Archive for September 6th, 2012

Be bold: chuck PowerPoint … say, what?

September 6, 2012

Punch line: Despite a 95% share of presentation software, many companies are now starting to encourage stepping away from traditional power point slide presentations. 

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Excerpted from Businessweek, “Death to Power Point!”

Power point

No matter what your line of work, it’s only getting harder to avoid death by PowerPoint.

Since Microsoft launched the slide show program 22 years ago, it’s been installed on no fewer than 1 billion computers and an estimated 350 PowerPoint presentations are given each second across the globe. 

On June 18, the Iranian government made the case for its highly contested nuclear program to world leaders with a 47-slide deck … Two years back, the New York Knicks tried to woo LeBron James with a PowerPoint pitch, which may explain why James won his first NBA championship in Miami.

As with anything so ubiquitous and relied upon, PowerPoint has bred its share of contempt.

Plug the name into Twitter and you’ll see workers bashing the soporific software in Korean, Arabic, Spanish, and English as each region starts its business day.

Part of this venting may stem from a lack of credible competition:

PowerPoint’s share of the presentation software market remains 95 percent, eclipsing relative newcomers Apple Keynote, Google Presentation, Prezi, and SlideRocket.  

Sometimes … PowerPoint slides …do more harm than good. They bore audiences with amateurish, antiquated animation and typefaces and distract speakers from focusing on the underlying structure of their creators’ speeches.

The best speakers at any corporate level today grip an audience by telling a story … The boldest among them do away with slides entirely 

Even if you’re a middle manager delivering financials to your department in slides, you’re telling a story. 

Many of the top presentation gurus advocate judiciously limiting the role of PowerPoint.

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About the 4.5 million jobs that Obama has (or has not) created …

September 6, 2012

The Dems are touting 4.5 million jobs created by President Obama.

CNN says that the number  is an accurate description of the growth of private-sector jobs since January 2010, when the long, steep slide in employment finally hit bottom.

But – and it’s a BIG but — while a total of 4.5 million jobs sounds great, it’s not the whole picture.

According to CNN:

Nonfarm private payrolls hit a post-recession low of 106.8 million January 2010 … The figure currently stands at 111.3 million as of July.

While that is indeed a gain of 4.5 million, it’s only a net gain of 300,000 over the course of the Obama administration to date since the private jobs figure stood at 111 million in January 2009, the month Obama took office.

And total nonfarm payrolls, including government workers, are down from 133.6 million workers at the beginning of 2009 to 133.2 million in July 2012. There’s been a net loss of nearly 1 million public-sector jobs since Obama took office, despite a surge in temporary hiring for the 2010 census.

Meanwhile, the jobs that have come back aren’t the same ones that were lost.

According to a study released last week by the liberal-leaning National Employment Law Project, low-wage fields such as retail sales and food service are adding jobs nearly three times as fast as higher-paid occupations.

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Stepping back to see the forest from the trees …

September 6, 2012

In marketing, there’s a measure called the net promoter’s index … in essence, it’s a company’s percentage of avid supporters minus the percentage of avid disapprovers.

Gallup tracks presidential approval daily … below is Obama’s net approval rating (% approve minus % disapprove) since inauguration.

Note a couple of big picture points:

  1. The overall trend during Obama’s term has been down … even adjusting for the extraordinary hope & change starting point
  2. The most recent bounce back didn’t full recover the 2011 drop
  3. The 2012 trend has been consistently down

The big election question: will Obama continue to slide until election day or stage enough of a bounce back to squeak out a win?

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