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Word Document to Power Point: Possible?

Rl'Halsinor

Explorer
I need to make a presentation in a week. Right now I am researching and typing out my notes in Word document. A good deal of my notes I want to use for a Power Point presentation.

1. Is there a way to transfer my notes to Power Point without me having to type them out again?

2. If I can, is there any way that I can edit the information so that I can have the information "slide-in" (where the information flys in from the top bottom, sides, etc.)when I click the button or will it have to show each page fully? (sorry, I can't make it clearer than this!)

3. How do I do this?

Thanks!
 

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Hi,
What you are proposing is definitely possible. When you have finished in Word, save your document, then go to the File menu> Send to>Microsoft Office Powerpoint. This will send your notes to Powerpoint.
The problem is that all the notes could go to one slide, instead of separate slides. The best way to ensure that the notes go in slides as you wish, is to use styles. What I mean here is at the start of the Formatting toolbar, you should see a box that could say Normal, or Heading 1, etc. These are the default styles within Word.
Anything you want as the start of a new slide (that is the title) should be Heading 1. Each main note should be as Heading 2, subpoints Heading 3, etc all the way to Heading 6.

Once the notes are in Powerpoint, you can edit as you wish. By this I mean add graphics, spellcheck, etc. If you wish to add animation (the text flys in, etc) you need to apply animation for each slide. Now the way to do this will depend upon which version of Powerpoint you have. A way, regardless of version is to go to the Slide Sorter view, available under the View menu>Slide Sorter view. Then go to the Slide Show menu and there will be either Animation Scheme or Custom Animation. These options are how to add the flying text. Then hopefully there will be an option to Apply to All Slides.

If you have any problems, let us know, but also try Microsoft Help.
 

Rl'Halsinor said:
1. Is there a way to transfer my notes to Power Point without me having to type them out again?

2. If I can, is there any way that I can edit the information so that I can have the information "slide-in" (where the information flys in from the top bottom, sides, etc.)when I click the button or will it have to show each page fully? (sorry, I can't make it clearer than this!)

1. Cut and paste. It works great between the different MS office programs. Retains font, formatting, etc. You'll still have to monkey with it to make it look good, but it'll all be there.

2. I know exactly what you're talking about, and as someone who has seen quite a few presentations, I ask that you don't do it.

  • Animations in powerpoint distract the audience from the presentation. They are often slow and bust up the pacing of your presentation.
  • If you do it right, you're hitting your spacebar with every sentance. You're concentrating less on the presentation aspects and looking at the computer more than the audience.
  • If you do it wrong or need to skip around, you end up hitting the space bar 50 times and it looks very unprofessional.

There are places with tips on things to avoid with powerpoint. Check out PowerPoint is Evil for a good start.
 

Rl'Halsinor said:
1. Is there a way to transfer my notes to Power Point without me having to type them out again?

2. If I can, is there any way that I can edit the information so that I can have the information "slide-in" (where the information flys in from the top bottom, sides, etc.)when I click the button or will it have to show each page fully? (sorry, I can't make it clearer than this!)

3. How do I do this?

Thanks!

1. Copy/paste?
2. Yes, custom animations. No big deal.
3. Take an online class or buy a book. Your questions are really beginner powerpoint stuff. If I could sit at your comp and show you, it would take 10 mins, to type it out in terms that you might understand, days. My company has all these sort of application training on their intranet free to employees.

My tip for you is to make finished pages first, you can always copy and insert slides that you then edit down. Whole slides will make the presentation larger in file size, but it's a lot easier for you to design/understand.
 
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Rl'Hansinor said:
I need to make a presentation in a week. Right now I am researching and typing out my notes in Word document. A good deal of my notes I want to use for a Power Point presentation.

1. Is there a way to transfer my notes to Power Point without me having to type them out again?

2. If I can, is there any way that I can edit the information so that I can have the information "slide-in" (where the information flys in from the top bottom, sides, etc.)when I click the button or will it have to show each page fully? (sorry, I can't make it clearer than this!)

3. How do I do this?

1. The Heading styles trick maransreth posted is the way to go.

2. Ditto XCorvis. You can, but please don't. Your audience wants to be wowed by what you say, not distracted by what they see. If you absolutely must use a "build" slide (for example, points you're about to make are a surprise to your audience and you don't want them reading ahead), don't animate the text but simply have it appear bullet by bullet.

3. The way you do it depends on which version of PowerPoint you have. In the most recent version (Office 2003), you're looking for the "Custom Animation" sidebar.


Now, I've been playing around with presentations (as a part of my job responsibilities) and watching presenters (ditto) for over 10 years, so I can't pass up this opportunity to post my personal Top 10 PowerPoint Peeves. Please accept these tips not as a guide to what I may think you personally are obviously about to do wrong (as for all I know you may be an accomplished and deft speaker), but rather a (hopefully helpful) reminder of pitfalls I think it's best to avoid.

10. "In this presentation." Referring to your slides in a "meta" way, as in "I'm going to go over this presentation now." Your slides are not your presentation; what you are saying is your presentation. However, slides are ideal for (1) providing the audience an outline or framework for what you're saying and (2) illustrating something you're already saying in a meaningful way. (Bonus points if you refer to your slides in a derogatory way and then use them anyway: "Well, it's time for death by PowerPoint." (True story.))

9. Misused clipart. Use (decent, relevant) photos, use (simple, easy to understand) icons, or use nothing at all. Especially not the silly cartoon clipart that's way too easy to find and abuse. Really. Your audience will thank you for it. (Bonus points here if you actually describe the picture: "As you can see in this picture...." (True story.))

8. Meaningless charts. If your audience can't figure out for themselves what the chart means within 5 seconds, reconsider using it or be prepared to talk about it for a long time (but see Peeve #6). (Bonus points if it's literally illegible from midway back in the very small conference room. (True story.))

7. Circus colors. Keep your design down to two or three colors if at all possible; use tints and shades if you need more variety. Don't use bold, garish colors that are going to tire your audience's eyes. (Bonus points if every single bullet point on every single slide has vari-colored text in bold blue, red, and yellow. (True story.))

7a. Multiple emphasis. Yeah, I'm cheating to sneak in more than 10, but this does kind of go with the colors thing. If you find yourself with some text that's boldface, italic, underlined, highlighted, and colored, you really should consider simplifying. You should also check to see if different bits of text are emphasized in different ways. Subtlety and consistency is best (which is why this point dovetails with #7). (Bonus points if every single bullet on every single slide has some of this multiply-emphasized text in it. (True story.))

7b. Over emphasis. If you find that everything on the slide is boldface, italic, underlined, highlighted, and/or colored, you need to tone it down. Emphasizing everything equals emphasizing nothing. (Bonus points if the whole presentation's this way. (True story.))

6. Lingering over a slide. Show the slide, make the points that are on the slide, and move on. (Bonus points if you tell a story about how you made the slide. (True story.))

5. Meaningless diagrams. Diagrams differ from charts and clipart in that they actually (are meant to) present narrative content: processes, workflows, stuff like that. If your audience can't figure out a diagram within about 5 seconds, reconsider using it or be prepared to talk about it for a while (but see Peeve #6). (Bonus points if you explain it and your audience still doesn't get it. (True story.))

4. Giving the printouts at the wrong time. This one's a fairly big snafu, but it's a little more nebulous. Sometimes you want the audience to have a printout of your slides as a "takeaway," other times you want the audience to have a printout so they can follow along and/or make notes. The second situation is harder to justify than the first, but I've seen it done. The problem you end up with is that unless your audience is fully invested in what you're saying, they're going to be tempted to flip through the printouts if they have them. (Bonus points if your printouts are photocopies of execrable quality and you become frustrated and flustered while apologizing for the fact. (True story.))

3. Slides packed completely full. "White" space is a design element too. "Continued" slides are just fine. (Bonus points for, you guessed it, slides packed so full they're literally illegible from midway back in the small conference room. (True story.))

2. Failing to rehearse the slides. Your audience can tell if you whipped up your slides and then thought no more about them while preparing your presentation. Ideally, be so familiar with your slides that you know which one is up (and which stage in your build you're at) by how many times you've clicked or keypressed or whatever. Realistically, it's okay to glance at your slides every so often to make sure everything's running smooth, but you can catch the unrehearsed presenter when he or she looks at the screen in surprise because that slide "wasn't supposed to be there." (Bonus points for staring at the screen your slides are on the entire time you're presenting. (True story.))

1. Reading the slides to the audience. Don't. Just don't. You have much more interesting things to say than what you typed. If you don't, start cutting huge swaths of text from your slides so you can speak to your audience instead. Remember, your slides are only there to apprise the audience of where you are in your presentation and illustrate your points. Your slides are not your presentation. (Bonus points if you fail to read the slide properly and make amusing or even shocking slips of the tongue while trying. (Yep: true story.))


As an exercise, I imagined the slides I'd make from this list: I imagined a dozen slides, each titled with one of the boldfaced and numbered points and each showing one photo or screenshot of the offending behavior. Probably fourteen slides: add a title page to the front and a "discussion" slide (entitled "Discussion" or "Questions?" with a big question mark on it or something) to the back. The rest would be talking.

HTH. HAND.
 
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Marius Delphus said:
Now, I've been playing around with presentations (as a part of my job responsibilities) and watching presenters (ditto) for over 10 years, so I can't pass up this opportunity to post my personal Top 10 PowerPoint Peeves. Please accept these tips not as a guide to what I may think you personally are obviously about to do wrong (as for all I know you may be an accomplished and deft speaker), but rather a (hopefully helpful) reminder of pitfalls I think it's best to avoid.

You are my new hero.
 

Oops, can't believe I forgot:

9a. Misused fonts. One font is fine. Use a clean, readable font that you know is present on the computer you're going to print from and the computer you're going to present on. Sans serif fonts like Arial are best for onscreen presentations. Really. If you absolutely must mix fonts, use sans serif (like Arial) for the titles and serif (like (blah) Times New Roman) for the body text. (All kinds of bonus point opportunities on this one: (1) use any "display" font, (2) use any "script" font, but especially with ALL CAPS, (3) use more than four distinctly different fonts on every single slide, (4) use a font that gets replaced on the destination computer with a dingbats font, so that when you go to present there are absolutely no letters left on your slides -- just symbols. (Yep: true stories, all.))

I should just renumber these and call them my Top 13, I guess. Maybe throw in another one or two for the triskadekaphobes.

9b. Squeezed graphics. Yes, if you take the sizing handle on one side of a picture, you can scale it in one dimension without scaling it in the other. This almost always results in a very peculiar-looking graphic that subtracts from the professional look you're (hopefully) trying to achieve. (Bonus points if it's a photo of a widely recognized public figure and it's been squeezed to about 50% of its original width... and stretched to over 100% of its original height. (True story.))

3a. Tiny text. If you're dropping below 14 point text just so you can fit everything in, split the slide and give that poor text some air. A related problem is PowerPoint's new "Fit text to placeholder" feature (debuted in XP or 2003 version, I think) that automatically and happily uglifies your slide by dropping your line spacing (anything under .85 needs serious reconsidering). In PowerPoint 2003, go to "Tools > AutoCorrect > Apply as you type" to turn this off. Go now. (Bonus points if the slide titles are this way, too. (True story.))


@XCorvis: Thanks :)
 

Marius Delphus said:
5. Meaningless diagrams. Diagrams differ from charts and clipart in that they actually (are meant to) present narrative content: processes, workflows, stuff like that. If your audience can't figure out a diagram within about 5 seconds, reconsider using it or be prepared to talk about it for a while (but again, rule #6). (Bonus points if you explain it and your audience still doesn't get it. (True story.))

Heh. I violate this one all the time. But then my presentations are very technical and while it's my job to tell the people what it means, there si only so much you can do to simplify a biochemical pathway or a 2D western blot.

So figure out, yeah they get that, understand fully, no way, not in one slide, not even in one presentation. I think I put an abbreviated (very) pathway onto about 8 slides last time and still left out more than I included.
 

Yes, well, ahem, my Personal PowerPoint Pet Peeves certainly aren't rules (and therefore I shouldn't have used the word "violate" or "rule" at all, actually... mea culpa... going to sneak back and edit those out, heheh).

So I'll place the following caveat: I'm talking about presentations for a general audience. Clearly, if the subject is so technical that its nature requires it be explained at length with diagrams whose meaning is not immediately obvious... then that's what you need to do.
 

And oh yeah... the topic that started that whole flood of typing:

X. Superfluous animations, sound, and/or video. The thing to remember on this one is, if you think it's "cute," your audience will hate it. Guaranteed. Generally, "jazz" (as it's called around here) adds exactly nothing to the meaning of your presentation (remember, the slides are not the presentation), and is much more likely to actually distract from what you're trying to say (which is your presentation). Personally, I don't do sounds at all, I only add "cover" transitions, and I only use "dissolve" or "appear" builds. (For bonus points: (1) include a "whoosh," "zing," or "sparkle" sound with every single bullet point on every single slide, (2) include a "typewriter" noise as PowerPoint builds every single bullet point on every single slide letter by letter, (3) make someone in the audience physically ill by using a random assortment of build animations and slide transitions, (4) use a slide transition that brings the antique computer you're presenting on to its knees (I'm looking at you, Dissolve), and/or (5) try to play a video during the slideshow without knowing how, and spend 15 minutes of your time at the podium trying to get it to work right (see Peeve #2). (Need I say? True stories.))
 
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