How to Improve Your PowerPoint Presentation?

April 27, 2026

Share this article

There’s an actual political party in Switzerland called The Anti-PowerPoint Party. Don’t believe me? Then check out this website.


I don’t bring this up because I hate PowerPoint. It’s a fine piece of software for creating visuals to illustrate a presentation. But I do think that we need to rethink how we use the presentation tool.


In many ways, PowerPoint has grown beyond an illustration tool and merged with our corporate presentation psyche in ways that hamper our ability connect with audiences and give good presentations. Here are some ideas that will help you with your next PowerPoint deck.

Don’t Use PowerPoint to Draft Presentations

The process of creating PowerPoint slides has merged in our corporate brain with the process of initially creating a presentation. As a result, we’re creating terrible presentations.


Here’s a scene that takes place thousands of times every day in law offices across America. Judy wants to create a presentation. So, she sits down at her desk and opens up her PowerPoint software and begins using the program’s easy-to-use templates to outline her message. Before long, she has created 30 or 40 slides, loaded with bullet-points. She then goes in front of her audience and narrates her presentation from the slides.


About two minutes into her speech, her listeners are busily thumbing their iPhones. Judy has bored her audience with too much detail and too many slides.


Why?


In part, because PowerPoint encourages lots of bullet-points and a boring outline format. We need to remember that PowerPoint is a program for creating visual aids, not drafting presentations.


Instead, of turning so quickly to PowerPoint, Judy should have taken out a blank sheet of paper and written down three simple ideas that she really wanted her audience to take away from her presentation. Then she could use PowerPoint as a tool for bringing her presentation ideas to life with graphic images.

Don’t Let PowerPoint Rob You of Rehearsal Time

Next, corporate America is spending so much time creating PowerPoint slides that it’s failing to do the most important thing needed to give good presentations: rehearse.


PowerPoint is a horrible time-suck.


I was on the telephone with an architect the other day who told me that they were consistently losing competitive presentations for new business. When I asked them how much time they spend rehearsing their presentations, they admitted that they didn’t do much rehearsal. But when they e-mailed to me their PowerPoint slides, it was clear that they had spent several days creating gorgeous visuals.


Let’s be clear about something. If it comes down to a choice between PowerPoint and rehearsal, dump the slides. For a 30-minute presentation, use eight to ten slides at the most. Save your time for rehearsal.


Plenty of people are great presenters without PowerPoint. No one is great without rehearsal.


Implement these ideas and none of us will have to join the Anti-PowerPoint party.


Joey Asher

A smiling professional wearing a tan blazer over a multi-colored floral top and a pearl necklace against a white background.

Joey Asher has worked with thousands of business people helping them learn how to communicate in a way that connects with clients. His new book 15 Minutes Including Q&A: a Plan to Save the World from Lousy Presentations” is available now. He is also the author three previous books including “How to Win a Pitch: The Five Fundamentals That Will Distinguish You from the Competition”, “Selling and Communication Skills for Lawyers” and “Even A Geek Can Speak.”

Recent Posts

April 27, 2026
“When I’m leading a meeting, I find that people spend a lot of time typing emails. What is your strategy for dealing with the iPhone problem?” “When I’m leading a conference call, I know that there are people listening in who aren’t paying attention. They’re surfing the internet, writing memos, making their own phone calls. Are there tricks for making people pay closer attention?” “People look at their laptop and iPads during my presentations. Is there anything I can do about this?” A lot of people ask me how to keep their listeners from getting distracted by today’s digital technology. And they never like my answer. But here it is. BE MORE ENGAGING. It’s not the listener’s fault that your meeting feels like a waste of time. Many communicators blame iPhones and laptops for their audiences’ failure to pay attention. It’s as if some people think that the smartphone has created a form of attention deficit disorder that has made it more difficult to connect with listeners. Many training sessions now begin with the scolding plea, “Please turn off your cell phones and pagers.” I read an article in the New York Times about a law professor that banned laptops during his lectures because he wanted to foster more “active intellectual experience.” Yeah right Professor. The laptops are the reason that your law students aren’t paying attention to your soul-suckingly dull lectures. Call me a contrarian. But I don’t buy the argument that speaking is more difficult in the digital age. Lecture halls, conference calls, and meeting rooms are perfect little democracies. Audiences vote with their attention spans. If people feel the benefit, they will pay attention. If not, they won’t. And it’s always been that way. The only difference today is the manner in which attention spans wander. In the old days, if you were dull, people would fantasize about their love interest. Today, if you are dull, people still fantasize about their love interest. But they also can tap out emails to them on their iPhone. If you want to overcome digital distractions, you need to give people a strong reason to pay attention. You keep them engaged in four ways. First, start the presentation by stating a simple listener benefit for paying attention. “During this presentation, I’d like to discuss how your organization can grow its revenues despite increased regulatory scrutiny.” If you don’t tell people a clear reason why they should to listen to you, then they have every right to turn to their smartphones. Second, lay out a simple agenda for your presentation, meeting or conference call. “During this call, I want to discuss three things: the current regulatory environment, how it’s hurting us, and what we can do about it.” A clear roadmap gives a sense of what to expect and that you have your thoughts well-organized. That makes it easier to stay focused and pay attention. Third, whenever possible, ask people questions and let them respond. Interactive is always better. One-sided presentations, meetings and conference calls multiply the chance of people tuning out. If people are involved in a discussion with you, they won’t be on their iPhones. That’s a guarantee. Finally, be passionate. If you’re droning on like that dull teacher in “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” people aren’t going to pay attention. But if you’re excited, they will listen. It’s easy to blame the digital age for making it harder to connect with audiences. Don’t buy it. The fault dear speaker lies not in your listeners’ iPhones but in your skills as a communicator. 
April 27, 2026
“I’m terrible at remembering names.” We hear that all the time. But we find that remembering names is a skill that anyone can learn if they simply make it a priority and use a few tricks.
April 27, 2026
Leo Tolstoy began his masterpiece “Anna Karenina” with the sentence “All happy families are alike; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.” Here’s my twist on that famous opening line: “All lousy webinars are alike; each good webinar is good by following a few principles”. Lousy webinars are an unfortunate fact of our Covid-driven business life. It’s great that you can sit at home, eat a sandwich, and learn something. But these on-line presentations are almost always boring. And the reason they stink is almost always the same — they’re PowerPoint slides with a never-ending voice over. No one wants to stare at a computer screen listening to a voice drone for an hour about lowering business risk. But webinars don’t have to stink if you follow a few principles.
April 27, 2026
Joey Asher has worked with thousands of business people helping them learn how to communicate in a way that connects with clients. His new book 15 Minutes Including Q&A: a Plan to Save the World from Lousy Presentations” is available now. He is also the author three previous books including “How to Win a Pitch: The Five Fundamentals That Will Distinguish You from the Competition”, “Selling and Communication Skills for Lawyers” and “Even A Geek Can Speak.”
April 27, 2026
Joey Asher has worked with thousands of business people helping them learn how to communicate in a way that connects with clients. His new book 15 Minutes Including Q&A: a Plan to Save the World from Lousy Presentations” is available now. He is also the author three previous books including “How to Win a Pitch: The Five Fundamentals That Will Distinguish You from the Competition”, “Selling and Communication Skills for Lawyers” and “Even A Geek Can Speak.”
April 27, 2026
Joey Asher has worked with thousands of business people helping them learn how to communicate in a way that connects with clients. His new book 15 Minutes Including Q&A: a Plan to Save the World from Lousy Presentations” is available now. He is also the author three previous books including “How to Win a Pitch: The Five Fundamentals That Will Distinguish You from the Competition”, “Selling and Communication Skills for Lawyers” and “Even A Geek Can Speak.”