How to Design Slides for Oral Presentations

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How to Design Slides for Oral Presentations
Skills Keywords:
Proposals, Speaking

This Resource Page will help you: 

  • Understand the main principles of slide design
  • Learn how to design effective presentation slides 

Design Tips

Most oral presentations are supported by slides. You will see a lot of differing advice about creating slides. Here are the two main principles that should guide your slide design: 

  • your slides should support your presentation – not replace it
  • the audience’s attention should be on you – not on your slides. 

So, how can you apply these guiding principles in practice? Here are a few key tips to consider as you draft and edit your slides: 

  • Conciseness—make every word count.*
  • Clear and informative graphics—remove non-essential information.
  • Easily readable text—be mindful of font type, font size, colors, animations.
  • Perfect grammar, spelling, and punctuation—edit your slides carefully.
  • Citations and references—your professors will expect you to provide citations and references, just as you would for a written assignment. Don’t forget to also cite your visuals; if you didn’t create them, then you need to cite them. You can include a slide at the end of your presentation that lists all of your references. 

*There may be times when information-dense detailed slides are appropriate—for example, if you are a course instructor, or if a conference organizer requests it. In these situations, consider making a more concise presenter version for yourself and a detailed version that the audience can download and keep.  

Now let’s see some slide examples! 

Example 1

The slide below from an oral presentation about vocabulary learning shows several design issues. Click on the red icons and check our feedback: 

Example 2

The slide below from an oral presentation about vocabulary learning features an effective design. Click on the green icons and check our feedback: 

Example 3

The slide below is from a presentation that leads to a class discussion and features an effective design. Click on the green icons and check our feedback: