Pecha Kucha – Tweak Your Slides (2024)

Monday marked presentation day in Professional Communication and Presentation. I had high hopes, primarily because Alex has worked so hard to develop these students’ delivery and engagement skills, and because their topics were overall fascinating. I was not disappointed. This was by far the best bunch of PechaKuchas in recent memory…perhaps even since I introduced this subject in class. This makes me question whether this class should not consistently be taught by both Alex and myself. She brings something to the table I often forget–application. I tackled application in class last week during our discussion of arranging and organizing a PK by discussing and then facilitating an in-class storyboarding session.

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This post is a bit backward, as I previously discussed how to rehearse for a PK, but I tend to adapt and adjust based on the circ*mstance, and I think being in the place of observer as opposed to teacher this month has helped me see what sorts of revisions my own heavily-cerebral, theory-based approach to public speaking needs to become the dynamic experience that Alex Rister brought to this month’s students. I’ve used storyboarding in class as a means of organizing this presentation since discovering Felix Jung’s guide on Avoision.com(yes, I know, I’ve mentioned it before–but it rules! If you are planning on presenting a PK–read this guide!). Each month, students are required to ditch the traditional outline in favor of a storyboard, which usually follows the format below (which is three Power Point slides, set to print at 3 slides per page). Students use these sheets to help them develop an analog plan for their slides.

Want a quick and easy storyboarding sheet? Create 3 blank slides in Power Point. Then, print the slides in 3 per page handout format.

Not only does storyboarding provide a more well-rounded learning experience (kinesthetic, visual, auditory–they have to talk me through their storyboards), but it also serves as a much more worthwhile tool when it comes to visual design. One challenge for novice slide tweakers is the concept of thinking in visual metaphors. Finding that impacting image in a site like Flickr (do you use Compfight.com to search through Flickr? No? Seriously–do it. It’s the easiest way to search through thousands of creative commons Flickr images. Do it!) takes conceptual thinking, to find an image of academic integrity, one cannot look for that term and expect magic results as one would get from conducting a search on a stock image website like istockphoto.

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While I love Flickr's users and their bounty of Creative Commons images, to get to that content, I have to run a regular search, then an advanced search. Results for the same search term a few minutes apart generate completely different results, sometimes unusable or irrelevant images are included.

Stock images are images that are purposely shot to convey a concept or idea. However, Flickr is not a typical image repository. It is instead a collection of user-generated images, some of which are done by professionals, some of which are done by amateurs. One must search for concepts and visual representations of abstract ideas like academic integrity, for instance, a diploma, a graduate, an A+ (hint–do a search for the term in a stock image website and see what the results are. Then, return to Compfight and run a search for the concrete results you see in the stock image website.

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Much better--all Creative Commons content, all sizes available via a quick preview glance, and the results are much more relevant to the term. I ❤ Compfight!

Why Compfight, you ask? While I love Flickr, I am not so in love with it’s search engine, which leaves me frustrated and confused. I was introduced to Compfight a year ago by a colleague and I now cannot live without it. I love it so much that the days when Compfight is down are dark days, desolate tweakless days.

Storyboarding a Pecha Kucha requires that the presenter take the same basic concepts that govern organizing a speech and adapt them to the pk format of 20 images x 20 seconds. In an effort to aid presenters aka amazing students (and hopefully in February Alex!) in creating a solid pk structure, I’ve developed, with a bit of help from Felix Jung, a short how to:

First, as Jung suggests, break your talk up in to sets.

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Like small cupcakes, the sets in a Pecha Kucha should be delectable, satisfying bites of well structured content.

Keep it simple; break up your speech into three recognizable chunks:

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Think about coordinating your presentation via recognizable ideas. In this case, Reeses' Pieces colors serve to remind me of what will go where.

Now, give each of those segments a number of slides.

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Thinking about your speech as one long chain of connected ideas as opposed to a disparate series of chunks will help you see how these 20 second increments will work together.

Felix Jung found that 4 was a pretty good number to work with.

  1. Opening (4 slides)
  2. Body 1 (4 slides)
  3. Body 2 (4 slides)
  4. Body 3 (4 slides)
  5. Closing (4 slides)

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Make these segments flexible—you might need five slides for your opening; you might only need three for one idea. Be flexible and keep the ideas simple. You can only reasonably speak 100-150 words per minute, or 33 words every 20 seconds.

Pecha Kuchas are about removing content, not adding it. Focus on what you know and what will help you prove your point and convince your audience.

Now, take each segment and write down one idea per slide that is related to your topic.These can be specific ideas or just things you know you need to include, like “thesis” and “PUNCH/opening.”

What you title each segment is up to you. Use the blank lines on your storyboard to title each segment. The blank slide to the left will work as the content placeholder or drawing of content you will place on a slide.

What you title each segment is up to you. Use the blank lines on your storyboard to title each segment. The blank slide to the left will work as the content placeholder or drawing of content you will place on a slide.

Now, in the blank space, include visual cues; you can draw these or write them out. Tie the visual cue to the big idea you are covering in the slide. You can create a separate outline for specific content or use the presenter notes feature to keep track of specific content for a specific slide.

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Finally,transfer your storyboard into your slides. Create 20 slides, add your big idea, and start adding the content information from your outline and your visual cues into the presenter notes section in Keynote or Power Point.

The next post will cover a few different ways you can adapt this chunking pattern to several successful organizational patterns of persuasion including an adaptation of Nancy Duarte’s sparkline and Monroe’s motivated sequence.

Pecha Kucha – Tweak Your Slides (2024)

FAQs

How do you make Pecha Kucha effective? ›

Your speech should be casual and flow from one slide to the next. Enhance your speech with clear photos. Fill the slide with the photo to ensure all of your audience can see the image. Memes, gifs, and other pop culture images can be used to make your Pecha Kucha more relatable to your audience!

What is the Pecha Kucha technique? ›

A Pecha Kucha presentation is a format that uses 20 slides or images that are displayed for 20 seconds each. The slides will move automatically as the presenter is speaking.

How do you make slides move after 20 seconds? ›

To make the slide advance to the next slide when you click the mouse, select the On Mouse Click check box. To make the slide advance automatically, select the After check box, and then enter the number of minutes or seconds that you want.

Does Pecha Kucha have to be exactly 20 seconds? ›

PechaKucha Frequently Asked Questions

They follow the 20x20 rule, where each presentation consists of 20 slides, each shown for only 20 seconds before automatically progressing to the next one. This structured approach results in a total presentation time of 6 minutes and 40 seconds.

How to structure a Pecha Kucha? ›

The rules for a Pecha Kucha presentation are simple: The presentation must contain exactly 20 slides that are displayed for precisely 20 seconds each, making the total presentation time six minutes and 40 seconds.

Why is it called Pecha Kucha? ›

The term Pecha Kucha means “chit chat” in Japanese. Two owners of an architectural firm—Mark Dytham and Astrid Klein—created Pecha Kucha because they wanted a fast-paced presentation style that emphasized images rather than text.

Why is Pecha Kucha effective? ›

The 20-second timeframe for each slide requires concise presentation of topic information, and practice of the presentation itself for clarity and confidence. This results in improved presentation skills, and ultimately, self-confidence in both the presentation and the topic knowledge.

Why is Pecha Kucha good? ›

PechaKucha isn't about memorizing a speech. It's about knowing your subject matter, breaking down information, and practicing until it becomes comfortable. It gets students thinking, learning, and improving. What more could a teacher want?

What is the 10 rule for slides? ›

Decoding the 10/20/30 PowerPoint Rule

Embrace the 10-20-30 rule for presentations, which recommends keeping them under 10 slides, delivering them within 20 minutes, and using a font size no smaller than 30 points. By applying this rule, you can make your presentations more direct, memorable, and compelling.

What is the 3 second rule for slides? ›

3 Second Rule: Your Audience should get your message on each slide in 3 seconds. If you must use bullet points, no more than 6 lines with no more than 6 words each. Your audience didn't come to listen to YOU read, either. If you are following FIX #1, then your slides won't work as a script anyway.

What is a 20 slide presentation which moves automatically every 20 seconds? ›

PechaKucha is a presentation format, a very straightforward one. Each presentation is made up of exactly 20 slides, shown for exactly 20 seconds each. So each talk is 20X20 = 400 seconds = 6 minutes and 40 seconds. That's it!

Can a Pecha Kucha be about anything? ›

Yes, it is a good idea to use a simple topic, and it helps if the topic is something you are excited about. The Pecha Kucha site says, “The key to a great presentation is to present something you love.”

Do Pecha Kucha have words? ›

The best Pecha Kucha's rarely have many words and only images so these need to be enough to prompt you as with no words there is nothing else to help you out. It needs to be like a script, practiced in this way too. You should know what to say without looking at the slides.

In what ways can Pecha Kucha make the teaching learning process engaging and meaningful? ›

Implementing a PechaKucha strategy for at least some class lectures has the additional benefit of opening up time in a class session's schedule for more discussion, hands-on activities, and other active-learning strategies that have been consistently shown to enhance student learning (Ave, Beasley, and Brogan 2020).

What is the benefit of Pecha Kucha? ›

Pecha Kucha helps increase the level of student confidence for future presentations. Pecha Kucha is also considered attractive, concise, faster, and most importantly helps reduce the level of dependence on slides full of text.

What are the benefits of Pecha Kucha presentation? ›

It's a great way for you and your team to brush up your presentation skills. Expressing an idea via PechaKucha isn't as easy as it seems, however, but when mastered, it has a positive impact on your communication and speaking skills and increases audience learning.

What are the advantages of using Pecha Kucha model of presentations? ›

Pecha Kucha promotes creative thinking and communication.

The format challenges presenters to distill their ideas into a concise and visually engaging format. So instead of running around the bush and filling in their talk with non-essential information, they focus on the most important aspects of their message.

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