Book Short: Stick Figures That Matter
Book Short: Stick
Figures That Matter
I have read a bunch of books lately to try to improve my
presentation skills. The latest one, The
Back of the Napkin: Solving Problems and Selling Ideas with Pictures, by Dan
Roam,
was good, and quite different from some of the others I've read recently like
Presentation Zen
and Beyond Bullet Points,
both of which are much more focused on effective use of Powerpoint.
The Back of the Napkin takes a different approach. The focus is much more on creating compelling
visuals. It's not about Powerpoint so
much as it is about teaching how to crystallize concepts into tight and
compelling schematics. Roam creates two
pretty good frameworks for thinking about this: one that breaks down the message of a given slide into its most simple
element -- are you describing a who (use a portrait), what (chart), when
(timeline), where (map), why (plot), or how (flowchart)? And a second that takes that element and asks
five questions about the best way to convey the information -- simple vs.
elaborate, quality vs. quantity, vision vs. execution, individual vs.
comparison, or change state vs. as-is.
Both frameworks are good, and if you're already doing really
good presentations, this will help improve them. In short, I'd say The Back of the Napkin is a good read if
you're obsessed with creating compelling visuals, but it's more of a deeper
drill than the two books I noted above. I'd read and master the material from Presentation Zen for 101, then
dive into this topic for the 201 course.




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