understand and remember information that’s important both in business and education.

But how do you actually include a story in your presentation? To really unlock all the potential, the storyline has to be connected to your main goal and, following the best Zoom presentation tips, carried throughout the whole presentation.

First, clarify what emotion you want to evoke, whether it’s surprise, joy, desire, anger, or anything else. Think of relatable examples, statistics, jokes, or experiences that will resonate with your audience. When you see people nodding their heads, that’s usually a sign that you’re nailing the presentation, and you’ve made an emotional connection with your audience (or they’re practicing active listening skills :)).

Elena Valentine, CEO of Skillscout, uses Prezi Video to show the importance of storytelling in presentation and shares some tips to help you hone in on using story as the ultimate attention grabber. Learn all about it in here video.

3. Visual vs. textual information 

Zoom presentations with visual aids are 43% more persuasive than those without. The human brain loves visuals – they make it easier to quickly process the message compared to slides with text. Also, ideas presented graphically are easier to comprehend and remember than those presented through text alone.

zoom presentation examples

To bring the human connection to your Zoom presentation, you need all eyes on you. If your audience is focused on reading lines or bulleted lists on the screen, they are more likely not paying attention to what you’re saying.

That’s why it’s important to include visual information in your slides. Here are some Zoom presentation tips about types of visuals for your slides:

  • Data visualizations. Charts and graphs are your best friends if you want to communicate data and numbers. Prezi’s data visualization tools can help you with that – easily create designs to support your story and make your presentation more delicious.

Data visualized presentation

  • Maps . Turn geographical data and insights into interactive maps for cities, regions, or even whole continents – our brains love the data associated with reality.
  • Images and videos. These visual assets are a must-have in presentations to explain how things work, emphasize the idea, or draw attention to your message. Your choice of images will impact the emotional connection with the audience, so choose them wisely.
  • Graphic elements. Flowcharts, diagrams, icon blocks, notes, and other features are excellent ways to communicate processes, plans, or ongoing situations. Combine your story with these elements, and you can be sure your message will be apparent to everyone.
  • GIFs and stickers. Sometimes one GIF can express more than words could say. They are super helpful if you want to create an exact image in the audience’s head. For example, imagine a presentation about monthly sales performance and this GIF on the first slide:

This celebratory GIF is a great way to kick things off and get your team excited to hear the rest of your presentation. 

4. Let your audience hear and see you

Another Zoom presentation tip regards what your audience can see and hear. It’s best to come off as professional as possible.

Good lighting conditions don’t mean spotlights all around you. Natural light is the best tool to look good in a virtual presentation . Make sure you sit near the window but avoid having it behind your back as it will create a shadow. If the natural lighting isn’t an option, play around with your lamps – even a cheap ring light can make a huge difference. Watch this video to learn how to create the best video lighting and more.

Now, when your audience can see you, make sure they can hear you as well. There’s nothing worse than watching a Zoom presentation when the speaker has disruptive noise in the background or a squeaky mic.

In the video below, we explain the best ways to make a crisp and clear sound when you’re presenting. Even more, Zoom has several ways you can improve your audio – look for more Zoom presentation tips and hacks at the end of this article.

5. Make sure your Zoom presentation flows

This Zoom presentation tip works well with storytelling. Everything you say and show should have a good segue – both your story and your presentation slides.

Rather than transitioning through slides linearly, use Prezi’s presentation templates to have a more conversational presentation. You can create various flows and zoom in on a topic to go deeper. Or, let the conversation guide you and jump straight into the most relevant topics that your audience is interested in.

In his video, Brian Fanzo, Digital Futurist and keynote speaker, covers how to avoid coming off as scripted in an online presentation. Watch his video here for more: 

6. Body language is worth a thousand words

Body language has an enormous impact on how your audience perceives your Zoom presentation. Jessica Chen, Founder and CEO of Soulcast Media in her Prezi video explains that body language determines up to 60% of how we receive the information presented, whereas the choice of words makes only 7% and tone of voice only 33%. 

There are many ways you can mindfully use your body language during presentations. One of the top Zoom presentation tips is to stick something eye-catching next to your laptop camera so you can hold eye contact with the audience. To look confident and persuasive, move slowly, fluidly, create space between your shoulders and ears, and keep your head straight. And most importantly – use your hands, especially at the start of your video call. It will create a warm and safe place both for you and your audience.

7. Don’t hide behind the slides

It’s hard to make your presentation personal if you’re just a small rectangle in the corner of the Zoom window. All your audience can see on their screen is a giant slide with information and data. 

Using your body language is a key Zoom presentation tip, that’s why you should forget about sharing your screen and display your content right next to you. This makes a more memorable experience and impactful presentation. Prezi Video is the right tool for that – easily drag and drop the content you’d like to show or use our templates to build presentations that will amaze your audience.

8. Activate your audience

Another great Zoom presentation tip to keep your audience engaged is through conversational presenting with interactions. Once in a while, stop presenting to talk with your audience and allow them to ask questions or clarify something. Encourage them to use the Zoom chat or respond to a poll .

Zoom breakout rooms are an excellent choice for online workshops or training sessions. Participants can discuss the topics from your presentation in greater detail and express their ideas, enabling collaborative learning and knowledge sharing.

However, not everyone feels comfortable speaking up. Using Prezi Video during online meetings allows your audience to share instant reactions – images, GIFs , text, or stickers. By organizing that kind of interactivity in your Zoom meeting, everyone can participate and raise the level of energy in the meeting.

For more tips on activating your audience on Zoom, watch this Prezi video by Rich Mulholland, founder of the presentation company Missing Link: 

9. Create, rehearse, present

You can agree on or not with Malcolm’s Gladwell “ 10,000-hour rule “, but one thing is clear – the more you present, the better you become at it.

Once you’ve created your presentation content, rehearse it. You can use Prezi Video to record yourself before going live to Zoom so that you can see yourself in action. Practice where you’ll add pauses, ask the audience a question, or make a joke. Think about what tone of voice you should use to keep the audience focused and what your body language is saying.

You can even record your presentation and review it later to gauge how you can improve it. Practice makes perfect.

Selling on video expert, Julie Hansen, shares Zoom presentation tips for more effective sales meetings in her video here: 

11 Zoom presentation hacks for even better meetings

Add prezi virtual camera.

Download Prezi Video desktop app and connect Prezi Virtual Camera with your Zoom . After that, you can instantly share your content and ideas with you on screen, making everything from internal updates, trainings, and sales pitches more interesting.

Change your Zoom virtual background

To jazz up your Zoom presentation, you can create and upload your own virtual background image . Surprise coworkers with your office’s picture in the background, join a meeting from a sunny beach in Spain, or create a professional-looking background as your business card. Use one of our virtual background templates to get started.

Test the sound

It’s always a good idea to test your mic before joining a Zoom meeting. Go Zoom Settings > Audio and test both your microphone and speakers. This way, you can avoid that awkward “Can you hear me?” moment at the start of your meeting.

Spacebar to mute/unmute

Forget about those awkward moments when you’re trying to find the mic to unmute yourself and say something quickly. One nifty Zoom presentation tip: hit the spacebar and hold it to unmute yourself as you speak.

Turn off video and audio by default

Avoid that “first look tension” when joining a Zoom meeting. Go to Settings > Audio and mute your mic when joining a meeting to control the first sound. Under the Settings > Video settings, check the “ Stop my video when joining the meeting ” so that you can always greet your team with a smile and a wave.

Hide non-video participants

During large team meetings or all-hands, it’s nice to see other coworkers in your Zoom window. To avoid a cluttered screen with static images and videos, you can hide meeting participants without video from the gallery view. Go to Settings > Video and click Hide non-video participants . Now you can enjoy live reactions and people around you all meeting long.

Hide your self-view during Zoom presentations

In Zoom meetings, we tend to pay too much attention to how we look. It can be a real distraction and steal the focus of the presenter. To avoid that, press the three dots button on your video and choose Hide Self View . This will create a more natural feeling, as you most likely wouldn’t look in the mirror during a face-to-face meeting.

Share your screen with confidence

Eliminate notifications like messages or ads popping out when you’re sharing your screen. If you’re using a Mac, we recommend turning on Do Not Disturb mode , and for Windows users, use Focus Assist to avoid unnecessary pop-ups.

Mute all participants

It’s common for someone to have their mic on by accident, which can cause unwelcome distractions like background conversations, traffic sounds, or a barking dog. Skip these moments and mute everyone: hit Command+Control+M on Mac or Alt+M on PC.

Ensure the best visual quality

To ensure the best presentation quality, always go on Fullscreen mode . It’s especially important when presenting data during a meeting or explaining complicated graphs with small text.

Use reactions to interact

Small things matter, especially when you want your virtual presentation to have more human connection. Though Zoom allows you to use reactions like applause, love, thumbs up, and others, you can unlock even more interactivity with Prezi Video. Encourage your audience to share comments, GIFs, or any image during your presentation, allowing them to react and give feedback without unmuting or affecting meeting time.

Put these Zoom presentation tips into action

With more presentations happening online than ever before, it’s important to understand the basics of Zoom and how it affects your presentations. Learn more Zoom presentation tips when you visit the Prezi Video Gallery or get started by creating your first Zoom presentation today.  

zoom presentation examples

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11 Essential Tips for Presenting on Zoom

January 24, 2022 - Dom Barnard

A boss unwittingly disguised as a potato during Zoom meetings, cries of “you’re on mute!” and guest appearances by kids and pets, are among the hilarious anecdotes attached to this hugely popular app.

However, it becomes serious when you need to make a good impression in a virtual meeting, job interview or presentation.

Zoom became a massively popular communications tool for business, education and social meetings during the Pandemic. In 2020, there were  485 million Zoom downloads , which is 30 times more than the year before!

Of course, some of the top Zoom presentations tips apply equally well to in-person or online delivery. Such as establishing your end goals, preparing a flowing framework and strong content, then practising your speech more than once. However, there are particular advantages and disadvantages to Zoom, to get the right results for presenting online.

These Zoom presentation tips will help grow your competence, confidence and success.

1. Put some trousers on!

One of the great things about Zoom presentations is there is a degree of informality and comfort.

You can dress just your top half smartly, have a hot beverage just off-screen, and do your best public speaking in familiar surroundings.

One of the worst things about Zoom presentations is …there is a degree of informality and comfort!

You can find yourself easily distracted, lacking in focus and slower in your responses.

The best way to present well on Zoom – when the stakes are high – is to create a wholly business-like environment and attitude. Use a space in your home or field location that’s as bland and clinical as possible, with no potential noise disturbance. Dress smartly from head to toe to create the best mindset.

Site your technology in front of you and imagine it’s a lectern and a set of multi-media tools in a meeting room or lecture theatre.

2. Use the superpower of data

While you’re using technology to communicate or collaborate, it’s common sense to optimise ways to enhance your presentations.

As part of your extensive preparation for important Zoom meetings, consider what documents, images and graphics to share, to add credibility and professionalism to your pitch. Or, simply to hold the attention of a Zoom audience from start to finish.

Familiarise yourself with the Share Screen option on Zoom, and the best ways of displaying videos during a Zoom call, including advanced share methods for online presentations.

There are good Zoom share screen tips here, including how to add a video to presentations on Zoom.

Zoom presentations with visual content are  43% more persuasive . Also, 90% of the information we process comes from visual input. So your Zoom presentation materials could be what gets you that job, funding or agreement.

3. Non-verbal communications tips for Zoom

Don’t assume that online presentations release you from many of the body language pitfalls and best practices. The opposite is true, as you need to focus on non-verbal cues even more.

If you deliver your Zoom presentation in a rigid, static and clinical way, you are missing out on some of the best ways to be successful in communications.

People respond to people. Effective communication requires warmth, authenticity and establishing a strong personal connection with your audience. Being robotic when presenting online won’t help you to succeed.

If this is an intense online meeting, then showing empathy can also increase the engagement and openness you achieve.

How do you communicate non-verbally on Zoom?

Without going over the top, be purposeful and slightly exaggerated in your body language. Sit straight and lean subtly towards the screen. Never away from it and certainly no slumping, crossed arms or chin/elbow leaning!

Smile, nod and keep strong eye contact, including showing your attention passing from person to person across a split-screen. Use hand gestures and show subtle movement in your upper body to add emphasis to key points.

4. Verbal communications skills

Zoom presentations also make it too easy to slip into a monotone voice or race through a presentation. You may even find the process of talking to technology – not live people – causes you to ramble, or get lost in your ad-libs or Q&A responses.

Make sure you articulate clearly, add emphasis when needed, and generally modify your tone regularly but logically.

Don’t be afraid to leave small pauses to drive a point home, or to take a deep breath while you construct your next point. If you look directly at the screen and hold eye contact, this ‘white space’ is perfectly acceptable.

5. Is everyone listening?

One of the most important presentation skills, in general, is reading the room. Is your potential boss or buyer looking bored? Are the panel of decision-makers getting confused? In contentious presentations, being able to spot your biggest dissenter from their non-verbal communication can help you shift your focus to winning them over.

It’s challenging to gain that sort of body language intel from online meetings. So, the best Zoom presentations compensate for that.

It can be as simple as adding more direct questions to your content and literally pausing regularly to ask your audience about queries or concerns. Make your questions open-ended, not a yes or no response.

“Let’s take a minute. What else do you need to know about that part of my presentation?”

Also, keep Zoom presentations succinct, flowing and animated. Your audience will drift away subconsciously if your delivery is pedestrian or you talk for too long without involving them.

Remember, attention spans are even shorter on technology!

Practice your video presentation and get feedback on your performance with  VirtualSpeech .

6. Opening Zoom presentations with pizazz

No, this doesn’t refer to grabbing your audience’s attention with a juggling trick or wearing your most colourful or glamourous finery.

How you start a Zoom presentation sets the tone. If you instantly engage their interest with a compelling opening, the attention and engagement last.

This should primarily be 100% clarity on the purpose of your presentation and the desired outcome. As well as establishing your credibility and methods to achieve the end goal.

Vague introductions and slowly revealing your key points drains your time and your audience’s attention.

What makes a good opening for Zoom presentations?

7. Icebreakers

You can’t shake their hand, but you can issue a quick, warm greeting and a short, relevant fact about yourself that helps them to warm to you.

8. Storytelling techniques

These work for a myriad of business communication tasks. Give a short (that word again) anecdote or illustration, to give context to your Zoom presentation. That could be about you, your product or the outcome you are requesting, for example.

9. Meaningful quotes in presentations

“The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place.” – George Bernard Shaw.

Good quotes can work!

10. High impact fact

Another great opening for Zoom presentations is a little known fact or ‘behind the scenes’ secret that grabs attention. Did you know,  one-third of adults still sleep with a ‘comforter’  like a soft toy or blanket? (Not relevant to many presentations but it’s a memorable statistic that caught OUR attention.)

Wake your audience up with something they want to remember – and share with others – and they will be alert and ready to listen.

11. End Zoom presentations correctly

One last piece of advice on Zoom presentations. Don’t get so relieved when you get to the end, that you forget your call to action.

All communication should include an invitation of some kind, in clear language. What would you like your audience to do, now your Zoom time is over? Tell them that and thank them for your attention, with one last warm smile.

Be the Keynote Logo

The Ultimate Guide to Giving Virtual Presentations on Zoom

Part 2: creating the structure, flow, and slide designs for your virtual presentation.

PART I Introduction 1 – Cool Zoom Features 2 – Virtual Presentation Do’s 3 – Virtual Presentation Don’ts PART II 4 – Presentation Purpose 5 – Structure & Flow 6 – Slide Design PART III 7 – Connect with the audience 8 – Audience Participation 9 – Sharing Content PART IV 10 – Video & Audio Recordings 11 – Post-production 12 – Your Phone as a Webcam PART V 13 – When Things Go Wrong 14 – How to Ground Yourself PART VI 15 – Advanced Techniques 16 – Zoom Webinars vs Meetings 17 – 23 Essential Settings

A key trait of successful speakers is understanding their personal brand. They know what they represent, how they want to be perceived, and what success looks for them. It’s common for this knowledge to accrue with experience, but you don’t have to wait for your 10,000 hours in order to get to that point.

You’ll achieve success sooner if you follow the steps below.

  • Define who you are as a speaker Are you a motivational speaker, an entertainer, a teacher, or a combination of all of them? Deciding on this highest level of goals will help you keep your talks on track, and remind you why you do what you do. For me, my goal is always to entertain, educate, and inspire—in that order. The vast majority of my energy comes from the energy of the audience, in the form of laughter.
  • Know what you’re good at and what you’re not Not everyone is funny, and not everyone can speak for an hour without any slides while making people weep with joy. You need to be honest with yourself in order to optimize your presentation design. Bombing when you try to tell a joke is painful for everyone, and it will deflate your energy on stage. So if your key skill is data visualization? Wow people with that and leave the jokes to the comedians.
  • Establish what you want the audience to experience Do you want them to laugh, or scribble copious notes, or enjoy a community experience interacting with their neighbours when you engage them in audience participation?
  • What does success look like? When you know what you want the audience to experience, you can use it as your metric for success. If you want them to share photos of your slides on social media, you can measure that. If you want them to download your slide deck PDF from your landing page, you can measure that. Want them to laugh 15 times during your talk? You can measure that. Standing ovation? Well, we all want that. If you don’t have your success criteria defined you can’t gauge if you’re succeeding as a speaker. Optimization of your talks comes from observation. If that 11th joke fell flat, remove it or figure out why and change it.

Photo of toothpaste aisle

But instead, I went to the supermarket with a friend (who was wielding my phone as a camera), and took a series of seven shots like this:

Toothpaste aisle original content mindset be the keynote

The result is content that nobody else in the world has. This is critical if you’re speaking about a topic that many others speak about (the psychology of shopping behaviour for example). You already have your own original take on the topic, but if you use the same photos/charts/data points as everyone else, your message is watered down by the sameness of the visuals—even if what you are saying is completely new.

  • Develop a “Diverse Content” mindset Your audience will (hopefully) contain a broad and diverse cross-section of people. People respond best when your content is reflective of them. By developing a mindset of diversity, you can source different examples, use quotes from more varied sources, and recommend tools, businesses, and the advice of those who reflect more than just your own image. Not only is it the right thing to do, I guarantee it will make you stand out as a speaker people trust.

Presentations are unequal parts art, structure, story, design, interaction, flow, balance, emotion, and technical production. Sounds simple. It’s not. But it’s made much easier if you’ve defined the purpose of your talk (as described in the previous chapter).

Try these tips to get a head start:

  • Reduce your big idea to a small one Can you recall a time when a colleague, stranger, or family member asked what you do, or what your latest talk is about? And you meandered for 2 minutes trying to explain it, only to leave them with a puzzled look on their face. Don’t worry, we all do it. How do you get past this problem? The best way I know—and this works equally well for an elevator pitch for a new startup—is to do a reduction exercise. It works like this: you write down a long series of bullet points that describes, in detail, everything you want to communicate in your talk. Dive deep into the minutiae and unpack it all. Once you’ve done it, start again, but this time, instead of 94 bullet points, you have to do it in 47, then 24, then 12, then 6, then 3, and finally 1. By the time you’ve completed this exercise you’ll have such a strong sense of your talk’s value proposition that you’ll be able to rattle it off without thinking. Not only will this help you describe it to someone, but you’ll be able to write better titles for your talk, and you’ll have a deeper understanding of all aspects of your content. It’s also a great dumping ground for all of your wildest ideas.
  • First, when you really know a section, it gives you confidence when you get to that point when presenting because you know it! and your execution and delivery will be much tighter.
  • Second, when you know a segment well, you can learn how to shorten or extend it depending on how much time you have. Sometimes you’re so short on time (you went slow or the previous speaker ran over their time) you have to cut pieces, and if you know them intimately you can whip off a quick summary of the whole point and tell the audience to check your slides afterwards. Conversely, if you have a lot of extra time all of a sudden, you can slow down and dig deeper into the topic than you thought you could.
  • Third, it allows you to ad-lib. This is one of the highlights of every talk, and something that comes with experience. It’s always a really fun moment because you just let loose and find new points and angles to your message–which is often where the true brilliance in your talk will emerge.
  • Fourth, aren’t you enjoying a break from standard bullet points in this section?
  • Fifth, over time you will start to build what I call a “Greatest Hits Deck” (GHD) where you store your very best work. It’s much easier when you have your bits chunked to grab 15 slides and copy them into your GHD. GHD’s are really useful when you get invited to give a talk to an audience you know isn’t familiar with your work. And instead of giving a new talk that you might not have time to prepare, or a recent talk that didn’t go down well, you can whip out the GHD and be an absolute crowd favourite. Whenever I get to rock my GHD I’m over the moon and look forward to the event even more.
  • Establish an opening hook The start of your talk is the only time you will have 100% of the audience’s attention. They are sitting in anticipation of what’s to come which makes it a really important moment to get right. Starting with “blah blah blah, hello, blah, blah, a little about me, blah blah” will send people straight to checking Facebook. See if you can find a dramatic or bold statement, or tease the outcome of your story without giving it away. Experiment saying things out loud and see what feels like it’s going to build excitement. The magic comes when you open with that statement—without saying anything, ANYTHING—before it.
  • Visit your talk resources landing page to get your slides and all the other goodies you mentioned.
  • Connect with you on whatever social platform you prefer, to ask any follow-up questions. This is a fantastic way to create a 1-1 engagement with someone.
  • Promote your latest “thing” whatever that may be. You earned it. And if you did a good job of not being a salesy speaker, the audience won’t be against you doing it. If you pepper your talk full of sales however, they won’t like that.

The topic of slide design requires multiple intensive courses to cover all you need to know (I’ll be releasing those in due course), but you’re probably sick of scrolling in this guide so I’ll keep it short and sweet. By short I mean huge, and by sweet I mean sweet.

In this chapter I’ll cover:

  • Slide design basics
  • Finding content for your presentation
  • Using media in your slides
  • Animations and transitions
  • How to show data in your slides
  • Using paid presentation templates to accelerate your work
  • A few cool design tricks
  • Making your slides Tweetable and shareable
  • Using master slides (Keynote has respectfully changed this term to be “Slide Layouts”, PowerPoint still uses “Slide Master”)

Told you it would be short.

Part 1 – Slide Design Basics

#1 use the 16:9 aspect ratio (not 4:3).

The old-school aspect ratio for slides was 4:3. This was established based on the shape of those projector pulldown screens common in classrooms. However, it’s more common—and significantly more modern and cinematic looking—to use a 16:9 aspect ratio. This is how most on-stage screen look, and it closely mirrors how laptop screens and computer monitors are designed.

Which aspect ratio should you use for a virtual presentation? 16:9.

#2 Don’t open your presentation software until you’ve outlined your talk

This is precisely why this chapter comes after defining your presentation’s purpose. By starting your work inside PowerPoint, staring at a blank slide, you’re going to work more slowly and will end up with spaghetti slides that don’t have a coherent structure.

A skeleton outline breaks down the sections and subsections of your talk into a simple list. This view makes it easy to re-order the sections to create the right story arc.

Once you have your outline, it’s time to open the software and work on your slide layouts to create the structural chapter/section slides. But don’t add your content until you’ve established a theme (if you want one) and your typography selection.

Create a presentaiton skeleton outline before you build your slides.

#3 How to choose a theme for your presentation

Themes can be good and bad. Having an overarching concept to follow can make things easier for you, but if you choose one based on a currently popular meme, you can end up looking like everyone else who also had this bright idea. Star Wars and Game of Thrones themes for example, are insanely overused.

If you know the makeup of your audience, and know they’ll be familiar with the theme it can work in your favour, but if it’s an atypical audience for you and they don’t recognize your inside jokes, GIFs, and topical references you risk falling flat.

It can, however, be a good tactic if it fits with your goal as a speaker (to be known for your themes).

Personally, I like to create my own theme from the talk concept. Sometimes based on a known theme but then expanded into my original style.

As an example, I did a talk called “The Conversion Equation” which was very mathematical in nature. I started by creating an opening slide, taking my own photo based on the movie A Beautiful Mind and then built out my own designs following that.

How to design a theme for your virtual presentation slides

Yes, I used a known theme as the opening slide, but I used the original content mindset from the previous chapter to make the bulk of the content my own.

I used a chalkboard to channel Matt Damon in Good Will Hunting for other parts of the design. Slides like these can take a lot of time to create but they are well worth it because they will be memorable.

I’ll be doing design breakdown videos in the future, that show how I did this.

At the end of the day, you do you.

#4 Choosing and finding a typeface (font) that matches your presentation theme

When working with a theme, it will only work if the typeface you choose merges seamlessly with the concept. Fortunately, there are thousands of free fonts available to help you create the right aesthetic and avoid the standard selection of typefaces that’s bundled into your presentation software.

In the following example (the chalkboard background) I hunted through free font sites for a chalkboard style. You can see the search results from the font site DaFont.com.

Use sites like dafont.com to find free fonts to match your virtual presentation's theme

To demonstrate the importance of choosing an appropriate font, consider the example below where I used Arial, one of the many bog standard default fonts. It looks pretty terrible, and the theme is diminished as a result.

Don't use default fonts in your presentation slide themes

#5 How and when to use agenda Slides

For some types of presentation you’ll be giving on Zoom, such as an internal corporate presentation, it can be really helpful to lay out in advance what will be covered. While this isn’t something I do personally—I like to keep it all a mystery—it can help set expectations.

The only thing I ask of you if you have an agenda slide, is to use the Progressive Reveal technique so that you’re not kicking off your talk with a giant wall of text.

Which brings me to my next point.

#6 Learn the progressive reveal technique to make your bullet points amazing

The Progressive Reveal technique is the best way to present a lot of information on your slides while keeping the attention and focus of your audience while you do it. It’s most commonly associated with bullet points but can also be used for:

  • Famous quotes
  • Slides that tell a story

You can read about the Progressive Reveal technique in detail here .

Or you can watch the Progressive Reveal video below.

zoom presentation examples

Video powered & sponsored by Wistia

#7 Using section slides to keep your audience aware of your progress

Section slides help break down your talk visually for the audience. A consistent design provides a visual cue that you’ve reached a new chapter. It’s also helpful for you to find your way around a large slide deck. A nice bold solid colour is often a good way to go.

In the example below, see how the orange section slides stand out.

Using section slides for a consistent chapter experience in your presentations

#8 Using recap slides to end each section with a takeaway

A slide at the end of each section that recaps the major takeaway(s) from that section can help the audience retain the information more easily before you move to the next section. Don’t do this for a really short talk as it’ll be overkill.

Without question, the top question (but you said without question?) of all virtual presentations is “Will you be sharing the recording/slides afterwards?” You can mitigate this question by including a reminder slide at the end of one or two sections. It helps attendees relax knowing that they can focus on enjoying the presentation without fear of forgetting any important details.

#9 When and why you should use appendix slides

Use cases for an appendix are likely limited to academia or research presentations, but they can be used to collect references, resources, and any of the finer print that you can’t communicate on your slides. By including an appendix loaded with useful information, attribution, and references, you are upping the value of the PDF you make from your slides.

Part 2 – Finding Content For Your Virtual Presentation

The core of your content is undoubtedly your big idea, but it still needs to be enriched by examples to bolster your premise, or expand on certain points. This includes photos, videos, quotes, data points etc.

Unless you’ve discovered a new dinosaur in your basement, chances are that there is probably someone, somewhere, doing a similar thing. You need to work a bit harder when finding and creating examples to make sure your talk is as unique as possible.

Here are a few tips for finding fresh content:

#10 Don’t use the first thing you come across in search results

This is what most people do, and it’s guaranteed to result in generic, overused content that doesn’t stand out as useful, original, or thoughtfully curated.

#11 Remember the original content mindset and create your own content

Create as much of your content yourself by taking photos, recording videos, running experiments and doing your own research. Unless you’re an academic or positioning yourself as sharing statistically/scientifically significant data, you can create a unique perspective with simple social media polls, or by interviewing a handful of people.

#12 Ask permission before you use anyone else’s work

If you find artwork, photography or other visual assets online that would be perfect for enhancing your slides, you must ask for permission to use it. Using other’s work without permission is theft, and not acceptable. The good news is that most people—when asked—will gladly let you use their content in your presentation.

To illustrate, I created a talk called Frankenpage and needed a good image of Frankenstein. The very best that I found was a fantastic piece of digitally rendered artwork, and fortunately the artist’s website was listed, so I reached out to ask for permission.

He said yes, which was wonderful.

Something that I find to be universally true, is that people really appreciate you asking for permission as there are a lot of bad people who rip things off.

Always ask permission before using someoe else's content in your slides

#13 Localize your content for the country or city you are speaking to

Watching a rockstar walk out on an Edinburgh, Scotland stage in front of an audience of 50,000, and greet the crowd with “Hello England!!!!” is an immediate buzz kill. I’m talking about you, Dave Mustaine of Megadeth.

Conversely, if you’re giving a Zoom presentation to an audience in London, Paris, Tokyo, or Weed, California, if you can rock up with a ton of localized content, you’ll immediately be a hit. The audience will thank you for showing up thinking about them, and the content will be more easily relateable.

A really clever technique for finding localized content is to use a VPN.

A VPN effectively transports your Internet connection to another location where you’re more likely to get local results when using a search engine.

Read how to Use a VPN to Find Localized Content for Your Next Presentation for a deep dive into how to do this.

For even more bonus points, translate some of your slides if you are presenting to a foreign-language audience. Just make sure you double-check the translation.

Before delivering a talk to my biggest live audience (6,000), I translated 250 slides into Portuguese. The (intended) title of the talk was “The Internet is Broken and Marketers are to Blame”. Unfortunately Google translate wasn’t accurate enough leaving me with an opening slide which in Portuguese read “Someone Turned off the Internet, and it’s the Vegetable Marketer’s Fault.”

Part 3 – Using Media in Your Presentation Slides

#14 how big should an image be on your slides.

You know what I hate about most slides that have photos on them? This…

Don't use default slide templates for images

And no, I don’t hate parrots. Parrots are awesome. What I hate is all the wasted space around the photo. To be fair, this is almost always the fault of the presentation software (this example is from a Keynote template), but it results in tens of thousands of slide decks full of ineffectual imagery.

Then what to do, Oli? What to do? It’s reaaaaally easy. Use the whole slide.

Make images fill the entire slide for a more impactful slide design experience

It’s much more dramatic and when you see it on a big laptop, monitor—or even better IRL on a giant stage—it sets the screen alive. Impact is important in slide design.

If you took the photo yourself you should have a nice high-res version so you’re all set, but if you’re sourcing photos/GIFs from the search machines, you can use a simple technique to get images as big as possible.

Use the size tool in Google image search.

Use the Google image search "size" feature to find high-res images for your presentation slides

Similarly, if you’re taking a screenshot to use in your presentation—a great way to create original content btw—take a big one like I did there ^^.

I could have done it like the one below, but that would’ve left me with a lame screenshot.

Don't use small screenshots for your presentations

#15 How to use video in your slides

It’s doubly important to use fullscreen videos in your slides. Think about how you watch TV, sacrificing 60% of the screen would make it unwatchable. A fullscreen video removes any distractions.

In terms of the audio in your videos (or just an audio clip), I’ve said it several times in this guide but it bares repeating. Make sure the volume levels on all of your A/V slides are the same, and as close as possible to the level of your mic. More on that in Chapter 10 – Video and Audio Recordings .

#16 Using animated GIFs in your slides

A presentation decision that afflicts most beginner speakers is the way they use the wonderful/hateful Graphics Interchange Format or GIF for short. I’ll leave you to debate among yourselves whether or not to call it GIF or JIF. Okay, I’ll step in actually. JIF is technically the correct to pronounce it, but it sounds really weird when you say it like that. Sorry, not sorry.

Mistakes presenters make with GIFs:

  • Low res GIFs This is most often because GIFs get generated by—you guessed it—GIF generator software and they’re tiny, averaging around 500px on the long side.
  • Overused meme GIFs EVERYONE is using them because they’re ridiculously popular. Don’t add to the problem.
  • Not scrolling in the search results Because they’re ridiculously popular, you need to exercise your finger just a little more than the average person to find one that’s perhaps a little different.
  • Leaving it on the screen too long (this is far too common) If your GIF didn’t make the audience laugh, having it on repeat in the background as you start your next point is even less funny. It’s almost worse if they did find it funny, because while you’re starting to talk about your next point they are paying absolutely no attention to you as they chuckle away like children.

#17 How to make your own high-resolution GIFs

You can use PowerPoint and Keynote to make your own higher-res GIFs, simply by choosing the “File>Export>Animated GIF” in PowerPoint or “File>Export To>Animated GIF” option in Keynote. Boom.

The parrot GIF below took me all of 60 seconds to make, it’s original content, uniquely mine, and it’s totally awesome. Because parrots are awesome. Am I creating a parrot theme? Not intentionally.

How to create animated GIFs in Keynote

As I wrote the end of the previous paragraph, it sparked a very meta action, in that I wanted to check if there were actually parrot themed slide templates, cos that would be funny right? It would also mean I could inject some “original content mindset” content right here, right now.

I give you… PARROT PRESENTATION THEMES! Wow.

Parrot themed slide templates

PowerPoint renders GIF as full HD 1920×1080 (amazing!) while Keynote is slightly smaller at 1080×680 (disappointing but still good). Both of them are significantly bigger than the average you’ll find in search.

Here’s the GGGGGGGGIF in action.

How to create animated GIFs directly inside PowerPoint

You’ll understand what I mean by leaving it on the screen too long if you’re reading the next section while this continues to annoy you.

Final point on GIFs. Please don’t use a “Winter is Coming” GOT GIF in your slides. Ever.

Part 4 – Using Slide Transitions and Animations in Your Zoom Presentations

#18 don’t use animations or transitions because you think they’re cool.

The goal isn’t to be cool, it’s to be useful. Slides animations should always be additive: your goal for the slide should be achieved to a greater degree with the animation versus without.

Don’t worry though, if you do it right it’ll still be cool.

#19 Don’t use animations and transitions because they’re there

Presentation software is as much the problem as it is the solution. They come loaded with effects that just don’t have a sensible use case. PowerPoint is significantly more guilty in this regard as it seems to favour quantity over quality.

#20 Try them all so you’re educated as to their potential (and potential lameness)

While you shouldn’t use many of them—and some not at all—it’s important that we understand our tools to as high a degree as possible. I encourage you to run through every effect, changing the settings and timing, using them on text, shapes, and images, until you have a solid grasp of what they can do.

When you are faced with a communication challenge, and need to add that certain something to improve your slide, you’ll know where to turn.

Turn to slide animations when you need them, not when you’re bored or as a default design strategy.

#21 Don’t use transitions on every slide

Some (most) transitions are jarring or annoying. You’ll get away with one or two, but if you abuse them you will really turn your audience off. If I’m being honest, there’s one transition I use in Keynote 90% of the time. It’s called Magic Move and I’ll demonstrate it a little further down the list.

#22 Don’t make animations so complex they slow down your computer

This can cause problems with excessive lag when presenting over Zoom.

#23 Be honest with yourself. Is that animation actually  cool?

When you’ve made that super rad motion event of the century, ask yourself if it’s making the presentation better. Then duplicate the slide removing the animation and run through it again. Which do you actually prefer to watch? Simpler is almost always better.

#24 Test all animations and transitions on Zoom – and watch on a second machine

Set up a second laptop and watch them as the audience will see them. Sometimes they just won’t work over Zoom. However, if you are making own screen recording (not the Zoom recording) you will want to leave them in if they are genuinely additive, because your recording will be amazing even if the live stream wasn’t perfect.

#25 Examples of good and bad slide transitions in Keynote

zoom presentation examples

The good, the bad, and the definitely ugly transitions in Keynote. Be warned, bad design inside.

#26 Examples of good and bad slide transitions in PowerPoint

Video coming soon.

#27 How to use transitions for section slides to show the information hierarchy of your talk

A presentation is for the most part a straight-line linear flow. You show one slide after another, until you’re done. You have seven sections or chapters, they come and they go, and it feels like a continuous delivery.

There’s a brilliant technique that breaks the horizontal flow by transitioning vertically whenever you get to a new chapter in your talk. It’s a technique I learned from friend and fellow speaker Mike King from NYC digital marketing agency iPullRank .

The traditional horizontal flow looks like this:

Horizontal flow of presentation slides

Whereas the vertical flow looks like this:

Vertical flow of presentation slides

By using a transition to shift vertically down, it tells us visually that we have finished the last section and moved on to a new section. It’s a good example of an additive use of a transition to aid communication and clarity, versus trying to look fancy.

You can see how it works in the video below.

zoom presentation examples

Watch how to use Grid and Push transitions in Keynote and PowerPoint to improve the perceived structure of long or complex presentations.

Part 5 – Showing Data in Your Slides

Good data visualization is not easy, but do it right and you set yourself up for having very sharable slides . On a basic level you need to consider the following points.

#28 Consider the format and scale of the data you’re sharing

Is it one number? A list of numbers? Do you make it big, or really small? Visuals or words?

Observe the stark difference in the examples below that demonstrate the nuances of slide design. Which of the slides below has more impact?

You might think the one on the right looks lame and boring, but from a design perspective, the stark white background and small typography creates a dramatic focus on the data point, forcing the audience to carefully lean in to read it.

Both approaches are good, but I’d recommend you try making things a little different throughout your talk to create a more varied experience.

Different approaches to data visualization in slide design

#29 Allow the slide to stand alone with context and attribution

If you want your slides to be shared your goal should be to remove doubts and questions. Success is a reaction such as “Wow, such interesting data from Jane Doe!” vs. “Okay, but where’s the attribution? What’s the source? It’s hard to believe this is credible.”

Context is critical.

Most often it’s as simple as adding an asterisk with a source (ideally with a link) to show where the findings come from.

The first example (above) has an attribution link on the bottom-right corner, but the sparse white example doesn’t have one.

In this instance I opted for a different strategy because I felt having more text on the slide would hurt the design impact of the stark design. However, it does still need to be on there, so the way I achieved this was to duplicate the slide, with the second one having the attribution. This allowed me to lead with the design aesthetic I wanted, then after a brief moment I clicked through to the duplicate. A subtle slide design trick.

#30 Example of data visualization: Twitter Polls

Simple animations can be useful when exposing data. In the example below—results from a Twitter poll—the bars on the graph are animated to illustrate the votes actually happening. It’s not fancy, it’s just useful enough to give a brief timeline to the event.

To achieve the effect, I created four rounded rectangle shapes. On the first slide they had a width of 1px, on the second I stretched them to be as wide as they had appeared in the poll results, then I simply used the Magic Move transition to animate between them.

Use Twitter polls to create original cata and content for your presentations

You can see how to achieve this effect in the video below.

zoom presentation examples

#31 How to reveal the data on your slides to tell the right story

The manner in which you show your data is important. In the examples above, with a single data point, you’d show it all at once. But with a more complex slide that has a lot of information on it, the progressive reveal technique is a much smarter way to go.

By revealing the data piece by piece you are able to craft a more well-timed and engaging story s well as keeping your audience focused on whichever data point you are currently discussing.

Watch the video below for a full explanation of how this technique works—demonstrated primarily with bullet points).

Video caption

#32 Leave the audience with a solid takeaway

Just as context is crucial to making sense of your data’s origin, the relevance of the data to your audience is key to them taking something away that’s actually useful. Presenting Tokyo transport usage numbers to a UK transport association audience would feel like you’re not trying hard enough.

Relevance is key. Relevance with an actionable next step is a golden key of glory.

For instance, saying that “70% of B2B software companies plan to invest more in content marketing in 2021” is barely even interesting. But saying “In our research  on ebook landing pages, when we asked for ‘business email address’ on your forms vs. ’email address’ we received 45% more branded company email addresses ([email protected] vs. [email protected]).”

I can take that back to my job and make real change having been informed of that insight.

p.s. that was a real email address experiment I ran for software company Unbounce, of which I’m a co-founder. Happy to share more if you find that interesting.

#33 Using charts for data visualization

Presentation software does a pretty good job of helping you with chart options, but it’s easy to make them look bad if you’re not much of a designer.

Keynote makes it easier to keep your charts looking good but has limited options. PowerPoint has many more options and superior control over the finer details, but the designs can get a bit cheesy if you’re not careful.

You don’t want impressive data only to represent it with the world’s lamest default-style 3D pie chart.

If you want to get a head start on your data visualization or you’re not a good designer, I would strongly suggest buying a template. It’s much easier to edit a design than it is to create one, so don’t be afraid to use a template in this instance.

There are many sites offering slide templates as one-time downloads or more commonly now on a subscription basis. Which leads me to my next point.

Part 6 – Using paid presentation templates to accelerate your work

#34 why you should consider buying a presentation template.

If you really want to accelerate your slide creation, you can purchase one that’s been professionally designed. Envato Elements has a massive collection. One aspect of this platform that I find most valuable is the fabulous data visualization slide designs. In the past they were available to purchase individually, but now it’s a monthly subscription that gives you access to all of them. Other sites like SlideQuest allow you to buy a complete collection at a on-off price—often on sale. An example infographic slide template with lots of data visualization is shown in the screenshot.

Paid presentation templates are a great way to accelerate your slide design.

Part 7 – Two Quick Slide Design Tricks to Speed Up Your Workflow

Slide design is about a lot more than simple tips and tricks, but there are some that are so wonderfully simple you just need to know about them. Here are two slide design tricks you need to use.

#35 How to make a transparent background from your photos

This one is easy to find in PowerPoint, but quite buried in Keynote (and not at all possible in Google Slides).

In PowerPoint, select your image then choose “Picture Format > Remove Background” and it will highlight the areas it thinks are the background.

If it did a good job you can just accept it and the background is magically gone. However, if it didn’t select the background correctly you can manually add and remove areas to make transparent. Sadly, this is really clunky and not based on selecting areas of colour, instead you are drawing lines around areas.

zoom presentation examples

How to remove the background from a photo in PowerPoint. Note, this is the Mac version of PowerPoint so there may be differences in the PC version which tends to have more features.

Keynote does a much better job of giving you smart controls—once you find the feature. It’s buried in the Image submenu when you’ve got an image selected. Simply click “Instant Alpha”, click on the portion of the image you want to make disappear, click the “Done” button, and poof, it’s gone.

If the colour isn’t as even as in the parrot example, click then drag your mouse to expand the selection and it’ll grow bigger, selecting more of the image. Just stop before it wipes out things you want to keep and you’re done (you may have to repeat it on different sides of the image if the colour doesn’t connect all the way around).

It’s not perfect and doesn’t work on everything, but when it does it’s a thing of beauty. Check out the video to see how powerful it is.

How to remove a photo background with instant alpha in Keynote

The video below shows how to use Keynote to remove backgrounds in three different types of image with increasing complexity.

zoom presentation examples

How to remove the background from a photo in Keynote.

#36 How to use a crazy neon background colour for your unfinished slides

This is a productivity tip. When you start to have upwards of a hundred slides, it can be hard to keep track of ones you haven’t quite finished yet, or for when you want to add placeholders for some new slides.

To help visualize your TO-DO list, you can use hideous slides layouts with a neon background. The screenshot below shows the “Light Table” view in Keynote, which is really handy for taking a bird’s eye view of your slide deck.

For a quick demo I made a new deck with three slide layouts: blank, section, incomplete.

When the “incomplete” slide layout is used it becomes super obnoxious looking, but VERY effective at highlighting your outstanding work.

Use a bright background colour for your unfinished slides

Part 8 – Making your slides Tweetable and Sharable

#37 learn the characteristics of a shareable slide.

Slides that get photographed and shared on social media tend to have a few specific content characteristics. The subject matter is usually data, results of original research, a chart outlining a new process, infographics, or something hilarious, to name a few.

But these slides still need a little help to optimize their chances, and the techniques for success sharable slide design can be applied to any interesting slide to make them more successful.

You can read an in-depth slide design tip on the topic here How to Design Massively Shareable and Tweetable Slides .

#38 How to encourage the audience to share your content when giving a virtual presentation

Sometimes you need to prompt people with things you’d like them to do, and there’s a technique you can use to help your slides be shared and exposed to new audiences. The trick is to choose a slide that your audience will have their own answer to, such as a poll, and have it tee’d up in advance.

It’s always a little risky to switch to a browser mid-presentation for an interactive segment (moreso IRL when you’re dealing with bad conference wifi), but your audience will probably appreciate the ability to take part.

I’ll use Twitter to illustrate how it works in a few steps:

  • Prepare a Tweet that includes a poll.
  • Add the hashtag of the event you are currently speaking at.
  • Add a request for people to retweet to increase sample size.
  • Add another Tweet to make it a Twitter thread.
  • Add a screenshot of the slide in your talk that’s prompting this exercise (it could be results of the same poll that you ran at another time– for instance the last time you gave the talk, or just as part of your pre-talk research.
  • Instruct the audience to go to Twitter and search for the hashtag to find your Tweet.
  • Ask them to vote and retweet the poll.

This way you will have a group of people sharing your poll data with a new poll for people to answer and a request for others to further retweet. The effects can create a loop of interaction from fresh audiences.

How to get your audience to share your content on Twitter during a virtual presentation

Part 9 – How to Use Master Slides / Slide Layouts to Scale Your Slide Production

#39 what to do with the default template master slides.

All presentation software platforms allow you to create what are called “master slides” (Keynote has respectfully changed this term to be “Slide Layouts”, PowerPoint still uses “Master Slides”). These are global templates that you use to speed up your work and keep your slides consistent. By default the layouts and designs on them are largely useless. The screenshots below shows an example of starting a new slide deck in Keynote from a template and what you get in the master slides.

If you use what the default slides give you, you’ll have a slide deck that looks too similar to others who use the same template. The image below also shows the first default title slide in Keynote and PowerPoint.

The default master slides are so generic you’ll bore yourself to death by using them. Yes, they can help you get started quickly, but if you begin with this approach you’ll only slow yourself down over time—when you learn to develop your own layouts and designs.

How to use master slides in Keynote

#40 The 10 master slides / slide layouts you should create for your own presentation template

The first thing I do in the slide layouts is delete EVERYTHING except for the blank template. Then I use the slide design basics  section from earlier to quickly set them up. Usually in this order:

  • Opening slide
  • Title slide
  • Chapter slide
  • Recap slide
  • Typographic slide
  • Fullscreen photo slide
  • Bullet slide—with the Progressive Reveal technique set up
  • Q&A slide
  • Closing slide

You only need to do this once—with refinements over time—and you can start with it each time you have a new talk to give.

Again, if you start with a paid template you can whip this up in no time and customize it as you figure out your theme and typographic choices.

Intro Introduction to Virtual Presentations on Zoom

Chapter 1 18 Cool Zoom Features You Should Know About

Chapter 2 12 Things You Should Do in Your Zoom Presentation

Chapter 3 8 Things You Shouldn’t Do in Your Zoom Presentation

Chapter 4 Defining Your Presentation’s Purpose

Chapter 5 How to Define Your Talk’s Structure, Story, & Flow

Chapter 6 41 Slide Design Tips for Virtual Presentations

Chapter 7 6 Ways to Make Eye Contact With an Invisible Audience

Chapter 8 How to do Audience Participation in a Virtual Presentation

Chapter 9 How to Share Content during a Zoom Presentation

Chapter 10 How to Create a Stunning Video and Audio Recording

Chapter 11 Using Post-Production to Add Value to Your Zoom Recording

Chapter 12 How to Use Your Phone as a Beautiful Webcam

Chapter 13 What to Do When Things go Wrong in Your Presentation

Chapter 14 How to Ground Yourself and Get Ready to Present

Chapter 15 Advanced & Creative Zoom Presentation Techniques

Chapter 16 The Difference Between Zoom Meetings and Zoom Webinars

Chapter 17 23 Zoom Settings to Enable or Disable for a Smooth Presentation

7 Zoom Presentation Tips to Bring Your Virtual Events to Life (Best Guide in 2024)

Anh Vu • 29 July, 2024 • 9 min read

Here are 7 Zoom Presentation Tips to help you hold better Zoom events and fight off that fatigue – let’s make your next Zoom presentation the best yet!

Presenting can be extremely difficult, but virtual presentations (via Zoom or any other video meeting platform) offer their challenges.

After a couple of years of remote working, many team leaders and senior business managers are noticing Zoom fatigue amongst staff, so it’s time to reignite our presentations and ensure we’re creating engaging and memorable meetings.

Table of Contents

  • Take the Mic
  • Check your Tech
  • Ask the Audience
  • Keep it Short and Sweet
  • Tell a Story
  • Don't Hide Behind Your Slides
  • Take a Break to Answer Questions

Tips for Better Engagement

Let's find out how to make an interactive Zoom presentation with more Zoom presentation tips!

  • Pictionary on Zoom
  • Zoom Word Cloud
  • Complete Guide to Interactive Presentation
  • Bad presentation at work
  • Easy Topic for Presentation

Start in seconds.

Get free templates for your next interactive presentation. Sign up for free and take what you want from the template library!

Zoom Presentation Tips for the Intro

Tip #1 - take the mic.

Zoom interactive presentation

One of the most simple and effective ways to capture your virtual audience is to take control of the conversation and ease anxieties. This doesn’t mean dictating all conversation, it’s more about creating a comfortable environment where your audience can feel focused and contribute to the discussion. 

We’ve all been in awkward pre-meeting “waiting rooms” while holding on for the last couple of people to join. As the person running the session, you can remove people's meeting anxieties and instantly get them on your side.

As the presenter and (probably) host of the Zoom meeting, others will consider you a confident leader. Make sure you welcome people in as they join your Zoom presentation, use a meeting icebreaker , and show them your personality and that they are welcome to engage with your presentation. You will have their attention from the very start.

Remember, you are presenting for a reason. You are the expert on your topic, and they are looking to you to communicate that information – You’re the pro, and you’ve got this!

Tip #2 - Check your Tech

Mic check 1, 2...

Of course, sometimes, tech fails us, and we can’t always do anything about it. But you can help reduce the chances of that happening by checking in on your presentation software, camera and mic before the Zoom presentation starts and people join.

Also, check any videos or links you’re using to give yourself the best chance of delivering a wonderfully seamless presentation with preparation.

One of the best parts of a Zoom presentation is that nine times out of 10, there isn’t anyone else in the room. This has a massive benefit for anyone presenting - you can prepare. This does not mean writing a script and reading it word for word. Still, it allows you to have extra notes with any data and information you need, and it can be right on the screen for only your eyes to see – so you can browse your messages for answers to a question without looking away.

💡 Extra presentation tip for Zoom : If you’re sending out Zoom invites ahead of time, make sure that the links and passwords you’re sending out all work so that everyone can join the meeting quickly and without added stress.

Zoom Presentation Tips for Punchy Presentations

Tip #3 - ask the audience.

You can be the most charismatic and engaging person in the world, but if your presentation lacks that spark, it can leave your audience feeling disconnected. Luckily, an easy solution to this problem is to make your presentations interactive.

So, let's discover how to make a Zoom presentation interactive. Tools like AhaSlides provide opportunities to include creative and engaging elements in your presentations to keep your audience switched on and involved. Whether you’re a teacher looking to engage a class or an expert in your business, it’s proven that interactive elements like polls, quizzes and Q&As keep an audience engaged when they can respond to each on their smartphones.

Here are a few slides you can use in an interactive Zoom presentation to pull that audience focus...

  • Make a live quiz - Regularly ask audience questions they can individually answer via a smartphone. This will help you understand their topic knowledge in a fun, competitive way!
  • Ask for feedback - It’s vital that we’re constantly improving, so you might want to gather some feedback at the end of your presentation. You can use interactive sliding scales to measure how likely people are to recommend your services or even gather opinions on specific topics. If you were pitching a planned return to the office for your business, you might ask, “How many days would you like to spend in the office?” and set a scale from 0 to 5 to gauge the consensus.
  • Ask open-ended questions and pose scenarios - This allows your audience to engage and show off their knowledge. For a teacher, this could be as simple as ‘What is the best word you know that means happy?’, but for a marketing presentation in a business, for example, it could be a great way of asking ‘Which platforms would you like to see us use more in Q3?”
  • Ask for brainstorming .  To start a brainstorming session, you can learn  how to make a word cloud . The most frequent words in the cloud will highlight common interests within your group. Then, people might start discussing the most prominent words, their meanings, and why they were chosen, which can also be valuable information for the presenter.
  • Play games - Games in a virtual event may seem radical, but it could be the best tip for your Zoom presentation. Some simple trivia games, spinner wheel games and a bunch of other Zoom games can do wonders for team building, learning new concepts and testing existing ones.

how to make a presentation interactive on Zoom

These engaging elements make a huge difference to your audience's focus and attention. Not only will they feel more involved in your interactive presentation on Zoom, but it will also give you added confidence that they are absorbing your speech and enjoying it, too.

Make Interactive Zoom Presentations for Free!

Embed polls, brainstorm sessions, quizzes and more into your presentation. Grab a template or import your own from PowerPoint!

Tip #4 - Keep it Short and Sweet

Where you can, you want to try to keep your Zoom presentation digestible. While most meetings or presentations are scheduled for an hour, it’s generally agreed that most viewers can only maintain focus for around 10 minutes . This makes it important to keep meetings brief, and where you can’t keep them short, ensuring your audience is engaged is vital.

You can maximise your audience's focus by not overcomplicating your slides. Text-heavy slides will have your listeners reading rather than listening to you, and they will burn out and lose stress much more quickly. If you need to give a lot of information, break it down into a few slides or use an illustrative graphic or interactive drop to talk people through it instead.

Tip #5 - Tell a Story

More interactive Zoom presentation ideas? We must confess that storytelling is so powerful. Suppose you can build stories or examples into your presentation that illustrate your message. In that case, your Zoom presentation will be much more memorable, and your audience will feel more emotionally invested in the stories that you tell.

Case studies, direct quotes or real-life examples will be much more engaging to your audience and can help them relate to or understand the information you’re providing on a deeper level.

This isn't just a Zoom presentation tip but also a great way to start your presentation. Read more about it here !

Tip #6 - Don’t Hide Behind Your Slides

Make Zoom presentation interactive

Although it’s much more difficult to present your body language via Zoom than in person, there are still things you can do to help ensure that your Zoom presentation gets your message across effectively.

Camera on! It’s tempting to hide behind your slides, but having your camera on will make a huge difference. Not only will your audience be able to see you, but it will communicate confidence and encourage others to leave their cameras on and hold the meeting in the open atmosphere of a live setting.

Although many workers remain remote, there is still a desire for that face-to-face connection we once had when working in offices and travelling for meetings and presentations. Sometimes, just seeing a friendly face will put someone at ease, creating a positive sentiment that they associate with you and your presentation.

As well as leaving your camera on, some people find that standing up to present is still effective - even on Zoom! If you have a large enough space and can find a way to make it work, standing up gives you added confidence, and it’s a great option if you're presenting virtually for a conference.

Tip #7 - Take a Break to Answer Questions

If you know you’ll be presenting for a long time, there's a lot to say about making space for a few breaks. Over Zoom, it’s not as easy to send everyone off for a quick coffee break because of how lengthy it can be to get everyone back and focused, so instead, you could end each section with a quick Q&A session.

Doing this has two advantages:

  • To keep everyone up to speed by elaborating on points you may have gone over a bit too quickly.
  • To give everyone a break from listening and looking.

On some live Q&A software , you can accept Q&A questions from your audience throughout your Zoom presentation and then answer them whenever.

These tiny breaks in the presentation can bring back your audience's focus as they anticipate that they need to interact.

No time like the present

So, that's the zoom presentation tips and tricks! With these tips, you should feel ready to take on the (presentation) world. We know that presentations aren’t always accessible, but hopefully, these virtual Zoom presentation tips go some way to relieving the anxieties. Try to use these tips in your next Zoom presentation. If you stay calm, stay enthusiastic and keep your audience engaged with your shiny, new interactive presentation, it will be your best Zoom presentation yet!

Anh Vu

Tips to Engage with Polls & Trivia

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How to Present on Zoom: Google Slides and Powerpoint Presentation Guide & Tips

zoom presentation examples

Presenting in front of your peers and superiors has to be one of the most daunting tasks ever. You’re never quite sure about the feedback you’d be getting, which only adds to the tension. However, in this pandemic season, the task of presenting has somehow gotten even more challenging. There are a lot of technical hurdles to overcome, which can seriously take the winds out of someone’s sail — especially if they are not very experienced on the matter.

Zoom, of course, has been the most popular video conferencing application over the last few months and offers a plethora of tools to put our minds at ease. Today, we’ll take you through all of them and even give you a couple of pointers to improve your presentation in Zoom.

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What is Zoom Screen Share and why is it important?

Screen Share is one of the most used and most important features of Zoom. It allows you to demonstrate your thoughts, give your peers a glimpse of your ideas. You can either share an application window, your entire desktop, or even a whiteboard — the possibilities are limitless here.

You can also start a screen sharing session without jumping through hoops of creating a separate meeting. Simply click/tap on the ‘Share Screen’ button in the Zoom client — both PC and mobile — and you’re good to go.

Related: How to use Zoom Filters

Remember you’ll need a sharing key or meeting key for this to work. If you don’t have access to either, you must share your screen while you’re in a meeting.

zoom presentation examples

To share your screen during a meeting, first, log in with the appropriate credentials and start a meeting. Then, hit the ‘Share Screen’ — ‘Share’ while on mobile — button right in the middle of the meeting options panel and what you want to share with the class.

zoom presentation examples

We’ve covered the topic of screen sharing on Zoom quite extensively in a separate article. So, be sure to check that out .

Related:   What Does Pin Video on Zoom Mean? Do They Know If You Pin a Video?

How to present a Powerpoint PPT in Zoom?

Microsoft Office suite is, without a doubt, the most widely-used presentation applications on the planet. It’s been on our computers for ages and it’s likely to stay put for a considerable amount of time.

With that said, Zoom doesn’t straight up give you the option to load the Microsoft Office component in the application. Still, there’s a pretty straightforward method of presenting in front of the class.

Related: 50+ Best Zoom Games

You can achieve the desired results with the help of Zoom’s Screen Sharing feature — yes, the bit we covered in the previous section. It simply allows you to pick a window of your choice and share it with the class.

What’s even more awesome is that the participants could even pitch in and share their thoughts if they see fit. Alternatively, you can also share your entire desktop screen, which is the best way to get more screen real estate.

With the basics out of the way, let’s see how you can present a slide on Zoom.

Related:   Zoom Error Code 3113 Fix

1. Create a separate slideshow window

If you have a traditional single-screen setup, this is the only guide you need to concern yourself with. The methodology is split into two bits — one: PowerPoint and two: Zoom.

First, open up Microsoft PowerPoint and pick the slide you want to share. Now, click on the ‘Slide show’ tab and hit ‘Set Up Slide Show.’

zoom presentation examples

Then, select ‘Browsed by an individual (window)’ under ‘Show type.’ Hit ‘Ok’ to confirm.

zoom presentation examples

Finally, switch to slide show mode by clicking on the ‘Slide Show’ tab and selecting either ‘From Beginning’ or ‘From Next Slide.’

zoom presentation examples

This would open a slide show window, separately. If you do not want to show the slideshow in a separate window, all you have to do is skip the previous step — ‘Browsed by an individual (window)’

2. Present PPT on Zoom

Now, go back to your Zoom meeting and click on the ‘Share Screen’ option.

zoom presentation examples

Now that the PPT has been launched in a separate window, you can easily select that window on the next screen and commence the slideshow. Click on ‘Share’ to begin.

zoom presentation examples

Here’s how it’d look:

zoom presentation examples

How to present using Google Slides on Zoom?

If Microsoft PowerPoint is a little too heavy for you, you could always opt for Google’s adequately powerful alternative called Slides. It allows you to create interesting yet simple presentations and share as you see fit. Of course, it also needs Zoom’s Screen Share feature to work as intended, which, at this point, should feel pretty natural to you.

Related: How to Mute on Zoom

1. Use Presenter View

Now, if you want a more immersive experience and also keep track of the notes you might have, we recommend using the ‘Presenter View.’ With the View enabled, Google Slides would create a separate window for all your notes, which only you’d be able to see. The main presentation window, on the other hand, would remain clutter-free and free from distractions.

To use the ‘Presenter View,’ first, you simply need to go to your presentation page, click on the little downward arrow right next to the ‘Present’ button at the top-right.

zoom presentation examples

Now, hit ‘Presenter View.’

zoom presentation examples

As soon as you click that button, you’ll get a separate space for all your notes, while another clean window would appear for slideshows.

zoom presentation examples

2. Use Zoom to present

Now that the windows have been separated, you can easily use Zoom to present the slideshow window. While in a meeting, click on the ‘Share Screen’ button and select the browser window with Google Slides on top.

Finally, hit ‘Share’ to start the screen-sharing session.

zoom presentation examples

Some tips for a successful presentation

As we’ve discussed, presenting is one of the most daunting tasks in the world for most, even virtually. The techy jargon often only adds to the tension, making many people dread the sessions, even when they are completely prepared. Below are some basic handy tips for your next presentation.

Related: How to annotate on Zoom

1. Master your craft

Knowing the material is always the best way to prepare for a hectic presentation. If you know what you’re presenting and have complete faith in the report, you’re ought to do exceptionally well. However, when it comes to Zoom presentations, knowing just the material isn’t enough. You also need to make sure all your components are in order and you’re presenting with confidence.

Try a couple of dry runs, see if your presentation is working just as it’s supposed to. Practice the pitch if you have to. Checking all of these boxes would improve your chances of success, remarkably.

2. Dress for the occasion

When you’re not forced to present in a swanky conference room, it’s not difficult to lose track of the dressing etiquette. However, you must remember the scale of your presentation and try your best to look the part. Wearing a perfectly ironed shirt and fitted trousers would not only impress your peers and superiors, but it’ll also instill a sense of confidence in you.

Related: How to see everyone on Zoom

3. Create a quiet environment

Zoom is quite capable of filtering some noise out of video chats. However, it doesn’t have the quality to cancel out everything you throw at it. So, before you start a video conferencing session and go about your presentation, make sure you’re in a relatively quiet environment. There can be a bit of noise, here and there, but make sure your subtle points aren’t drowned by some rogue barks from the street below.

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Art of Presentations

How to Give a Presentation on Zoom? [A Step-by-Step Guide!]

By: Author Shrot Katewa

How to Give a Presentation on Zoom? [A Step-by-Step Guide!]

If you’ve never used Zoom, giving a presentation on it might seem a bit challenging. But, that’s a challenge we will have to learn to overcome as the world moves digital more and more day by day. The key question really is how to give a presentation on Zoom!

To give a presentation on Zoom, first, start by joining a meeting. Now open the presentation file on your computer and share the slides on Zoom using its “Share Screen” feature. You should test your camera, mic, speaker, and internet connection before you start with your presentation.

As easy as it may seem, some of you may need further detailed instructions. So, in this article, I will provide a step-by-step guide on things that you need to do in order to deliver a presentation on Zoom successfully! Plus, I will also share some tips that can help you ace your presentation on Zoom!

So, without any further delay, let’s get started!

Understanding the Zoom Application Interface

Before we understand the steps to give a presentation using Zoom, it is perhaps a good idea to acquaint yourself with the Zoom user interface first. If you are well-versed with it, then perhaps you may want to skip this section and click here instead.

Logging into Zoom

zoom presentation examples

Although you can login to your account using zoom website too, but it is best to download and use the zoom app .

Once you have download the app, you will be prompted to login to your account. If you don’t have an existing account, you can either sign up or even login using your social account such as Google or Facebook. It’s actually quite simple.

If you feel that you don’t want to sign up or even use the social accounts for your meeting, you can choose to use “Sign In with SSO” option. SSO stands for single sign on and this allows you to sign in even when you don’t have an account with Zoom just once.

Zoom Home Screen

zoom presentation examples

Once you’ve logged in, you will be taken to the home screen on Zoom.

There are a bunch of different things that you ca do with the home screen on Zoom. If you have been invited for a meeting, you will need to click on “ Join “. However, you will also need the meeting ID and the password for the meeting. If you don’t have the details, you will perhaps need to contact the person hosting the meeting.

You can also host the meeting yourself by using the “ New Meeting ” button. You can set a new meeting and invite others to join using this option.

Likewise, you can also schedule a meeting in the future using the “ Schedule ” option.

Furthermore, for changing the account related information, just click on your profile picture in the top-right corner of your window.

Lastly, there are several other detailed settings that you can tweak for your Zoom application. Almost all the other settings can be found in the “ Settings ” section by clicking on the “ Gear Icon “.

Zoom Virtual Meeting Window Interface

zoom presentation examples

Once you are a participant in a virtual meeting, either by joining an existing meeting or by starting a new meeting, you will be greeted with an image similar to the one mentioned above.

On this screen, you will be presented with several different options. Some of the key functions that you will need to be aware of are as follows –

  • Mute – Turning on the Mute or Unmute
  • Video – Toggling between your Video
  • Participants – Checking the names of the Participants
  • Share Screen – to deliver a presentation (more on this later)
  • Record – To record a meeting session
  • End – Knowing how to end a meeting and exiting a call.

All the above functions will be visible on a small bar at the bottom of the window. If you are not able to see this option bar at the bottom, just hover over at the bottom part of your screen and all the options will appear .

Although there are other features that are also available for a zoom user or a participant, however, the aforementioned features should be good enough to deliver a presentation. These 6 features are at the very least something that you should be aware of.

How to Give a Presentation on Zoom (Step-by-Step)

Zoom has become a common tool for giving virtual presentations today. It is a widely used tool at conferences, meetings, and other events! If you are giving a presentation on Zoom for the first time, then perhaps you should be aware of a few things –

Here is a quick step-by-step guide on how you can give a presentation on Zoom:

Step 1: Install Zoom

Download and install the Zoom application to your desktop. To download the application, visit https://zoom.us/download and download the Zoom Client to your computer.

Step 2: Login to your Zoom Account

After installing the application, open it and log into your Zoom account. If you don’t have one, you can sign up for free using your email account.

Zoom also has options to sign in using SSO (Single Sign-On) or with your Facebook or Google account.

Step 3: Test Audio and Video Settings

Before you start or join a meeting, you will need to configure and test your audio and video settings.

To do that click on the gear icon on the Zoom application’s home screen. This will open the settings menu.

Now click on the “Audio” tab and select the microphone you are going to use. Try our different audio settings. After the microphone, select the speaker for audio output. If you can’t hear anything, try out another speaker source.

After configuring audio, click on the “Video” tab. From there, select the camera that is connected to your desktop. Tweak different video settings and find out what works best for you.

Step 4: Join or Schedule a Meeting

zoom presentation examples

Now start a meeting by clicking on “New meeting”. You can also schedule a meeting on Zoom. To do that, click on “Schedule” and set up when you want to start the meeting. After completing the set-up, Zoom will give you a URL. Share it with the team members to join the meeting.

Or you can join a meeting by clicking “Join” on the Zoom client’s home screen. You can use a meeting ID or URL to join a meeting in Zoom.

Step 5: Open the Presentation

Once you have everything setup, you then need to prepare to show your presentation with your audience. To do that, open the presentation slides on your computer.

Step 6: Share Your Presentation

The last step in giving your presentation is to make sure that you share your presentation with your audience. To do that, click on “Share Screen” from the Zoom clients meeting window , select the screen where your presentation slides are open, and click “Share”. Now start presenting your slides to the audience.

Step 7: Stop Sharing to end the Presentation

One thing to know is how to end the presentation. To stop screen sharing, simply click on “Stop Share” located at the top of the screen . This option will only appear when you start sharing your screen.

How to Share a PowerPoint with Presenter View on Zoom?

To share your PowerPoint presentation slides with presenter view on Zoom, follow the steps given below:

Step 1: Open the Zoom App and Login

The first step really is to open the zoom app and login to your account.

Step 2: Join or Setup a Virtual Meeting on Zoom

Next, join the meeting. Remember, you need the meeting ID and password to join a meeting. Make sure you have requested for the details beforehand.

Step 3: Open Your PowerPoint Presentation

First step is really to open your presentation file that you want to present on the PowerPoint application.

Step 4: Put the Presentation in Presenter View

Now select the “Slide Show” tab from the top of the screen and click on either “From Beginning” or “From Current Slide” depending on your preference. This will open the slides in the “Presenter” view.

Step 5: Switch to the Zoom Application

Now, go to the Zoom application, start or join a meeting. While you are in the “Presenter” view on PowerPoint, press “ Alt+Tab ” to switch between applications in Microsoft Windows-powered computers. For iMac, use “Command+Tab” to move through open apps.

Step 6: Share Screen on Zoom’s Meeting Window

Once you are in Zoom’s meeting window, click on “Share Screen”, select the window where your PowerPoint slides are open in the presenter’s view, and click “Share”.

And that’s all you have to do in order to share PowerPoint with the presenter’s view in your Zoom meetings.

How to Share PowerPoint on Zoom Without Showing Notes?

There are two methods that you can use to share PowerPoint slides on Zoom without sharing your presenter notes. For the first method, you will need to have two monitors connected to your computer.

As for the second one, you can still share your PowerPoint slides on Zoom without sharing your notes (and you won’t need two monitors either). I’ve briefly explained both methods below.

Method 1 – Dual Monitor Method

In this method, you will be presenting your PowerPoint file on one monitor while looking at your presenter’s notes on the other one. Here’s how you can do that:

Step 1: First of all, open your slides on PowerPoint.

Step 2: Now join or start a Zoom meeting.

Step 3: Now click on “Share Screen” and select “Screen 1”. Then click “Share”. Here, “Screen 1” is your primary monitor.

Note: If you are not sure which one is your primary monitor, select where the PowerPoint file opened in.

Step 4: Now go to the PowerPoint application, click on the “Slide Show” tab, and from there click on “Monitor” and select “Primary Monitor”.

Step 5: Open the presentation file in the presenter’s view by clicking on the “Slide Show” tab and selecting “From Beginning” or “From Current Slide”.

If you have done everything correctly, participants will only be able to see the presentation slides while you have your presenter’s notes open on the second monitor.

In case you shared the wrong monitor on Zoom, click on “Screen Share” on Zoom’s meeting window, select “Screen 2” and click on share. This should fix your problem.

When you are sharing a screen on Zoom, you will notice a green border around that screen. This indicates which monitor you are currently sharing.

Method 2 – Sharing Portion of Your Screen

Follow the steps below if you have only a single monitor connected to your computer.

Step 1: Join or start a meeting on Zoom.

zoom presentation examples

Step 2: Click on “Share Screen” and from the pop-up window select “Advanced”. From there select “Portion of Screen” and click on “Share”. This will give you a green border on your screen that you can adjust. Only the things that are inside this border will be shared on Zoom.

Step 3: Now open the presentation file in PowerPoint, and go to the presenter’s view by selecting “Slide Show> From Current Slide or From Beginning”.

Step 4: Adjust the size of the green border so that it only shows the presentation slides in the presenter’s view.

And that’s all you have to do. By doing so, your audience will only see the slides that you are presenting, but not your notes.

How to Show Yourself During a Zoom Presentation?

Ensuring that you are visible from time to time during a presentation can make it slightly more engaging and much more interactive. Here is how you can do that-

Step 1: First, start or join a Zoom meeting.

zoom presentation examples

Step 2: Click on “ Share Screen ” and select the “ Advanced ” option. From there, select “ PowerPoint as Virtual Background ” and select the file you want for your presentation. Then click on “ Share ”.

Step 3: Make sure your video is switched on so that you are also visible to your audience. You can do that by clicking on “ Start Video ” on the Zoom Virtual Meeting Interface.

It will take some time for your slides to appear on the Zoom client. When it is done, participants will be able to see your face in front of the slides in Zoom. Make sure that your camera is connected to your computer and configured correctly.

This feature works best if you have a green screen behind you . If you have one, go to Zoom’s settings menu, select the “Background and Filter” tab and check “I have a green screen”. If you want to stop showing yourself during a zoom presentation, click on “Stop Video” on the meeting window and that will do the job.

Furthermore, you may sometimes want to show just yourself to the audience and not show the presentation at all. For that, all you need to do is simply click on “Start Video” in the Zoom Virtual Meeting Interface.

How to Record a Presentation on Zoom?

If you want to record your presentation on Zoom, you can do it easily. After joining or starting a meeting on Zoom, click on the “Record” icon located at the bottom of the meeting window. Once the recording starts, you can pause the recording or stop it whenever you like.

zoom presentation examples

After the end of the meeting, the recorded video will be automatically converted into “.mp4” format and stored on your computer.

Tips for Giving an Awesome Presentation on Zoom

Giving a presentation in front of an audience is always a challenging task. Especially if it is online, many things can go wrong during your presentation. This is why I’m sharing some tips that can help you deliver an awesome presentation on Zoom. These are as follows –

1. Make a Professional Looking Presentation

There are several ways to make your presentation look really professional and high quality. One obvious method is to outsource your presentation to a specialised design agency! But, that can become really expensive depending on your budget.

Another (non-obvious) option is to use a PowerPoint Presentation Template! There are several high-quality and professional templates that you can get quite easily! In fact, using these Presentation Designs is quite inexpensive! You can download as many presentation templates as you want for as little as $16.5/month!

My favorite one is Agio PowerPoint Presentation template. It is perfectly suited to give a professional look to your presentation and yet it is quite quick and easy to use. Check out some of the images below –

Agio PowerPoint Presentation Template

zoom presentation examples

Furthermore, make the presentation as simple and straightforward as possible. Do not confuse your audience with a network of colorful texts, graphs, or other contents.

Only use data and graphs that are relevant to your presentation. Also, the clever use of transition animations can make the slide appear much more engaging.

2. Check Your Equipment Beforehand

Whenever you are giving your presentation online, many things can go wrong. For example, your camera or mic may not function properly. Such interruptions will only make you a laughing stock in front of the participants.

Check your mic, camera, and speakers to find out whether they are working properly or not. Also, check your internet connection and your laptop’s battery level. If everything is ok, then you are good to go on with your presentation.

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Credit to Cookie_Studio for the featured image of this article

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5 ways to make zoom presentations engaging and irresistible.

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Dry. Dull. Boring. Exhausting. Painful. Waste of time. Forgettable. Those are the words and phrases that came up when I asked people this question: What word would you use to describe the Zoom Presentations/webinars you attend?

And it’s true, most webinars are likely to be uninspiring … and forgotten shortly after you attend them. They aren’t wildly engaging, and their impact on your success is likely minimal. One thing that impedes their ability to wow is that they aren’t very different from other meetings you attend online. Also, those who create and deliver online presentations neglect the importance of understanding the medium. Online presentations have to do a lot more work to captivate you simply because:

  • The screen is a poor substitute for a real person standing in front of you
  • The temptation to multitask is heightened
  • Participating by yourself reduces the energy and emotional connection
  • Other things we watch on these very same screens—from Netflix to YouTube videos—have very high production value

To counteract the challenges that this medium imposes, consider these five enhancements:

1. Sizzle from the start

If your opening is similar to the one from the meeting your audience attended an hour before your presentations, you’ve already lost them. You need to make it clear from the moment you kick off that this is going to be different. Fun. Engaging. Valuable. Interesting. First impressions are so important. Now that everything has moved online, your presentation is being lumped into the five other meetings and events that your audience is participating in each day. You need to dazzle your audience from the very first second of your presentation. Make your start surprising, and your viewers will sit up from their slouch and take note.

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2. Banish the bullet

If the slides you’re presenting have more than 15 words on them (I challenge you to have 12 or fewer), you’re adding an extra helping of the ingredient called boring to your webinar. Bulleted slides are not effective for inspiring people or engaging them in your content. If you have information you want to share that requires the use of lots of words, make it available as a supplemental resource. Nothing says “it’s time to tune out” like a slide with 10 bullets on it. Think tantalizing tweet, not wordy whitepaper. When you do display words, use 32-point font or greater on every slide. This provides two huge benefits: First, it ensures you can’t get too many words on the slide. And second, it makes it easier for participants to see. Your slides are small on the devices of your audience members—especially if they’re using their phone.

3. Fluctuate the format

When you’re delivering a presentation online, you have to deal with one major challenge that’s much less prevalent in live sessions: the temptation to multitask. When you’re physically in a room of people, they’re less likely to answer an email while you’re presenting. But when you’re delivering online, it’s almost an invitation to multitask; after all, the device they’re watching you on has all these other tools to keep them busy: email, Instagram, instant messaging. That’s a lot of competition. To keep people from checking out other things on their device, you need to keep things dynamic. The best way to do this is to vary the way you convey your content. Move between stories, information, data, models, formulas, lists, etc. In fact, change the content format every two to four minutes to keep things dynamic and magnetic.

4. Heighten the humanity

If you’re delivering a presentation from a stage, it’s automatically more visceral and emotionally compelling. When you’re beamed onto someone’s laptop or phone thanks to the power of the internet, your humanity is diluted. The screen they’re watching you on serves as a scrim to suppress your scintillating style. To counteract that, you need to amp up the energy, double the empathy and exaggerate your expressions. Just don’t overdo it. You don’t want to seem like a parody of yourself like this.

5. Maximize the media

You’ve heard that a picture is worth a thousand words, and according to Gartner Research, one minute of video is worth 1.8 million words. When you use rich media, you make your presentation more persuasive and potent. And you make it much more visually interesting too. So as you build your presentation, ask yourself: Where can I replace words with pictures and video? Then go through it again when it’s done and ask the question again. Your audience will thank you for replacing the 26 letters of the alphabet with meaningful, magnetic media.

You need to be more deliberate when you deliver a virtual presentation if you want to have real impact on your audience. When you build and deliver your presentation with these five elements in mind, you’re sure to stand out, make your mark and add a giant deposit to your personal brand bank.

William Arruda  is a founder of  CareerBlast  and co-creator of  BrandBoost  - a video-based personal branding talent development experience.

William Arruda

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CAUSE AN EFFECT

Blog on science communication

How to give a professional presentation in Zoom

zoom presentation examples

You have a presentation scheduled in Zoom – a common sight since 2020. But as it’s a pretty new phenomenon, you’ve probably seen it done badly more often than not (we certainly have..). How can you avoid that from happening to you? Don’t worry: The Online Scientist is here to help.

Use our tips and tricks to avoid the most common blunders when presenting in Zoom, and to enhance the success of your online talk! If you get comfortable with it, you will probably enjoy presenting online just as much as you do in an auditorium full of people.

Design a clear and beautiful presentation

Just like with any other presentation, the success of a Zoom presentation starts with the preparation. This is so basic and important that we’ve written an entire book on the subject: Cause an Effect . Were you planning to design slide after slide with bullet points that you’re going to read out loud? If so, we can almost guarantee that your audience sneaks off to check Twitter or the news. Use the tips from our book to come up with a good story and nice slides without too much text. Or: present without PowerPoint slides if you can.

eBook Cause an Effect Creating better science presentations - The Online Scientist

Prevent accidental faulty clicks

No, this is not about your audience clicking away from your presentation. This is something that could happen to the best of presenters: instead of clicking the right arrow for the next slide, you click on the END button that takes you to the end of your slide deck. Awkward! A solution for this is to use a remote control for your presentation, even when you’re at home (we like this remote control by Logitech for example). It ensures that you don’t have to rely on your keyboard, and that gives peace of mind when you’re telling your story.

Be up to date and unavailable

Make sure that you’re up to speed technically: install the latest Zoom update in time for your presentation. But then, close all the tabs of your browser and other software running on your computer: an e-mail pop-up or calendar notification is not very professional…

Same goes for your phone: put it in flight mode, so you can’t be distracted nor disturbed during your talk. Finally, take care not to select the time of your Zoom meeting for any deliveries!

Put your phone on silent, and close all other programs.

Check your Zoom settings

Take your time to explore all the settings in Zoom – maybe you’ll run into something useful (and no.. we’re not talking about that feature that gives you blue lips, new eyebrows or a Santa hat). Useful functionalities are background noise reduction, lighting effects for your camera, or whether or not you want to enter any Zoom call muted and with camera turned off to see if it all works. By the way, it might be good to do this periodically, because new and handy features are added all the time.

zoom presentation examples

Test your audio and video

This is also quite basic: your presentation will be better if people can see and hear you properly. Thankfully, you can test your audio and video quite easily on the Zoom website: https://www.zoom.us/test

Make sure bad audio or video can’t distract from your story

Are the webcam, speaker and microphone you have in your laptop of sufficient quality? Maybe it’s possible to increase the quality of your audio or video by using an external webcam and/or microphone. If you have online meetings more regularly, a headset, lavalier microphone or even a studio microphone might be an investment to think about. If you’ve heard more than once that you should speak louder during online meetings, then definitely take this into consideration.

Check whether you’re presenting during a meeting or a webinar

If you’re invited to present but don’t organize the meeting itself, it’s good to check the format of the event. Is it a Webinar (during which you have no interaction with the audience besides the chat function) or is it a Meeting (during which the audience can participate actively)?

Furthermore, it’s good to check how the event is set up. Is there a waiting room so that everyone enters the meeting simultaneously, or do people enter whenever they join the session? In the latter case it’s good to have a first slide up that shows information about the meeting. Another question is who will take care of the questions in the chat? Are you doing that yourself? Or do you interact with the meeting host who does it for you?

Which options for interaction are there? Is the chat turned on? Will there be break-out rooms? Does the audience have access to hand raise, reactions, annotations or whiteboard? It would be a waste if you’re counting on a whiteboard, and the setting isn’t turned on.

Change your Zoom screen name

Another thing you can change in the settings. Nobody is logging on to see ‘Karen’s iPad’ speaking! For extra clarity you could add “Speaker” behind your name to make sure people know right from the introduction who you are and that you are the one presenting.

Change your name! Nobody wants to see a presentation by ‘Karen’s iPad’

Arrange proper lighting

Find two lamps, preferably lamps that you can adjust the brightness of, and that provide diffuse light. Put them on either side of your laptop or camera, or, if you only have lamps with direct light, aim them at the wall you’re facing while presenting. This setup will ensure that you are well-lit from two sides, without sharp contrasts or shadows. An easy alternative option is to turn up the brightness of your second screen; this will also light up your face a little (tip if you do this: find a yellowish website or image to show on that screen, so the light will be softer than a bright white Google Search homepage for example).

zoom presentation examples

Put your camera at eye level

As you can see above, it looks odd if you’re looking down at everybody while presenting. It’s not a very flattering angle for your (double) chin, and your background will only be interesting to ceiling fans. If you put your webcam at eye level you look at your audience and not down on them – not just unflattering but also not a nice sensation for the viewers. Even better is the next tip:

Present standing up!

Your energy levels are much higher when you are standing up to present. Consider the opposite: can you imagine doing a live presentation from a chair? It’s not professional nor engaging to watch a slouched speaker. Be inventive: if you don’t have a standing desk, shelves or cupboard, put a crate, stool, block or stack of books on your desk and put your laptop on top of it! But don’t forget the tip about eye level. If you’re not able to present standing up, you can boost the energy level of your talk by using your hands.

Present standing up for a high-energy presentation.

zoom presentation examples

Check your internet connection

You’re trying to wrap up your talk with a closing statement that sweeps everybody off their feet, but….your connection falters. What a waste of momentum! To prevent this, it’s best to connect your computer using a cable instead of WiFi. If this is not an option, free up your connection by making sure your housemates aren’t using Netflix, putting your phone in flight mode, and turning off WiFi-heavy appliances.

Clean up your room!

Any speech can lose some of its luster when there’s a pile of dirty laundry in the background. Our rooms are not spotless – we’re only human – but when we present, we look for flattering angles not just for ourselves but also for the room. We turn the camera towards a wall, where we’ve created a little scene with plants and a colorful painting. An entirely white wall may seem ideal, but we think it’s a bit boring. A featureless wall reminds us of a badly designed dorm room, which is not what you want to associate with the star of the meeting! Nothing wrong with a bit of smoke and mirrors… But:

The ideal background is one that doesn’t distract from your talk.

Do you have pets? Make sure they can’t just come in (or scratch the door for ages trying to get you to open the door). A goldfish might be the only exception to this rule (do trim its nails beforehand).

Pros and cons of virtual backgrounds

If it so happens that you’re presenting from your daughter’s room in front of pink unicorn wallpaper, a virtual background might be something to consider. Zoom has a few backgrounds available, but so does Canva . Or perform a search for copyright-free “Office backgrounds” on Unsplash or Pexels . Do check if the setting doesn’t end up providing a very unnatural perspective; it looks a bit strange if you’re not sitting behind a table, but in front of it:

zoom presentation examples

Don’t pick a tropical island or NASA photo as virtual background – unless you actually are a surfer or astronaut (respectively).

Watch out though: virtual backgrounds have one MAJOR disadvantage. If you’re not sitting in front of a green screen or very uniform background, or if the lighting is insufficient, then it will look very strange if you move your hands. Just look at the video below. If you use your hands as much as we do during a presentation, it’s not really an option without distracting your audience.

Dress to impress (like a professional)

Wear your nicest clothes, it’s as simple as that. We don’t get that many opportunities to show our best side anymore, so it’s most likely a welcome break from the eternal sweatpants/onesie situation. Show off that power-suit, that nice dress, the excellent jacket! It helps to choose clothes that contrast with your background. Go easy on the jewelry though, because dangling earrings, necklaces or a bracelet scraping the desk scan make quite the ruckus (especially if your microphone is also on there).

Share the right window (the most common mistake)

By now, you have probably encountered a presentation during which the speaker made the error of not sharing the PowerPoint Slide Show, but the editing window including the notes. It’s quite sloppy and – worse – distracting. Besides that, it made the slides smaller on screen and therefore harder to read.

How to prevent this? When you go to Zoom and select ‘Share screen’, you see all your open tabs and windows. This is where it often goes wrong: you accidentally select the PowerPoint presentation without it being in presenting mode.

So, make sure you put your presentation in presenting mode FIRST (using F5 or F8 or a similar button). Then go to Zoom and share your screen. If you do it like this, you see three options for PowerPoint (as shown below). There is a subtle difference: one is your editing window, one shows the presentation notes, and one is called PowerPoint Slide Show . This last one is the right one; it shows your presentation in its entirety.

zoom presentation examples

Organize your windows and screens

When you turn on your PowerPoint presentation mode, it automatically maximizes your PowerPoint window to fullscreen. But then you don’t see Zoom anymore, so the chats and participants are hidden and you can’t see what everyone’s doing. This can be very annoying if you’re not prepared for this.

It’s good practice to organize your windows and screens so that they are next to each other (you may have to make the windows smaller for this). Do this right after you start to share your screen, perhaps during the introduction. This allows you to simultaneously see your presentation including notes, the participants’ video (or yourself if you like), and the chat. Now you have a complete overview of all that is important!

zoom presentation examples

Make use of the handy features in PowerPoint and Zoom

Since you can’t use a real laser pointer when presenting online, you could use the laser pointer function in PowerPoint instead. You can even highlight text, or write in your presentation while you’re presenting. Keep in mind though, that if you think you really need a laser pointer to do your presentation, the real problem could be that you have too much text or data crammed on your slides…

zoom presentation examples

Note that highlighting, pointing, and writing in your presentation is also possible in Zoom. If you have shared your screen, you see the “Annotate” function in your view. If you unfold that, you see all kinds of options to draw or write on the screen, or to highlight information. In the example below, you see how you can use stamps to put little hearts in your presentation. And your audience can do this too! It’s a really nice feature to use in interactive exercises (for example: use those heart stamps to vote for a correct answer or favorite design). It’s a great way to keep your audience engaged too.

Interactive presentations are appreciated more!

zoom presentation examples

Plan for low-threshold interaction

Tell your audience at the beginning of your presentation whether you have time for questions at the end. Do you prefer interaction at the end? Remind them during your presentation that they can put their questions in the chat. This puts your audience at ease because they know you will deal with their questions, and also allows you to get going with the questions right away when you’re ready, instead of awkwardly waiting for the first question to pop up.

If you prefer to have more feedback, you can ask the participants to react during the presentation using the available icons (clap, thumbs up, heart, smile, etc). Compared to a live talk there is very little visual feedback to go on otherwise, so this might be good to have, but to be honest it can be distracting too.

Another kind of reaction can be found in the “Participants” menu: f.i. Yes/No replies, hand raise, thumbs up/down, coffee break icons. You can use these for creative moments of interaction to keep your audience attentive (though actual coffee might work better sometimes)

zoom presentation examples

Wrap up with a call to action

What do you want people to do after your presentation? Do you want them to follow you on LinkedIn, Twitter, Instagram? Do you want them to use a hashtag? Do you have a book, workshop or course you want them to purchase? Whatever it is – let them know!

So, NO slide with that 3D guy with the red question mark (or his confused Clipart colleague – you know who we mean!). It doesn’t add anything for anybody. If you have a round for questions, put your name, social media handles and/or website on screen, so that participants have the time to write it down.

At the end of the day (or presentation), what do you want people to do or remember? End with that!

If you have a presentation that you give more often, and you know from experience that there are more questions than time to answer them, you can give your audience a hand-out PDF afterwards. In the hand-out you can put the most frequently asked questions with answers. It’s also good practice to share a website on which you collect all the tips and resources from the presentation. Announce this at the beginning, so that participants don’t have to take notes. Note: it’s not advisable to share the slides from the presentation, because they were (or shouldn’t be) designed as hand-out, but as a visual support for your spoken words.

Why Zoom is (or can be) so much nicer than a live presentation

If you consider the options, online presentations using Zoom are a really nice development. You have your notes at hand, and you can set it up so that you feel most comfortable and supported. You also have more options for interactivity online, and it also provides a lower threshold for those who are uncomfortable in the spotlight; they can just ask a question in the chat. It allows for people from all over the world to see you speak, and you can do it from the comfort of your own home. We don’t all relish in the attention of being center-stage in a huge auditorium… Although the downside is that the informal drinks afterwards are much better in person.

Are you ready to start making beautiful slides as well? Then buy our e-book on designing clear science presentations for just 10 euro!

Curious to see what else you can learn about making great presentations? Check out our workshop series where we inspire you to design beautiful presentations and write better stories.

About the Author: Liesbeth Smit

Search for more scicomm tips:, read more about science communication:.

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Sound Jury Consulting

Sound Jury Consulting

Thomas O'Toole, Ph.D.

  • February 3, 2021

11 Tips for Persuasive Zoom Presentations

We are almost one year into the COVID-19 pandemic and Zoom (referring to both the specific platform and generically to all videoconferencing) has become the predominant method of professional communication. Attorneys attend hearings over Zoom, pitch their services to clients, and in some venues, even try cases to juries remotely. In this week’s blog, I want to explore the components of effective presentation over Zoom. Here are eleven tips that I developed with Dr. Mike Anderson, an expert in public speaking, to enhance the quality of your Zoom presentations.

zoom presentation examples

2. Look at the camera, not the computer screen. This is incredibly important, but also very difficult. When you are talking to a group of people who are going to make a decision with millions or more on the line, you want to see how they are reacting to you. However, study after study has highlighted the critical role that eye contact plays in creating a connection with the audience. If it does not look like you are speaking to your audience, why should they pay attention? Imagine having someone make a sales pitch to you without ever looking at you? You’re not going to buy what they have to sell. The virtual world is no different. Similarly, avoid darting eyes. If there are people or materials in the room that might tempt you to look away, either remove them or place them closer to the camera. Darting eyes creates awkwardness with your audience, which can cut against relationship-building.

3. Put the camera at eye level. You should not just have your laptop open on your desk with the camera looking up your nose. Nobody looks good at that angle. If nothing else, put some books under your laptop to raise it up to eye level, or consider purchasing an external camera to use instead of your laptop camera. This will drastically improve the effectiveness of your eye contact. To overcome the “up the nose” look, people will often error on the side of positioning their camera too high. There’s a fairly widespread belief that this position is more flattering from a picture taking perspective, however, on longer Zoom meetings, it is unnatural and also makes maintained eye contact more difficult.

4. Stand up. Standing versus sitting does not receive nearly enough attention when it comes to all that has been written about effective presentations over Zoom. When you sit, your energy level drops quite a bit. You are less energetic, less likely to gesture, and project less. Some corporate interviewers who conduct interviews over the phone will tell you that they can tell when a job candidate is sitting because the sitting candidate projects less and has less authority in their voice. However, videoconferencing limits your ability to walk around as you stand, so make sure you aware of your space and how it relates to the borders of the camera shot so that you do not inadvertently move off of the screen.

zoom presentation examples

6. Humanize the camera. How do you project your personality and dynamism to a lifeless camera device? It’s hard, which is why you need to reconceptualize the camera as a person you respect and value. Some experts go as far as recommending that you give the camera a name and to speak to the camera like it is their best friend. That may seem hokey, but the point is to find ways to visualize your audience so you do not lose the dynamism that is so essential to persuasive presentations.

7.  Speak with energy. In video presentations, you have to show more energy in order to keep your audience engaged. The goal is an energetic, conversational tone with smiling, gestures, and nodding, all of which are immediacy behaviors designed to build warmth and likability with the audience. The key is to practice and get feedback because this is hard to accomplish. The level of energy that you need in a remote presentation will likely feel excessive to you, but may be necessary. However, you also do not want to have so much energy that you come across more as someone’s crazy uncle than an effective and persuasive speaker.

8. Embrace animated graphics. Simple animated graphics, when effectively designed, create movement and interest, and can provide a great substitute for the lost dynamism of in-person presentations. They give your audience an interesting mental break from the monotony of what otherwise appears on their screen. You can also do this while still remaining on the screen by using either a picture-in-picture effect (as in the example) or a split screen, both of which can be accomplished with many of the live video-editing software programs that are available on the internet.

9. Go overboard on signposting. Many public speaking experts will tell you that effective transitions are the second most important part of an informative speech, and this certainly holds true in the virtual courtroom. Because your audience is not physically present, it is easier for them to get lost and signposting can help bring them back. A simple example of effective signposting is something like, “Mr. Smith, this case involves a fraud claim, which has five elements that the plaintiff needs to prove. I want to start by talking about the first element.”

10. Create a plan for your lighting. First, always makes sure your prime lighting source is behind the camera. You should never set up your shot where you are in front of a window or in front of a bright lamp. You will be washed out. Most cameras are designed to focus on the most lit part of the frame. If the brightest source is behind you, you will be out of focus. Natural lighting is the absolute best. Natural lighting makes everyone look good, when the source of that natural light is behind the camera, not behind the speaker. If you cannot find natural light, make sure you have at least two light sources on either side of the camera so that you do not produce harsh shadows.

zoom presentation examples

11. Create depth in your background. You should never shoot yourself in front of a blank white wall. Always show depth behind you and make sure you curate your background. However, it should not be so cluttered that it becomes a distraction. Instead, focus on adding things that add to your authority and look professional. Look at the two screenshots from interviews with Stacey Abrams. In the first one, she is just in front of a white wall where she clearly just put some books on a shelf. In the second interview, she obviously received better training because later in the month she has better lighting and is showing depth behind her with a more professional and curated background.

zoom presentation examples

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23 presentation examples that really work (plus templates!)

Three professionals engaged in a collaborative meeting with a Biteable video maker, a laptop, and documents on the table.

  • 30 Mar 2023

To help you in your quest for presentation greatness, we’ve gathered 23 of the best business presentation examples out there. These hand-picked ideas range from business PowerPoint presentations, to recruitment presentations, and everything in between.

As a bonus, several of our examples include editable video presentation templates from  Biteable .

Biteable allows anyone to create great video presentations — no previous video-making skills required. The easy-to-use platform has hundreds of brandable templates and video scenes designed with a business audience in mind. A video made with Biteable is just what you need to add that wow factor and make an impact on your audience.

Create videos that drive action

Activate your audience with impactful, on-brand videos. Create them simply and collaboratively with Biteable.

Video presentation examples

Video presentations are our specialty at Biteable. We love them because they’re the most visually appealing and memorable way to communicate.

1. Animated characters

Our first presentation example is a business explainer video from Biteable that uses animated characters. The friendly and modern style makes this the perfect presentation for engaging your audience.

Bonus template:  Need a business video presentation that reflects the beautiful diversity of your customers or team? Use  Biteable’s workplace scenes . You can change the skin tone and hair color for any of the animated characters.

2. Conference video

Videos are also ideal solutions for events (e.g. trade shows) where they can be looped to play constantly while you attend to more important things like talking to people and handing out free cheese samples.

For this event presentation sample below, we used bright colours, stock footage, and messaging that reflects the brand and values of the company. All these elements work together to draw the attention of passers-by.

For a huge selection of video presentation templates, take a look at our  template gallery .

Business PowerPoint presentation examples

Striking fear into the hearts of the workplace since 1987, PowerPoint is synonymous with bland, boring presentations that feel more like an endurance test than a learning opportunity. But it doesn’t have to be that way. Check out these anything-but-boring business PowerPoint presentation examples.

3. Design pointers

This PowerPoint presentation takes a tongue-in-cheek look at how the speakers and users of PowerPoint are the problem, not the software itself.

Even at a hefty 61 slides, the vintage theme, appealing colors, and engaging content keep the viewer interested. It delivers useful and actionable tips on creating a better experience for your audience.

Pixar, as you’d expect, redefines the meaning of PowerPoint in their “22 Rules for Phenomenal Storytelling”. The character silhouettes are instantly recognizable and tie firmly to the Pixar brand. The bright colour palettes are carefully chosen to highlight the content of each slide.

This presentation is a good length, delivering one message per slide, making it easy for an audience to take notes and retain the information.

Google slides examples

If you’re in business, chances are you’ll have come across  slide decks . Much like a deck of cards, each slide plays a key part in the overall ‘deck’, creating a well-rounded presentation.

If you need to inform your team, present findings, or outline a new strategy, slides are one of the most effective ways to do this.

Google Slides is one of the best ways to create a slide deck right now. It’s easy to use and has built-in design tools that integrate with Adobe, Lucidchart, and more. The best part — it’s free!

5. Teacher education

Here’s a slide deck that was created to educate teachers on how to use Google Slides effectively in a classroom. At first glance it seems stuffy and businessy, but if you look closer it’s apparent the creator knows his audience well, throwing in some teacher-friendly content that’s bound to get a smile.

The slides give walkthrough screenshots and practical advice on the different ways teachers can use the software to make their lives that little bit easier and educate their students at the same time.

6. Charity awareness raiser

This next Google slide deck is designed to raise awareness for an animal shelter. It has simple, clear messaging, and makes use of the furry friends it rescues to tug on heartstrings and encourage donations and adoptions from its audience.

Pro tip: Creating a presentation is exciting but also a little daunting. It’s easy to feel overwhelmed — especially if the success of your business or nonprofit depends on it.

Prezi presentation examples

If you haven’t come across  Prezi , it’s a great alternative to using static slides. Sitting somewhere between slides and a video presentation, it allows you to import other content and add motion to create a more engaging viewer experience.

7. Red Bull event recap

This Prezi was created to document the Red Bull stratosphere freefall stunt a few years ago. It neatly captures all the things that Prezi is capable of, including video inserts and the zoom effect, which gives an animated, almost 3D effect to what would otherwise be still images.  

Prezi has annual awards for the best examples of presentations over the year. This next example is one of the 2018 winners. It was made to highlight a new Logitech tool.

8. Logitech Spotlight launch

What stands out here are the juicy colors, bold imagery, and the way the designer has used Prezi to its full extent, including rotations, panning, fades, and a full zoom out to finish the presentation.

zoom presentation examples

Sales presentation examples

If you’re stuck for ideas for your sales presentation, step right this way and check out this video template we made for you.

9. Sales enablement video presentation

In today’s fast-paced sales environment, you need a way to make your sales enablement presentations memorable and engaging for busy reps.  Sales enablement videos  are just the ticket. Use this video presentation template the next time you need to present on your metrics.

10. Zuroa sales deck

If you’re after a sales deck, you can’t go past this example from Zuora. What makes it great? It begins by introducing the worldwide shift in the way consumers are shopping. It’s a global phenomenon, and something we can all relate to.

It then weaves a compelling story about how the subscription model is changing the face of daily life for everyone. Metrics and testimonials from well-known CEOs and executives are included for some slamming social proof to boost the sales message.

Pitch presentation examples

Pitch decks are used to give an overview of business plans, and are usually presented during meetings with customers, investors, or potential partners.

11. Uber pitch deck

This is Uber’s original pitch deck, which (apart from looking a teensy bit dated) gives an excellent overview of their business model and clearly shows how they intended to disrupt a traditional industry and provide a better service to people. Right now, you’re probably very grateful that this pitch presentation was a winner.

You can make your own pitch deck with Biteable, or start with one of our  video templates  to make something a little more memorable.

12. Video pitch template

This video pitch presentation clearly speaks to the pains of everyone who needs to commute and find parking. It then provides the solution with its app that makes parking a breeze.

The video also introduces the key team members, their business strategy, and what they’re hoping to raise in funding. It’s a simple, clear pitch that positions the company as a key solution to a growing, worldwide problem. It’s compelling and convincing, as a good presentation should be.

13. Fyre Festival pitch deck

The most epic example of a recent pitch deck is this one for Fyre Festival – the greatest event that never happened. Marvel at its persuasion, gasp at the opportunity of being part of the cultural experience of the decade, cringe as everything goes from bad to worse.

Despite the very public outcome, this is a masterclass in how to create hype and get funding with your pitch deck using beautiful imagery, beautiful people, and beautiful promises of riches and fame.

Business presentation examples

Need to get the right message out to the right people? Business presentations can do a lot of the heavy lifting for you.

Simply press play and let your video do the talking. No fumbling your words and sweating buckets in front of those potential clients, just you being cool as a cucumber while your presentation does the talking.

Check out two of our popular templates that you can use as a starting point for your own presentations. While they’re business-minded, they’re definitely not boring.

14. Business intro template

Modern graphics, animations, and upbeat soundtracks keep your prospects engaged as they learn about your business, your team, your values, and how you can help them.

15. Business explainer template

Research presentation examples.

When you’re giving a more technical presentation such as research findings, you need to strike the perfect balance between informing your audience and making sure they stay awake.

As a rule, slides are more effective for research presentations, as they are used to support the speaker’s knowledge rather can capture every small detail on screen.

With often dry, complex, and technical subject matter, there can be a temptation for presentations to follow suit. Use images instead of walls of text, and keep things as easy to follow as possible.

16. TrackMaven research deck

TrackMaven uses their endearing mascot to lighten up this data-heavy slide deck. The graphs help to bring life to their findings, and they ensure to only have one bite-size takeaway per slide so that viewers can easily take notes.

17. Wearable tech research report

Obviously, research can get very researchy and there’s not a lot to be done about it. This slide deck below lays out a ton of in-depth information but breaks it up well with quotes, diagrams, and interesting facts to keep viewers engaged while it delivers its findings on wearable technology.

Team presentation examples

Motivating your team can be a challenge at the best of times, especially when you need to gather them together for….another presentation!

18. Team update template

We created this presentation template as an example of how to engage your team. In this case, it’s for an internal product launch. Using colorful animation and engaging pacing, this video presentation is much better than a static PowerPoint, right?

19. Officevibe collaboration explainer

This short slide deck is a presentation designed to increase awareness of the problems of a disengaged team. Bright colors and relevant images combine with facts and figures that compel viewers to click through to a download to learn more about helping their teams succeed.

Recruitment presentation examples

Recruiting the right people can be a challenge. Presentations can help display your team and your business by painting a dynamic picture of what it’s like to work with you.

Videos and animated slides let you capture the essence of your brand and workplace so the right employees can find you.

20. Company culture explainer

If you’re a recruitment agency, your challenge is to stand out from the hundreds of other agencies in the marketplace.

21. Kaizen culture

Showcasing your agency using a slide deck can give employers and employees a feel for doing business with you. Kaizen clearly displays its credentials and highlights its brand values and personality here (and also its appreciation of the coffee bean).

Explainer presentation examples

Got some explaining to do? Using an explainer video is the ideal way to showcase products that are technical, digital, or otherwise too difficult to explain with still images and text.

Explainer videos help you present the features and values of your product in an engaging way that speaks to your ideal audience and promotes your brand at the same time.

22. Product explainer template

23. lucidchart explainer.

Lucidchart does a stellar job of using explainer videos for their software. Their series of explainers-within-explainers entertains the viewer with cute imagery and an endearing brand voice. At the same time, the video is educating its audience on how to use the actual product. We (almost) guarantee you’ll have more love for spiders after watching this one.

Make a winning video presentation with Biteable

Creating a winning presentation doesn’t need to be difficult or expensive. Modern slide decks and video software make it easy for you to give compelling presentations that sell, explain, and educate without sending your audience to snooze town.

For the best online video presentation software around, check out Biteable. The intuitive platform does all the heavy lifting for you, so making a video presentation is as easy as making a PowerPoint.

Use Biteable’s brand builder to automatically fetch your company colors and logo from your website and apply them to your entire video with the click of a button. Even add a  clickable call-to-action  button to your video.

Share your business presentation anywhere with a single, trackable URL and watch your message turn into gold.

Make stunning videos with ease.

Take the struggle out of team communication.

Try Biteable now.

  • No credit card required
  • No complicated design decisions
  • No experience necessary

Home PowerPoint Templates Zoom

Zoom Templates for PowerPoint and Google Slides

The Zoom PowerPoint Templates are predesigned and ready-to-use pictorial designs that depict the zoom-in effect of your presentation content to your audiences. It is available in a variety of layouts and sizes. These templates are adaptable and can be used in various industries and organizations, and you can download and modify any of these templates to suit your needs.

Our Zoom PPT Templates are professionally designed and are made up of PowerPoint shapes, icons, colors, and other essential elements that make them visually appealing. You can use Zoom PowerPoint Templates to help you create engaging presentations that effectively communicate with your audiences.

Featured Templates

Zoom Footprint Path PowerPoint Timeline

Zoom Footprint Path PowerPoint Timeline

4-Item Zoom In Diagram PowerPoint Template

4-Item Zoom In Diagram PowerPoint Template

Zig Zag Process Flow Zoom Template for PowerPoint

Zig Zag Process Flow Zoom Template for PowerPoint

Animated Business Navigational Zoom PowerPoint Template

Animated Business Navigational Zoom PowerPoint Template

Latest templates.

PPT Template - All Into One Circle Zoom Slide

Animated All Into One Circle PowerPoint Template

PPT Animated Circular Diagram for PPT

Animated 6-Item Cycle Diagram PowerPoint Template

Animated Slide Template for Timeline Presentation

5-Phase Animated Roadmap Concept PowerPoint Template

PPT Template for Research Cards

Research Cards PowerPoint Template with Zoom Animation

Presentation for Ocean Floor Label Diagram

Ocean Floor PowerPoint Template

Map and Flag of El Salvador

Editable El Salvador Map PowerPoint Template

Business PowerPoint 3D Model

Animated 3D Square Connected Block PowerPoint Templates

Project Overview Slide PowerPoint Template

Navigational Business PowerPoint Timeline

Infographic PowerPoint Timeline Design

Gear Zoom PowerPoint Timeline

Spherical Segmented Template 4 Step

3D Model Segmented Core PowerPoint Templates

Create Prezi like animations in PowerPoint

Animated Navigational PowerPoint Template

zoom presentation examples

Magnifier Glass Shape for PowerPoint

A Zoom Template is an informative template that gives your audience a close-up view of your presentation contents. The idea of zooming began in filmmaking as a technique to take a close-up shot of the scene. This technique helps focus on an important part of the scene.

It is used to depict cogent points and help your audience to understand them. You can use any of these templates for informal or formal presentations. They help save time, energy, and resources. Using these templates makes your presentation visually appealing and communicates efficiently to your audience without hassle.

Browse through our collection of Zoom Powerpoint Templates to select the one suitable for your next presentation. Also, our Zoom PowerPoint Templates are Mac and Windows-supported. You can also run them on Keynotes, Office365, and Google Slides. You can edit the templates’ placeholder content, color, fonts, and font size. It makes the slides personal, and your audience will pay attention.

What is the purpose of the Zoom PowerPoint Template?

Zoom PowerPoint Templates are used to return to sections of your presentation that you want to emphasize or to highlight how different parts of your presentation connect. It is significant because it depicts essential points and allows your audience to understand them quickly at a glance.

What Powerpoint Format Is Best For Zoom?

When giving a presentation, the best slide size for your PowerPoint is 16:9 or a widescreen layout. By default, PowerPoint presentations display content in a widescreen layout. On an iPad and other mobile devices, you can use the 4:3 format.

What should a Zoom PowerPoint Template include?

These templates should include the title of the presentation as well as the presenter’s title, organization, and department. The final slide should include contact information such as an address, phone number, website, email, and social media links.

Importantly, create a strong presentation by keeping your points simple and using examples. On the other hand, our Zoom PowerPoint Presentation Templates are designed to accommodate all necessary and required contents. These templates also include placeholder content that you can change to suit your needs.

How Can You Make A Zoom Slide?

You must follow the following Do-It-Yourself procedures to create a Zoom Slide:

  • Click on insert.
  • Scroll to Zoom and right-click.
  • Open the Slide Zoom dialog box that appears.
  • Choose which slides to use in your slide zoom.
  • After you’ve chosen your preferred layout, click insert. Your slide zoom has been created.

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zoom presentation examples

Presentation Examples: Inspiring Ideas for Different Types of Presentations

presentations ai

When preparing for a presentation, it can be immensely helpful to look at examples for inspiration. Different situations require different approaches—whether you’re pitching a new idea to investors, presenting a strategy to your team, or educating an audience at a conference. In this blog post, we’ll explore presentation examples across various categories, breaking down how each can be structured for maximum impact.

By examining these examples, you’ll gain insights on how to tailor your own presentation based on your objectives and audience.

1. Business Pitch Presentation Example: The Investor Pitch

An investor pitch aims to secure funding by convincing potential investors that your business is a solid opportunity. It needs to be concise, compelling, and data-driven.

Key Components:

  • Problem Statement: Start by highlighting a clear problem in the market that your product or service solves.
  • Solution and Value Proposition: Clearly explain how your offering addresses the problem and what sets it apart from competitors.
  • Market Opportunity: Provide data on the market size, growth potential, and target audience.
  • Business Model: Outline how your business makes money and its scalability.
  • Traction and Milestones: Showcase your progress so far, such as revenue growth, customer acquisition, or partnerships.
  • Funding Ask and Use of Proceeds: Specify how much funding you’re seeking and how you plan to use it.

Example Structure:

  • Slide 1: Introduction with a compelling statistic or quote about the industry.
  • Slide 2: Problem statement illustrated by customer pain points.
  • Slide 3: Solution overview with visuals of your product or service.
  • Slide 4: Market opportunity with key figures and growth trends.
  • Slide 5: Business model explanation with revenue streams and pricing strategy.
  • Slide 6: Traction, including growth charts, testimonials, or case studies.
  • Slide 7: Funding request and breakdown of how funds will be allocated.

2. Sales Presentation Example: Closing a Deal with a Client

A sales presentation should focus on understanding your client’s needs and presenting your product or service as the ideal solution. It needs to be persuasive, highlighting the benefits and outcomes your offering provides.

  • Understanding the Client’s Pain Points: Begin by discussing the challenges your client faces and what they’re hoping to achieve.
  • Tailored Solution: Customize your pitch to show how your offering directly solves their specific problems.
  • Benefits and ROI: Highlight the key benefits and the return on investment your client can expect.
  • Case Studies and Testimonials: Provide examples of similar clients who’ve seen success with your solution.
  • Next Steps and Call to Action: Clearly outline the next steps, whether it’s scheduling a demo, signing a contract, or a follow-up meeting.
  • Slide 1: Client-specific introduction with their pain points and goals.
  • Slide 2: Overview of your product or service, focusing on features that matter most to the client.
  • Slide 3: Detailed benefit breakdown with visuals showing outcomes and results.
  • Slide 4: Case study of a similar client, highlighting the problem, solution, and positive results.
  • Slide 5: ROI analysis with projections tailored to the client’s business.
  • Slide 6: Call to action, clearly stating the next steps or decision points.

3. Strategy Presentation Example: Presenting a New Business Strategy to Executives

A strategy presentation is about communicating a clear vision and plan for achieving specific goals. When presenting to executives, it’s crucial to be concise, data-driven, and aligned with business objectives.

  • Executive Summary: Begin with a high-level overview of the strategy and its importance.
  • Current Situation Analysis: Analyze the current landscape, including strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats (SWOT).
  • Strategic Objectives: Clearly define the goals and objectives of the strategy.
  • Action Plan: Break down the steps, initiatives, and timelines needed to achieve the objectives.
  • Resource Allocation: Highlight the resources (people, budget, technology) required for implementation.
  • Risk and Mitigation: Address potential risks and how they’ll be managed.
  • KPIs and Metrics: Define how success will be measured and monitored.
  • Slide 1: Executive summary with a bold statement about the strategy’s potential impact.
  • Slide 2: SWOT analysis or current situation overview.
  • Slide 3: Strategic objectives, laid out as clear, measurable goals.
  • Slide 4: Action plan timeline, including major milestones and deliverables.
  • Slide 5: Resource allocation, specifying budget and team responsibilities.
  • Slide 6: Risk assessment and contingency plans.
  • Slide 7: Key performance indicators and how progress will be tracked.

4. Educational Presentation Example: Teaching a Concept to Students

An educational presentation is about breaking down complex information into digestible parts. The goal is to inform and engage, making sure your audience walks away with a solid understanding of the subject.

  • Introduction to the Topic: Provide a clear overview of what the audience will learn and why it’s important.
  • Key Concepts Explained: Break the content into bite-sized sections, with each section covering a key concept.
  • Visual Aids and Examples: Use diagrams, charts, and examples to clarify and reinforce key points.
  • Interactive Elements: Incorporate quizzes, polls, or discussions to check for understanding and maintain engagement.
  • Summary and Review: Recap the key concepts and answer any questions the audience might have.
  • Slide 1: Topic introduction with a statement of objectives (e.g., “Today, we’ll explore the fundamentals of digital marketing”).
  • Slide 2: Breakdown of the first key concept with visuals and a real-world example.
  • Slide 3: Explanation of the second concept, including a brief interactive activity (e.g., a poll or quiz).
  • Slide 4: Visual demonstration or case study related to the topic.
  • Slide 5: Summary slide recapping the main points and next steps for further learning.
  • Slide 6: Open the floor for questions and discussion.

5. Motivational Presentation Example: Inspiring an Audience to Take Action

A motivational presentation aims to inspire and energize the audience. Whether you’re speaking at a conference or leading a team meeting, the goal is to evoke emotion and drive people to take action.

  • Personal Story or Anecdote: Start with a relatable story that sets the tone and connects with the audience.
  • Core Message or Theme: Define the central message that you want the audience to take away.
  • Powerful Examples or Quotes: Use impactful quotes or stories to reinforce your message and add emotional weight.
  • Call to Action: Clearly communicate what you want the audience to do next, and why it matters.
  • Closing with a Memorable Statement: End with a statement that lingers in the minds of your audience.
  • Slide 1: Opening with a powerful quote or a story that resonates with the audience.
  • Slide 2: Introduce the core message or theme (e.g., “The Power of Resilience in Overcoming Adversity”).
  • Slide 3: Share a personal experience or example that illustrates your message.
  • Slide 4: Reinforce the theme with a memorable quote or an inspiring example from history.
  • Slide 5: Call to action, urging the audience to apply what they’ve learned or commit to change.
  • Slide 6: Closing with a motivational statement or vision for the future.

Great presentations are built on a foundation of clear structure, relevant content, and a deep understanding of your audience’s needs. By examining these examples and tailoring your approach to fit your specific context, you can create presentations that are impactful, persuasive, and memorable. Whether you’re pitching, educating, or inspiring, having a well-organized presentation outline will give you the confidence and clarity needed to deliver your message effectively.

Table of contents

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IMAGES

  1. How to Give a Zoom Presentation: 5 Tips for Students

    zoom presentation examples

  2. How to use Zoom in PowerPoint for interactive presentations.

    zoom presentation examples

  3. Presentation on zoom

    zoom presentation examples

  4. 15 Tips for Engaging Zoom Presentations + Examples

    zoom presentation examples

  5. The Ultimate Zoom Teaching Guide 2

    zoom presentation examples

  6. 13 Zoom Presentation Tips to Ace Your Next Online Meeting

    zoom presentation examples

VIDEO

  1. Zoom Presentation Recording Ch 31

  2. Zoom Presentation Product Part

  3. Preparing a Zoom Presentation

  4. Zoom Commentary Technique

  5. Let's zoom into using this awesome PowerPoint trick #ppt #powerpoint #presentation #design #tutorial

  6. ZOOM PRESENTATION 15-05-2023 DR SOSA

COMMENTS

  1. 13 Zoom Presentation Tips to Ace Your Next Online Meeting

    Step 3: Share your screen on Zoom. From your Zoom meeting window, click on "Share Screen" and select the window with the Presenter view of your presentation. That's it! You'll now be able to look at the presenter notes on your screen while your audience views the slide open in your Presenter view window.

  2. 15 Tips for Engaging Zoom Presentations + Examples

    Make sure that your laptop, computer, lighting, headset, webcam, microphone, and internet connection are working. Have backup equipment if possible. Familiarize yourself with the Zoom app and other relevant software you're going to use during the presentation. Close unnecessary browsers, applications, or software before the presentation.

  3. How to Ace Your Zoom Presentation: Tips for Successful ...

    Select Hosts Only or All Participants. Step 3. Select the window you want to share - in this case, the one that contains the PowerPoint slide - and click on Share. If you are playing audio or video within your presentation, make sure to tick Share sound and Optimize for video clip. Step 4.

  4. The Ultimate Guide to Giving Virtual Presentations on Zoom

    17 Chapters. 29,584 words. 84 Screenshots. 10+ Videos. Roughly speaking—and by that I mean super specific—the Ultimate Guide to Giving Virtual Presentations on Zoom contains six thematic parts, seventeen chapters, 29,584 words, eighty four precision-crafted interface screenshots to show you how to do cool things, high-production ...

  5. Easy PowerPoint Zoom Tutorial (Free Templates & Examples)

    2. Access the Summary Soon Feature: To use PowerPoint Summary Zoom, click Insert > Zoom > Summary Zoom. This will create a new slide that displays a summary of your presentation, with thumbnails of each slide. 3. Customize Appearance: You can customize the appearance of the Summary Zoom slide by selecting the Format tab.

  6. 5 interactive Zoom presentation ideas to jump-start your virtual

    Prezi has over 200 presentation templates to help you get started on anything from sales pitches and training presentations to internal meetings. Customize these with your own content to make them your own. For more interactive Zoom presentations, use a video template that displays your content next to you on screen.

  7. The Ultimate Guide to Giving Virtual Presentations on @Zoom

    Kinda. To access the feature (beta at time of writing) click the "Advanced" tab in the "Share Screen" popup, and select "Slides as Virtual Background". This is what it looks like from the attendee's perspective. And yes, you appear twice on the screen. Once on top of your slides, and again beside them.

  8. Effective and Professional Zoom Presentation Tips

    Learning how to properly use and maximize Zoom beforehand can go a long way in turning a meeting from a yawn-inducing, error-filled meeting to a professional and effective presentation. Here are some keyboard shortcuts you may need to use: Muting your audio: ALT + A for Windows/ PC; CMD + CTRL + A for Mac.

  9. Zoom presentation tips to bring human connection into virtual meetings

    5. Make sure your Zoom presentation flows. This Zoom presentation tip works well with storytelling. Everything you say and show should have a good segue - both your story and your presentation slides. Rather than transitioning through slides linearly, use Prezi's presentation templates to have a more conversational presentation. You can ...

  10. 11 Essential Tips for Presenting on Zoom

    These Zoom presentation tips will help grow your competence, confidence and success. 1. Put some trousers on! ... That could be about you, your product or the outcome you are requesting, for example. 9. Meaningful quotes in presentations "The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place." - George ...

  11. The Ultimate Guide to Giving Virtual Presentations on Zoom

    Defining Your Presentation's Purpose. A key trait of successful speakers is understanding their personal brand. They know what they represent, how they want to be perceived, and what success looks for them. It's common for this knowledge to accrue with experience, but you don't have to wait for your 10,000 hours in order to get to that point.

  12. 7 Zoom Presentation Tips to Bring Your Virtual Events to ...

    More interactive Zoom presentation ideas? We must confess that storytelling is so powerful. Suppose you can build stories or examples into your presentation that illustrate your message. In that case, your Zoom presentation will be much more memorable, and your audience will feel more emotionally invested in the stories that you tell.

  13. How to Present on Zoom: Google Slides and Powerpoint Presentation Guide

    2. Use Zoom to present. Now that the windows have been separated, you can easily use Zoom to present the slideshow window. While in a meeting, click on the 'Share Screen' button and select the browser window with Google Slides on top. Finally, hit 'Share' to start the screen-sharing session.

  14. Easy PowerPoint Zoom Tutorial (Free Templates & Examples)

    We want to zoom into the different description slides from our Iceberg Model slide. 2. Access the Slide Zoom Feature: Next, click Insert > Zoom > Slide Zoom. From here, choose the slide, or slides, that you want to zoom into. Click Insert and a thumbnail or thumbnails of the slides will appear on your current slide.

  15. How to Give a Presentation on Zoom? [A Step-by-Step Guide!]

    Here is how you can do that-. Step 1: First, start or join a Zoom meeting. Step 2: Click on " Share Screen " and select the " Advanced " option. From there, select " PowerPoint as Virtual Background " and select the file you want for your presentation. Then click on " Share ".

  16. 5 Ways To Make Zoom Presentations Engaging And Irresistible

    In fact, change the content format every two to four minutes to keep things dynamic and magnetic. 4. Heighten the humanity. If you're delivering a presentation from a stage, it's automatically ...

  17. How to give a professional presentation in Zoom

    Then go to Zoom and share your screen. If you do it like this, you see three options for PowerPoint (as shown below). There is a subtle difference: one is your editing window, one shows the presentation notes, and one is called PowerPoint Slide Show.

  18. 11 Tips for Persuasive Zoom Presentations

    8. Embrace animated graphics. Simple animated graphics, when effectively designed, create movement and interest, and can provide a great substitute for the lost dynamism of in-person presentations. They give your audience an interesting mental break from the monotony of what otherwise appears on their screen.

  19. Create an engaging Zoom presentation in minutes

    How do you make a Zoom presentation in Prezi? The first step in making a Zoom presentation is to start with a great design. Find hundreds of presentation templates and video presentation examples to help you get started, or click the "quick record" option in your online dashboard for an easier and faster option. No matter what you start with, you can adjust your content so that it appears ...

  20. 6 Options for Presenting PowerPoint Slides in Zoom

    In this article I am using the Zoom app in Windows 10. The six options are: Share your entire screen/desktop. Share the Slide Show window. Share the editing window with a clean look. Run the Slide Show in a window and share that window. Use Presenter View to show the audience your slides while you see Presenter View.

  21. Zoom Powerpoint Templates and Google Slides Themes

    Free Zoom Slide Templates for an Engaging Slideshow. Upgrade your virtual presentations with a Zoom PowerPoint template. Whether you're a teacher, professional, or business owner, these templates will help you engage your audience and deliver your message effectively. With a range of customizable slides, you can easily manage your virtual ...

  22. 23 presentation examples that really work (plus templates!)

    It neatly captures all the things that Prezi is capable of, including video inserts and the zoom effect, which gives an animated, almost 3D effect to what would otherwise be still images. Prezi has annual awards for the best examples of presentations over the year. This next example is one of the 2018 winners.

  23. Zoom Templates for PowerPoint and Google Slides

    Browse through our collection of Zoom Powerpoint Templates to select the one suitable for your next presentation. Also, our Zoom PowerPoint Templates are Mac and Windows-supported. You can also run them on Keynotes, Office365, and Google Slides. You can edit the templates' placeholder content, color, fonts, and font size.

  24. 20+ Stunning Presentation Examples to Inspire Your Audience

    3. Strategy Presentation Example: Presenting a New Business Strategy to Executives. A strategy presentation is about communicating a clear vision and plan for achieving specific goals. When presenting to executives, it's crucial to be concise, data-driven, and aligned with business objectives. Key Components:

  25. Discover online presentation software

    Example: For a presentation on a new software tool, use the presentation maker's interactive features to demonstrate the software live, allowing the audience to see its functionality in real time. Animate slide transitions to reflect the narrative progression. For instance, use a fade transition to signify a smooth transition from one topic ...