A fresh look at presentation tools
When looking at new presentation tools, one requirements rises to the top: make it easier to create and tell a story so that the audience will remember it.
“Great stories happen to those who can tell them” — Ira Glass
In my search for better tools, I have been focusing on a few items:
- During the creation process, allow me to keep the story line easily visible. I don’t want to be distracted by the slide design.
- Make it easy to add images, videos, tables and graphs.
- Fast editing, updating, and collaborating
- Affordable — especially during the initial 6 months, during which you truly will be testing the new application.
There are a number of applications I started to look at.
In the past, I looked at Prezi and Beautiful.ai. More recently, I kicked the tires of Slides.com and Tome. Both are recent entries vying to dethrone PowerPoint and Google Slides.
These applications are generally great. Some do keep the focus on the storyline — no more death by PowerPoint bullets. Yet, the presentation creation process all happens in a UI-heavy web application. The interface doesn’t lend you to write and develop the story. They are all about designing slides, and assume you have the story clear.
Then, I discovered a set of tools under the umbrella Presentation as Code. These tools focus on creating the story line first, often in a basic…