How to Give a Presentation on Zoom? [A Step-by-Step Guide!]
By: Author Shrot Katewa
If you’ve never used Zoom, giving a presentation on it might seem a bit challenging. But, that’s a challenge we will have to learn to overcome as the world moves digital more and more day by day. The key question really is how to give a presentation on Zoom!
To give a presentation on Zoom, first, start by joining a meeting. Now open the presentation file on your computer and share the slides on Zoom using its “Share Screen” feature. You should test your camera, mic, speaker, and internet connection before you start with your presentation.
As easy as it may seem, some of you may need further detailed instructions. So, in this article, I will provide a step-by-step guide on things that you need to do in order to deliver a presentation on Zoom successfully! Plus, I will also share some tips that can help you ace your presentation on Zoom!
So, without any further delay, let’s get started!
Understanding the Zoom Application Interface
Before we understand the steps to give a presentation using Zoom, it is perhaps a good idea to acquaint yourself with the Zoom user interface first. If you are well-versed with it, then perhaps you may want to skip this section and click here instead.
Logging into Zoom
Although you can login to your account using zoom website too, but it is best to download and use the zoom app .
Once you have download the app, you will be prompted to login to your account. If you don’t have an existing account, you can either sign up or even login using your social account such as Google or Facebook. It’s actually quite simple.
If you feel that you don’t want to sign up or even use the social accounts for your meeting, you can choose to use “Sign In with SSO” option. SSO stands for single sign on and this allows you to sign in even when you don’t have an account with Zoom just once.
Zoom Home Screen
Once you’ve logged in, you will be taken to the home screen on Zoom.
There are a bunch of different things that you ca do with the home screen on Zoom. If you have been invited for a meeting, you will need to click on “ Join “. However, you will also need the meeting ID and the password for the meeting. If you don’t have the details, you will perhaps need to contact the person hosting the meeting.
You can also host the meeting yourself by using the “ New Meeting ” button. You can set a new meeting and invite others to join using this option.
Likewise, you can also schedule a meeting in the future using the “ Schedule ” option.
Furthermore, for changing the account related information, just click on your profile picture in the top-right corner of your window.
Lastly, there are several other detailed settings that you can tweak for your Zoom application. Almost all the other settings can be found in the “ Settings ” section by clicking on the “ Gear Icon “.
Zoom Virtual Meeting Window Interface
Once you are a participant in a virtual meeting, either by joining an existing meeting or by starting a new meeting, you will be greeted with an image similar to the one mentioned above.
On this screen, you will be presented with several different options. Some of the key functions that you will need to be aware of are as follows –
- Mute – Turning on the Mute or Unmute
- Video – Toggling between your Video
- Participants – Checking the names of the Participants
- Share Screen – to deliver a presentation (more on this later)
- Record – To record a meeting session
- End – Knowing how to end a meeting and exiting a call.
All the above functions will be visible on a small bar at the bottom of the window. If you are not able to see this option bar at the bottom, just hover over at the bottom part of your screen and all the options will appear .
Although there are other features that are also available for a zoom user or a participant, however, the aforementioned features should be good enough to deliver a presentation. These 6 features are at the very least something that you should be aware of.
How to Give a Presentation on Zoom (Step-by-Step)
Zoom has become a common tool for giving virtual presentations today. It is a widely used tool at conferences, meetings, and other events! If you are giving a presentation on Zoom for the first time, then perhaps you should be aware of a few things –
Here is a quick step-by-step guide on how you can give a presentation on Zoom:
Step 1: Install Zoom
Download and install the Zoom application to your desktop. To download the application, visit https://zoom.us/download and download the Zoom Client to your computer.
Step 2: Login to your Zoom Account
After installing the application, open it and log into your Zoom account. If you don’t have one, you can sign up for free using your email account.
Zoom also has options to sign in using SSO (Single Sign-On) or with your Facebook or Google account.
Step 3: Test Audio and Video Settings
Before you start or join a meeting, you will need to configure and test your audio and video settings.
To do that click on the gear icon on the Zoom application’s home screen. This will open the settings menu.
Now click on the “Audio” tab and select the microphone you are going to use. Try our different audio settings. After the microphone, select the speaker for audio output. If you can’t hear anything, try out another speaker source.
After configuring audio, click on the “Video” tab. From there, select the camera that is connected to your desktop. Tweak different video settings and find out what works best for you.
Step 4: Join or Schedule a Meeting
Now start a meeting by clicking on “New meeting”. You can also schedule a meeting on Zoom. To do that, click on “Schedule” and set up when you want to start the meeting. After completing the set-up, Zoom will give you a URL. Share it with the team members to join the meeting.
Or you can join a meeting by clicking “Join” on the Zoom client’s home screen. You can use a meeting ID or URL to join a meeting in Zoom.
Step 5: Open the Presentation
Once you have everything setup, you then need to prepare to show your presentation with your audience. To do that, open the presentation slides on your computer.
Step 6: Share Your Presentation
The last step in giving your presentation is to make sure that you share your presentation with your audience. To do that, click on “Share Screen” from the Zoom clients meeting window , select the screen where your presentation slides are open, and click “Share”. Now start presenting your slides to the audience.
Step 7: Stop Sharing to end the Presentation
One thing to know is how to end the presentation. To stop screen sharing, simply click on “Stop Share” located at the top of the screen . This option will only appear when you start sharing your screen.
How to Share a PowerPoint with Presenter View on Zoom?
To share your PowerPoint presentation slides with presenter view on Zoom, follow the steps given below:
Step 1: Open the Zoom App and Login
The first step really is to open the zoom app and login to your account.
Step 2: Join or Setup a Virtual Meeting on Zoom
Next, join the meeting. Remember, you need the meeting ID and password to join a meeting. Make sure you have requested for the details beforehand.
Step 3: Open Your PowerPoint Presentation
First step is really to open your presentation file that you want to present on the PowerPoint application.
Step 4: Put the Presentation in Presenter View
Now select the “Slide Show” tab from the top of the screen and click on either “From Beginning” or “From Current Slide” depending on your preference. This will open the slides in the “Presenter” view.
Step 5: Switch to the Zoom Application
Now, go to the Zoom application, start or join a meeting. While you are in the “Presenter” view on PowerPoint, press “ Alt+Tab ” to switch between applications in Microsoft Windows-powered computers. For iMac, use “Command+Tab” to move through open apps.
Step 6: Share Screen on Zoom’s Meeting Window
Once you are in Zoom’s meeting window, click on “Share Screen”, select the window where your PowerPoint slides are open in the presenter’s view, and click “Share”.
And that’s all you have to do in order to share PowerPoint with the presenter’s view in your Zoom meetings.
How to Share PowerPoint on Zoom Without Showing Notes?
There are two methods that you can use to share PowerPoint slides on Zoom without sharing your presenter notes. For the first method, you will need to have two monitors connected to your computer.
As for the second one, you can still share your PowerPoint slides on Zoom without sharing your notes (and you won’t need two monitors either). I’ve briefly explained both methods below.
Method 1 – Dual Monitor Method
In this method, you will be presenting your PowerPoint file on one monitor while looking at your presenter’s notes on the other one. Here’s how you can do that:
Step 1: First of all, open your slides on PowerPoint.
Step 2: Now join or start a Zoom meeting.
Step 3: Now click on “Share Screen” and select “Screen 1”. Then click “Share”. Here, “Screen 1” is your primary monitor.
Note: If you are not sure which one is your primary monitor, select where the PowerPoint file opened in.
Step 4: Now go to the PowerPoint application, click on the “Slide Show” tab, and from there click on “Monitor” and select “Primary Monitor”.
Step 5: Open the presentation file in the presenter’s view by clicking on the “Slide Show” tab and selecting “From Beginning” or “From Current Slide”.
If you have done everything correctly, participants will only be able to see the presentation slides while you have your presenter’s notes open on the second monitor.
In case you shared the wrong monitor on Zoom, click on “Screen Share” on Zoom’s meeting window, select “Screen 2” and click on share. This should fix your problem.
When you are sharing a screen on Zoom, you will notice a green border around that screen. This indicates which monitor you are currently sharing.
Method 2 – Sharing Portion of Your Screen
Follow the steps below if you have only a single monitor connected to your computer.
Step 1: Join or start a meeting on Zoom.
Step 2: Click on “Share Screen” and from the pop-up window select “Advanced”. From there select “Portion of Screen” and click on “Share”. This will give you a green border on your screen that you can adjust. Only the things that are inside this border will be shared on Zoom.
Step 3: Now open the presentation file in PowerPoint, and go to the presenter’s view by selecting “Slide Show> From Current Slide or From Beginning”.
Step 4: Adjust the size of the green border so that it only shows the presentation slides in the presenter’s view.
And that’s all you have to do. By doing so, your audience will only see the slides that you are presenting, but not your notes.
How to Show Yourself During a Zoom Presentation?
Ensuring that you are visible from time to time during a presentation can make it slightly more engaging and much more interactive. Here is how you can do that-
Step 1: First, start or join a Zoom meeting.
Step 2: Click on “ Share Screen ” and select the “ Advanced ” option. From there, select “ PowerPoint as Virtual Background ” and select the file you want for your presentation. Then click on “ Share ”.
Step 3: Make sure your video is switched on so that you are also visible to your audience. You can do that by clicking on “ Start Video ” on the Zoom Virtual Meeting Interface.
It will take some time for your slides to appear on the Zoom client. When it is done, participants will be able to see your face in front of the slides in Zoom. Make sure that your camera is connected to your computer and configured correctly.
This feature works best if you have a green screen behind you . If you have one, go to Zoom’s settings menu, select the “Background and Filter” tab and check “I have a green screen”. If you want to stop showing yourself during a zoom presentation, click on “Stop Video” on the meeting window and that will do the job.
Furthermore, you may sometimes want to show just yourself to the audience and not show the presentation at all. For that, all you need to do is simply click on “Start Video” in the Zoom Virtual Meeting Interface.
How to Record a Presentation on Zoom?
If you want to record your presentation on Zoom, you can do it easily. After joining or starting a meeting on Zoom, click on the “Record” icon located at the bottom of the meeting window. Once the recording starts, you can pause the recording or stop it whenever you like.
After the end of the meeting, the recorded video will be automatically converted into “.mp4” format and stored on your computer.
Tips for Giving an Awesome Presentation on Zoom
Giving a presentation in front of an audience is always a challenging task. Especially if it is online, many things can go wrong during your presentation. This is why I’m sharing some tips that can help you deliver an awesome presentation on Zoom. These are as follows –
1. Make a Professional Looking Presentation
There are several ways to make your presentation look really professional and high quality. One obvious method is to outsource your presentation to a specialised design agency! But, that can become really expensive depending on your budget.
Another (non-obvious) option is to use a PowerPoint Presentation Template! There are several high-quality and professional templates that you can get quite easily! In fact, using these Presentation Designs is quite inexpensive! You can download as many presentation templates as you want for as little as $16.5/month!
My favorite one is Agio PowerPoint Presentation template. It is perfectly suited to give a professional look to your presentation and yet it is quite quick and easy to use. Check out some of the images below –
Agio PowerPoint Presentation Template
Furthermore, make the presentation as simple and straightforward as possible. Do not confuse your audience with a network of colorful texts, graphs, or other contents.
Only use data and graphs that are relevant to your presentation. Also, the clever use of transition animations can make the slide appear much more engaging.
2. Check Your Equipment Beforehand
Whenever you are giving your presentation online, many things can go wrong. For example, your camera or mic may not function properly. Such interruptions will only make you a laughing stock in front of the participants.
Check your mic, camera, and speakers to find out whether they are working properly or not. Also, check your internet connection and your laptop’s battery level. If everything is ok, then you are good to go on with your presentation.
More Related Topics
- Change the Style of Your Bullet Points and Stand-out from the Crowd!
- 7 EASY Tips to Always Make your Presentations Attractive! (Even if You are a Beginner)
- How to Reduce the Size of Your PowerPoint File? The Perfect Method!
- Auto Create Your PowerPoint Slides using Design Ideas Feature!
- Main Features of PowerPoint! [I bet You DIDN’T Know These]
Credit to Cookie_Studio for the featured image of this article
8 tips on how to present over Zoom like a pro
Today, Zoom is a central part of the remote workplace. It and other video conference platforms are widely used for meetings, job interviews, webinars, and presentations.
In-person presentations can be stressful enough, and having to conduct them virtually can seem even more daunting.
But it doesn't have to be that way. Our eight pro tips for presenting over Zoom may help you feel more prepared, comfortable, and confident. Read on to find out more.
1. Plan out your Zoom background/location ahead of time.
You can use a location in your home or a virtual Zoom background. If you select a place in your house, make sure it is uncluttered and clean. A plain wall or shelves with neatly arranged books provide a professional setting.
Consider lighting. Soft lighting placed in front of you illuminates you evenly; sitting in front of a window can cause glare and shadows.
Make sure your background doesn't distract from you and your presentation. You don't want your audience focusing on a family photo or the dishes in the sink.
2. Test your equipment before your presentation.
Your equipment can make or break your Zoom presentation.
To avoid surprises, check your internet connection, plug in your laptop, and ensure that your camera angle is correct and that the microphone works.
You can confirm your internet connection, audio, and visual with a Zoom test meeting . Using a hard-wired connection rather than wifi is the safer option. And closing any applications you won't need during the presentation can conserve bandwidth.
Taking precautions can avoid or minimize frozen screens, views of the top of your head, dead batteries, and sound problems.
3. Put notes in the right place on your screen(s).
Zdnet recommends, the best webcams for remote-working video calls.
The pandemic lockdown will leave a legacy of increased remote working, so it's a good time to upgrade your webcam. Here are ten leading contenders.
You need your notes where you can see them, but you don't want to keep looking down or off to the side during your presentation.
To combat this, you can use dual monitors . Position your presentation on one of them, visible to all, and your presenter's notes — plus the webcam you're using — on the other, visible only to you.
Or you can present your slide show in a window and put a private view of your notes in another window on the same screen. Zoom provides step-by-step instructions for single and dual screens.
4. Practice Zoom presenting as if it were the real thing.
Zoom allows you to practice in the precise environment where you will be presenting. Set up your background, lighting, and screens as you will on presentation day. You can schedule a webinar practice session on Zoom and run through your presentation exactly as you will on the day. You can invite a friend to join you and offer feedback.
Practicing can make the difference between a smooth presentation or an awkward one. Rehearse as often as you can, and visit our page of public speaking tips .
SEE: What tech jobs don't require public speaking?
5. Minimize clutter on your slides.
Slides are a key part of a virtual presentation and can help you and the audience stay on track.
Slides should be easy to read and navigate. Avoid brightly colored backgrounds, complicated fonts, and too many graphics.
Each slide should communicate one concept or idea. Avoid a long list of bullet points on a single slide.
While a slide with few words in readable, bolded font works fine, visuals like charts, maps, and illustrations or photos can be more effective and keep your audience engaged.
6. Use easy-to-understand visuals.
Visuals liven up your Zoom presentation in ways words don't. Instead of a long list of numbers explaining company statistics, try a graph or pie chart. Visuals aid understanding and keep your audience interested.
Explaining technical procedures with videos or illustrations rather than wordy descriptions alone enables you to show and tell. They also accommodate different learning styles within your audience.
Microsoft posts tutorials for incorporating visual elements into PowerPoint slides and inserting videos from the web or your computer .
7. Explain your agenda before you begin presenting.
Most people like to know what to expect when logging onto a meeting. Opening your presentation with a slide outlining your agenda sets the timeline for your meeting and reassures your audience. If you plan to allow audience interaction, make sure to highlight when and how in your agenda.
You can list the points you're going to cover in your presentation on your slide(s) and/or use graphics. You can pose a question on a slide, then show how you plan to answer it. Starting off with a funny (but work-appropriate) photograph or illustration can put you and your audience at ease.
8. If appropriate, encourage your audience to interact.
Unless you have a good reason not to, encourage your audience to interact during or after your presentation.
Some presenters ask participants to use Zoom's chat function for questions and pause the presentation periodically to answer them or wait until the end. Presenters can mute and unmute the audience and allow time for comments and questions that way. Zoom also allows for engagement through participant polls during the presentation
The size of your audience may dictate how you want to handle audience interaction.
Not allowing participant interaction risks losing your audience to their phones and other distractions.
In conclusion
The hardest part of presenting on Zoom may be the technology for some and the public speaking for others. We hope our tips help.
Online public speaking courses can help with anxiety and discomfort. Developing emotional intelligence skills can also benefit your Zoom presentations.
The Ultimate Guide to Giving Virtual Presentations on Zoom
An irreverent and shockingly-actionable companion for anyone who wants to communicate to invisible audiences through a laptop screen.
I read a lot of “ultimate guides to X.” Most are not ultimate. Most aren’t even very readable. This is different. Oli Gardner has put together an extraordinary resource for both newcomers and experienced speakers. If you apply the tactics in this guide, I promise you’ll be among the best presenters online (or off) at your next engagement.
— Rand Fishkin. Co-founder & CEO, SparkToro.
What’s in the guide?
17 Chapters
29,584 words
84 Screenshots
Roughly speaking—and by that I mean super specific—the Ultimate Guide to Giving Virtual Presentations on Zoom contains six thematic parts, seventeen chapters, 29,584 words, eighty four precision-crafted interface screenshots to show you how to do cool things, high-production instructional videos full of fun, insights, marvellous techniques to marvel at, and did I mention that it’s twenty nine thousand, five hundred and eighty four words long?
Wait. If I add this paragraph to the number it’s actually 29,656. So, roughly speaking, it’s awesome.
This guide is actually free . I’m not asking for an email address. Helping you be a better presenter is my goal.
My only ask is that you consider sharing it with others, if you like the guide.
A few highlights from the guide
18 Zoom Features
Cool Zoom Features You Should Know About
Learn how to use the lesser-known features of Zoom for a more dynamic presentation.
7 Bad Techniques
Things to Avoid Doing in a Virtual Presentation
Learn the most common mistake in a virtual presentation and how to avoid making them.
13 Good Techniques
Definitely Do These Things When Presenting
With a few simple techniques you can drastically improve your chances of pulling off a successful virtual presentation on Zoom. And no, I don’t expect you to build an actual stage like I did, but you can at least put a plant in the background.
Your Talk’s Purpose
Create Experience Moments
A key trait of successful speakers is that they understand their personal brand. They know what they represent, how they want to be perceived, and what success looks for them. This leads directly into how we should be designing our talk experiences.
Presentation Structure, Story, & Flow
Learn how to craft a story arc by reducing your big idea to it’s simplest form and chunking it into structured elements.
40 Slide Design Tips
Slide Design Tips for Virtual Presentations
Take a deep dive into the art of presentation design in this incredibly actionable chapter that will elevate your skills overnight. And yes, there are forty tips in this chapter alone.
Real People
Virtual Audience Engagement
They may be invisible, but they’re still there, and they’re still real people who want to have a good time. Learn techniques for audience participation and five simple tricks to help maintain eye contact while presenting virtually.
Audio & Video
Create Professional Recordings of Your Talks
Learn the six elements of a great presentation recording. Plus techniques, tools, and lists of equipment you need to record professional high-resolution videos of your talks. It also covers editing in post-production, and how to add closed captions for enhanced accessibility.
6 Whoopsies
What to Do When Things Go Wrong
There are many things that can go wrong in a virtual presentation, most of them technical in nature. This chapter covers six serious issues, and offers creative solutions to turn a catastrophic and embarrassing moment, into a calm, collected, professional delivery.
5 Advanced Tips
Advanced & Creative Virtual Presentation Tips
Proxy hosts, shortlinks, customized meeting rooms, landing pages, and clickers, oh my. Enhance your expertise with these technical tips, and the best virtual speaking strategy of all—standing up.
23 Settings
Zoom Settings to Turn On or Off for a Successful Presentation
Zoom has a grand total of 301 settings—I counted them with my finger and brain—which can make it really hard to find a critical feature when it’s crunch time. This chapter breaks down the essentials and is your game-day checklist for success.
Intro Introduction to Virtual Presentations on Zoom
Chapter 1 18 Cool Zoom Features You Should Know About
Chapter 2 12 Things You Should Do in Your Zoom Presentation
Chapter 3 8 Things You Shouldn’t Do in Your Zoom Presentation
Chapter 4 Defining Your Presentation’s Purpose
Chapter 5 How to Define Your Talk’s Structure, Story, & Flow
Chapter 6 41 Slide Design Tips for Virtual Presentations
Chapter 7 6 Ways to Make Eye Contact With an Invisible Audience
Chapter 8 How to do Audience Participation in a Virtual Presentation
Chapter 9 How to Share Content during a Zoom Presentation
Chapter 10 How to Create a Stunning Video and Audio Recording
Chapter 11 Using Post-Production to Add Value to Your Zoom Recording
Chapter 12 How to Use Your Phone as a Beautiful Webcam
Chapter 13 What to Do When Things go Wrong in Your Presentation
Chapter 14 How to Ground Yourself and Get Ready to Present
Chapter 15 Advanced & Creative Zoom Presentation Techniques
Chapter 16 The Difference Between Zoom Meetings and Zoom Webinars
Chapter 17 23 Zoom Settings to Enable or Disable for a Smooth Presentation
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Communications
15 Tips for Engaging Zoom Presentations + Examples
Your next Zoom presentation is a week away. And your mind is racing.
What presentation software should you use?
What if the other attendees can hear your neighbor’s loud music?
Will they find your presentation boring?
Relax and take a deep breath.
You don’t have to figure out the answers to these questions by yourself. This guide will cover everything you need to know about planning and delivering engaging Zoom presentations without stress and anxiety!
After reading this article, you’ll be brimming with confidence and competence on your next Zoom presentation.
Table of contents :
The science behind your Zoom presentation anxiety
- Downloadable Zoom presentation checklist
Part 1: Tips on how to plan and prepare for your Zoom presentation
Part 2: tips during your zoom presentation.
- How to share your Piktochart slide deck on Zoom
- Present with ease on Zoom using Piktochart presentations
Before we get into all the other Zoom presentation tips, perhaps the most important is to deal with your Zoom presentation anxiety. And you’re not alone – anxiety over Zoom presentations is more common than you think .
A 2021 paper on why students have difficulties learning during synchronous presentations over Zoom found that 80 percent of the students polled experienced anxiety and trouble focusing during their virtual classes. But what causes this worry? In a peer-reviewed article, Professor Jeremy Bailenson, founding director of the Stanford Virtual Human Interaction Lab , highlighted the results of their research and cited four primary reasons behind Zoom fatigue, stress, and anxiety:
- Your brain interprets excessive amounts of close-up eye contact during video chats as an “intense situation.”
- Like looking at the mirror, you become more critical of yourself as you see yourself on camera.
- Limited movements while you’re chained in your chair and table.
- Video chats require a higher cognitive load than face-to-face presentations.
“You’ve got to make sure that your head is framed within the center of the video. If you want to show someone that you agree with them, you have to do an exaggerated nod or put your thumbs up. That adds cognitive load as you’re using mental calories in order to communicate,” shares Bailenson.
Finally, you have to consider tech troubles and presentation software fiascos, as well as dealing with the pressure of public speaking.
15 Zoom presentation tips and tricks to help you own the room like a pro
Now that you understand why Zoom presentations give you sweaty palms, let’s go through 15 actionable steps to prepare for the slides.
We created a checklist of the Zoom presentation tips so you can cross off each task.
Prefer video learning instead? Watch the video below.
The success of your Zoom presentation is the result of thoughtful planning and preparation.
Get ready for your online class, product webinar, or job interview on Zoom with the following pre-presentation tips:
1. Decide on the scope of your Zoom presentation
Before presenting on Zoom, ask yourself — what one particular idea or insight would you want your audience to learn from you?
“Defining the scope is the most critical step. What are the boundaries, what are the deliverables, what is the topic that you are covering?”, recommends Linda Parry Murphy , CEO of Product Launchers, Inc.
Trying to cover every subject will only make you more nervous.
Remember the Stanford study earlier about too much cognitive load as one of the reasons behind Zoom presentation anxiety?
Limiting the scope of your presentation can significantly reduce your cognitive load while keeping your audience focused on the key points.
2. Plan for the structure of your online presentation
It’s important to master the sequence and structure of your presentation as part of your preparation. Creating a framework guides the meeting participants so they understand what the data means, why it’s important, and what the implications are in this situation.
A solid structure in place also makes it easier to go back to what you’re saying. As a result, you will feel more confident because you can keep track of your talking points with a quick glance at your outline if you lose your train of thought.
Matt Abrahams, a lecturer in Organizational Behavior and author of Speaking Up Without Freaking Out , recommends the following examples of presentation structures that you can use:
- Past-Present-Future – review a process or share a timeline
- Comparison-Contrast – show the benefits of a certain idea, insight, product, or service
- Cause-Effect – explain the rationale behind a decision
- Problem-Solution-Benefit – motivate or convince your audience
- What?-So What?-Now What? – convince people to do a specific action after your presentation
Another simple presentation structure you can work on is to start with an introduction, the meat of your presentation where you can highlight 3 points, and wrap up with the summary and call-to-action.
3. Prepare your presentation visuals
Plenty of research and evidence shows that including images is more effective in getting your message across than written text or oral communications alone.
For instance, a captivating visual is four times more effective in conveying information than words alone. People remember 80 percent of what they see and do, compared to 20 percent through reading and 10 percent through hearing, respectively.
If your goal is to convince your audience during your Zoom presentation, you’ll also be delighted to know that using visuals can help you become more persuasive.
A Wharton School of Business research found that around a third of the audiences they polled felt that presenters who used visuals were more persuasive.
So remember that well-chosen images, even stock photos, can do wonders to augment your slides.
When making visuals for your presentation, use these questions as your guide:
- Is there an icon, illustration, or image that could represent your point in a more meaningful way?
- What types of diagrams , such as a timeline, flowchart, pie chart, arrows, or graphs, will help get your point across to your audience?
- Who are my target audiences? When choosing visuals for my presentation, are there certain cultural taboos or inappropriate humor that I should be aware of?
One more thing – consider using bullet points if you find slides with walls of text. They’ll be easier to digest without taking the focus away from you.
Present with ease (and minus the stress!) with Piktochart.
You don’t have to worry about how your online presentations will look like. Piktochart’s easy-to-edit templates will take care of the visual aspect for you.
4. Eliminate clutter in your surroundings
Staying in one place with no room to maneuver probably doesn’t spark joy for anyone. KonMari your environment by eliminating clutter on your desk and in the space around you. This means extra keyboards, unused notebooks, pens, food boxes, and books can go.
Eliminating clutter gives your brain the impression that there’s more room for you to move around during your Zoom event.
If the space you’re presenting in makes it difficult to clear off clutter, you could find a plain wall to present against. And if that’s not an option, you can use a clean virtual Zoom background . Keeping your surroundings out of sight means it’s out of mind for you and your audience; one less thing to worry about while presenting.
5. Do a tech prep
Presenting in Zoom while you’re at home or traveling is a technological wonder in itself. But technology can be frustrating at times too.
Spending some time optimizing your Zoom settings by clicking in the toolbar while you’re in a Zoom meeting. Under video settings, you’ll find a few options that can help with the visuals, such as focus assist.
Before your presentation, double-check the following:
- Make sure that your laptop, computer, lighting, headset, webcam, microphone, and internet connection are working. Have backup equipment if possible.
- Familiarize yourself with the Zoom app and other relevant software you’re going to use during the presentation.
- Close unnecessary browsers, applications, or software before the presentation. Turn off your laptop or desktop notifications. The goal is to optimize and speed up the device to have a smooth presentation.
- Prepare a PDF version of your presentation slides and have an extra copy of your presenter notes in case of technical mishaps with your slides. It also makes sense to have a short link to your presentation that you can share with the audience.
- Position your notes in the right spot so you know where to find them while presenting.
- Check Zoom settings and do a quick audio and video check.
6. Rehearse your presentation
After taking care of your surroundings and equipment, the next step is to prepare yourself.
Practicing your Zoom presentation in advance can help boost your confidence. Here are some tips to help you rehearse well for your presentation:
- Screen record yourself. Afterward, check your recorded video for technical issues, your body language, and whether or not your voice is audible or not.
- Practice with a family member or friend who can give feedback on any distracting nonverbal communication habits like too many hand gestures.
- Rehearse in the same room where you’ll be presenting. Use the same lighting, computer setup, and everything.
- Practice speaking to the camera, not your computer screen.
If you’re not used to face-to-face presentations, you could record your presentation and watch it back. I know, I know – it can feel so uncomfortable watching yourself. But a quick analysis will reveal if you use too many hand gestures, that can be distracting, and also if you need to reposition your camera so it shows your upper body while presenting.
The time has come for presentation day! You already know the ins and outs of your presentation, and you’ve practiced your Zoom presentation skills to a T. A couple of checks you can do before you start are:
- Make sure you’re in a quiet area to minimize any potential interruptions.
- Do a test call with a friend to check the internet connection and if you’ll stay connected.
Take note of the following tips and hacks to make your Zoom presentation engaging and anxiety-free during your webinar or talk:
7. Dress the part
Wear clothes that are appropriate for your presentation and audience. It also helps to be more mindful of your accessories and hairstyle. The outfits and accessories you wear during your Zoom meeting will speak volumes about you as a person.
For example, if you’re presenting to your coworkers, wear work clothes. If you’re pitching to a group of angel investors, wearing a tie can help convey that you’re serious and trustworthy. However, this may not be a good idea if you’re presenting to a group that is more open to change and tends to be more relaxed when it comes to conventional standards.
Another benefit of dressing the part is what you wear actually impacts how you think. Wearing formal clothes can improve abstract thinking and give you a broader sense of perspective, which is influential in helping you make better decisions.
8. Ditch the chair
Standing up when presenting in Zoom rather than sitting down helps you become more confident because you’re not hunched down on your chair.
Standing straight with your shoulders back also enables you to breathe easily, making your voice sound more powerful and confident. Finally, it allows you to move more and make explanatory gestures which is a charisma boost.
The more confident you appear in your presentation, the more confident you’re likely to feel.
“When your mind starts to feel more confident and powerful — it starts to see those challenging situations not as threats but as opportunities,” shares Harvard psychologist professor Amy Cuddy.
If you can’t stand up during your presentation, try to sit straight in your chair and back up your camera a little to show your upper body and not just your face.
9. Have a memorable introduction
National best-selling author and founder at Science of People Vanessa Van Edwards specifically recommends opening your presentation with IISSAAQQ to make it more memorable. IISSAAQQ stands for:
- I cebreaker
- I llustration
- S hort story
- S tatistic or surprising fact
- A nalogy or metaphor
Bonus points if you can weave in humor with some background information with a relevant fact. Research found that more popular talks used humor 12.92 times, whereas less popular talks used humor only 3.92 times on average.
You don’t have to force a joke – humor could just be a play on words or surprising the audience with a funny image or meme that contrasts with a statement. Nothing breaks the ice better than laughter.
10. Look your audience in the eye (or rather your webcam)
Looking your audience in the eye is easier during face-to presentations than Zoom presentations. It can be a little tricky during online meetings because we tend to look at people’s faces on the computer screen. Maintain eye contact by looking into your webcam.
“A good idea is to lower the monitor camera a little so that you don’t have to tilt your head back to gaze up at it. If you can’t help looking at someone’s face on the screen instead of their camera, it helps to move the Zoom window to the part of the screen nearest to the camera so at least you’re looking at approximately the right place when you’re looking at their face,” shares Carol Kinsey Goman , Ph.D., executive coach and international keynote speaker.
You could treat the camera as if you were doing a face-to-face presentation. This way, it’ll be a bit simpler to hold eye contact with your audience when you’re not looking at your notes.
11. Think happy thoughts
Find ways to boost your mood before your presentation. Aside from helping you feel good (which in turn can boost your confidence), you’re also likely to smile often with happy thoughts.
When you smile at your audience, they will also likely “mirror” your action and think happy thoughts.
“Mirroring is relevant to our tendency to be empathetic. When I see you smiling, my mirror neurons for smiling fire up, and I get your state of mind right away. I feel it as you feel it. We need that mirroring in order to create a full empathic response to other people,” describes Marco Iacoboni , author of Mirroring People and UCLA professor.
When you’re having a good time and sharing enthusiasm with your audience, they’ll reciprocate through their nonverbal communication. This means fewer folded arms and blank stares and more nodding along and smiles.
12. Delegate the chatbox
Have someone else take care of Zoom chat or manage the waiting room to keep you from being distracted. This person could be the meeting host, a colleague, or someone you trust who has your back during your presentation.
13. Engage your audience
A boring presentation is when there’s no interaction, and you’re being spoken at (hello, university lectures). You’ll be able to tell from everyone’s body language in the meeting room.
Make your presentation a two-way street. Here are some ways to encourage interaction and participation amongst your audience during your Zoom meetings:
- Ask questions. For example, if you’re presenting a team productivity software in Zoom, ask your audience about their top productivity problems at work. You can also use this time as an opportunity to transition to your next presentation slide.
- If you have a small audience, remember each person’s name and address them using their first names.
- Use visuals like illustrations, infographics, or a short video clip in your slide show. Tool recommendation : Use Piktochart Video to transform a long video into short clips.
- Use interactive quizzes while presenting online to change the pace and keep your audience engaged.
14. Talk like a human and avoid too much jargon
Alright, what does talking like a human mean in Zoom presentations?
For a start, avoid talking too much jargon and corporate speak. It makes you more relatable, keep your audience’s attention longer because your points will be easier to understand, and also helps you stand out from other presenters.
Just because you’re presenting in virtual meetings doesn’t mean you’re not talking to people. The only difference is you’re sharing your presentation in front of your camera instead of in front of the lecture room.
Next, improve your visual storytelling skills . Your presentation will be more memorable if you briefly share a story and pair it with visuals. Sign up for our free visual storytelling course . Check out the teaser video below.
15. Slow down
When you’re anxious and not too confident about your Zoom presentation, you’ll tend to speak fast, which in turn will make you more nervous. It’s a vicious cycle.
When presenting in Zoom, be mindful of your pace. Slowing down will not only take the edge off your nerves but also make you appear more confident.
Don’t be scared of pauses or gaps between your statements. Sometimes, you might need a sip of water to hydrate your throat. Other times, you could use the pauses as extra emphasis to drive key points.
Slowing down and changing up your talking pace will help you deliver an impactful presentation because you’ll have more control and be better able to drive the point home.
5 presentation examples and templates
To make presenting your Zoom presentation easy, here are some presentation templates and examples for inspiration.
Quarterly finance update
Have a big meeting coming up where you need to share sales performance and revenue figures? We’ve got you covered with this template.
It’s equipped with graphs where you can easily drop your revenue figures in and share performance with customizable graphs. There are also template slides for customer feedback and if your team is planning to introduce new processes.
Marketing strategy plan template
This marketing strategy slide deck is perfect if you’re onboarding a new client and want to walk them through your research, analysis, and proposed actions.
Group project
Presenting your collaborative project in a Zoom meeting to your classmates? Take the worry off so you can focus on sharing the results by using this science group project template .
Despite the name, you can use it for any kind of school or university project because the structure works for any type of research presentation. The template has slides for:
- Group introduction
- Your hypothesis/basis for the project
- Your theory
- How you tested the theory
- Key takeaways
Buyer persona template
The customer buying journey is always evolving, and you might need to present a case study to leadership or your team on recent findings. Our template makes it simple to share your customer’s story, as the template has slides for:
- The customer profile
- Motivations/goals
- Personal insights
- Responsibilities
Team update in the all-hands meeting
It’s common for managers, or project leads to update the company with their results in company meetings. In these cases, you might just need a single slide to share your progress.
This work breakdown structure template does the job, giving you space to share what your team’s objectives were, what the key results were, who was involved, and what the shipping date was for these goals.
How to share your Piktochart slide deck on Zoom
Step 1 : On the Piktochart editor, click Share to get the link to your presentation.
By default, your presentation is not publicly visible.
Step 2 : Copy and paste the link into your browser bar. Then, click the Show Presentation button. This will launch in fullscreen presentation mode, and now you’re ready to shine.
Step 3: Click Share Screen on your Zoom account and choose the browser with the Piktochart link.
For a visual demonstration, watch the short tutorial below with detailed instructions.
Ready to deliver your presentation?
That’s it for our Zoom presentation tips; now over to you.
You have a brilliant idea or insight to present, and you need to share them with your audience in your next Zoom presentation. It’s high time you nail it with the virtual presentation tips we outlined in this guide.
Take Piktochart for a test drive today and create your next presentation slide minus the stress using our free presentation maker .
Kyjean Tomboc is an experienced content marketer for healthcare, design, and SaaS brands. She also manages content (like a digital librarian of sorts). She lives for mountain trips, lap swimming, books, and cats.
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Home Blog Business How to Ace Your Zoom Presentation: Tips for Successful Virtual Presenting
How to Ace Your Zoom Presentation: Tips for Successful Virtual Presenting
It’s your turn to speak during a Zoom social event in your company when your cat decides to make an impromptu appearance, climbing onto your keyboard and causing a flurry of emojis to flood the screen. Thankfully, everyone loved your feline co-worker and joked about the hilarious scene.
But what if it happens in a more meaningful setting, like a virtual sales pitch you’ve been looking forward to for weeks? You wouldn’t want to risk losing a client – and your job – just because a pet rains on your parade.
In this article, we will provide you with essential tips and tricks on how to ace your Zoom presentation like a pro. From preparing your visual aids and keeping your audience engaged to handling technical glitches with finesse, we’ve got you covered.
Table of Contents
Preparing Your Zoom Presentation
Tips for delivering a successful zoom presentation.
- How to Share PowerPoint on Zoom
Handling Technical Issues During a Zoom Presentation
Follow up after a zoom presentation.
Like in-person presentations, a successful Zoom presentation requires careful preparation to ensure you can send your audience the right message. Here are some tips to help you prepare presentations for Zoom.
Use Relevant Visuals
There are many ways you can present information besides plain boring texts. Sixty-five percent of humans are visual learners , so your audience might retain the information you share better if you present them in charts, graphs, images, or other visualizations.
You may use several types of visuals throughout your Zoom presentation, but make sure they are easy to understand in a virtual setting and are relevant to your subject.
For instance, if you present a new product, you may record a video demonstration highlighting its features. Using Zoom’s built-in video player, you can then embed the video into PowerPoint or play it during your presentation.
Use a Simple Presentation Template
A simple presentation template can help you create a cohesive and professional-looking presentation on Zoom. Choose a template that complements your content and aligns with your branding, but avoid overly complex designs that may distract your audience.
You may use a roadmap PowerPoint template or include an agenda slide to set the timeline of your presentation and provide an overview of the topics you will cover. Aside from it keeps the presentation flowing smoothly, it helps your audience orient their thoughts on what will happen in the meeting.
Make It Interactive
Just because you are the presenter doesn’t mean you have to do all the talking – you can let your audience speak too! One of the key aspects of delivering a successful Zoom presentation is to make it interactive and engage your audience.
Think of some icebreakers that will keep your audience involved. It can be a simple open-ended question or a poll to stimulate discussion. You can also use breakout rooms to facilitate small group interactions or collaborative activities.
Interactive presentations help to break the monotony of one-way communication and make your Zoom presentation more dynamic and engaging. Having no activities encouraging interaction makes losing your audience’s interest during virtual meetings easier.
Practice the Presentation and Timing
Aside from the content of your presentation, you also have to worry about the technicalities of presenting on Zoom, so having a dry run before the real thing is important to ensure a smooth delivery.
Practice your presentation multiple times before the event to ensure you are comfortable with the content, pacing, and timing. This will familiarize you with the Zoom platform and its features, such as screen sharing, chat, and breakout rooms.
You have a killer Zoom PowerPoint. Now it’s time to focus on delivering it effectively. Here are some Zoom presentation tips:
Use a Neutral Background
Your background in a Zoom presentation can impact how your audience perceives your professionalism and credibility. Choose a neutral background that is free from distractions and clutter.
If you have an office space at home, that will work even better. Pick from Zoom’s virtual backgrounds, preferably plain and clean. Make your background boring so your audience’s attention is drawn to you. Stay away from bed!
Dress Appropriately
Even though you may be presenting from the comfort of your home, it’s important to dress professionally for your Zoom presentation. It’s not bad to wear your usual duds when attending a casual game night with your team. But if it’s a formal setup, like a business proposal, you must suit up to invite success.
Dressing up smartly may improve your mood and confidence. In a 2014 study , two groups of male subjects were asked to put on business suits and sweatpants before engaging in a negotiation task. Those who dressed up obtained more profitable negotiations than the other group.
As a rule of thumb, avoid wearing loud colors or busy patterns that may distract your audience.
Keep an Eye Contact
Maintaining eye contact is essential in any presentation, whether in person or on Zoom. Making eye contact helps you connect with your audience and convey your message more effectively.
The common advice you’ll get to achieve this on Zoom is to look directly into the camera to create the impression of eye contact with your audience. We agree with these, but as the speaker, you also have to read the facial expressions of your audience and see how they react to what you are saying.
If you are using a desktop or laptop, the simplest solution to achieving these two is to reduce Zoom to a smaller window and place it directly below your webcam. This way, you can glance at their faces occasionally while keeping the illusion of eye contact.
Keep Your Notes Minimal
If you are an expert in the topic you are presenting, it would be best to ditch your notes during Zoom events. Constantly looking down at your notes can be distracting for your audience.
But if the need calls for it, make sure to keep your notes minimal and stick them in the right place. You can use a second screen or a tablet, or position your notes close to the camera to refer to them without breaking eye contact. This way, you can stay focused on engaging with your audience and delivering your presentation smoothly.
How to Share PowerPoint on Zoom (Step by Step)
How to present on Zoom? Once you understand what Zoom presentations are and the tips for Zoom presentations, it is time to give the presentation using Zoom. Let’s see this step by step:
Step 1. Open the PowerPoint file you want to present.
Step 2. Join the Zoom meeting and click on the Share Screen icon in the meeting control panel at the bottom of your screen.
[Optional] You can customize who can share their screen in the Zoom meeting. Click on the small arrow in the corner of the Share Screen icon and select Advanced Sharing Options.
Select Hosts Only or All Participants.
Step 3. Select the window you want to share – in this case, the one that contains the PowerPoint slide – and click on Share.
If you are playing audio or video within your presentation, make sure to tick Share sound and Optimize for video clip.
Step 4. Click on the Slide Show tab in the PowerPoint window and begin the presentation by selecting Play from Start or Play from Current Slide.
Step 5. To stop screen sharing of PowerPoint, hover over the meeting controls at the top of your screen and select Stop Share.
It’s not uncommon for technicalities to derail a live Zoom presentation – video, Wi-Fi, or audio may fail. But there are things you can do to prevent them, or at least minimize their impact on your presentation when they happen.
First, test your equipment before your presentation and make sure everything is in place. You can join a meeting test on Zoom to check your internet connection, camera, audio, and microphone.
You may also send a PDF copy of your presentation to the attendees before the meeting if sharing your screen won’t work. This will allow you to carry on as you or your technical team figures out the problem.
If the technical issues persist, you should have a good Plan B and be prepared to continue on a different platform like Google Meet. Send the alternative link with the meeting invitation and give clear action steps when technical difficulties happen.
Following up after a Zoom presentation is a crucial step in maintaining momentum and maximizing the impact of your presentation. For example, if you are selling a product, you can use a follow-up email to make the final push of your sales pitch.
Start your email by expressing appreciation for their participation and summarizing the key points of your presentation. Include any additional resources, such as presentation slides or a video presentation recording, to reinforce your message. Offer yourself as a resource for further questions or discussions, and encourage feedback or comments from your audience.
Here’s an example of a well-executed follow-up email for a Zoom workshop event:
Conducting a virtual presentation sounds overwhelming as you must consider technical aspects in addition to delivering your message and keeping it engaging.
Remember, there’s no such thing as overpreparing when you have bosses or potential clients to impress. Follow the tips in this article to nail your next Zoom presentation!
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How to Share a PowerPoint on Zoom
Share your screen, whether or not you're the presenter
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What to Know
- Anybody can share a PowerPoint on a Zoom call but may need permission from the call’s organizer.
- To see notes, you’ll need a second screen to divide the view or have your notes on a separate device.
In this article, we’ll discuss how to share a PowerPoint, or any presentation, on Zoom. You can do this in a few clicks for more straightforward presentations, but for more complex presentations, you may want some more tools.
How Do You Share a PowerPoint in a Zoom Meeting?
For a presentation where you don’t need to see your notes, sharing a PowerPoint is a quick process.
Open your presentation, and close any windows you won't need. This will limit clutter and distractions.
Log into your Zoom call and when you’re ready to present, click Share Screen at the bottom. Choose your presentation from the menu.
When using a single screen, you should always pick the specific program you want to share. Doing this will protect your data and prevent pop-ups and other interruptions.
Go to the Slide Show tab in PowerPoint and click From Beginning . For the smoothest presentation, do this before anyone else joins the call, where possible.
Use the controls in the lower left-hand corner or keyboard controls to move through your presentation as usual.
Be sure to click on the Presentation window if you’re going to use keyboard controls. PowerPoint won’t acknowledge inputs from the keyboard unless you’ve deliberately clicked on the window.
How Do You Share a PowerPoint With Zoom and Still See Notes?
The best way to see your notes is to use a second monitor and PowerPoint’s Presenter View tools. Then your notes and controls are on one screen, visible only to you, and your presentation is on the other.
Open your PowerPoint and go to Presenter View to see your notes . This mode opens two windows: The presentation and the control panel.
Drag the control panel to your primary screen and the presentation window to your second screen. You’ll be able to see and control your presentation while looking directly into your webcam if you’re using it, and you won’t have to hold your neck at an angle to use the controls.
Log into the Zoom call and click Share Screen at the bottom. Choose your presentation window.
If you’ll need to present other documents or materials in addition to your presentation, have them open and minimized on your screen and share your second monitor instead. Then you can quickly bring those materials up without disrupting your flow.
Tips for a Better Zoom Presentation
If you're not the call organizer, contact them and ask what permissions they've set up and whether you'll need permission to share your screen.
For meetings with multiple people sharing the same presentation, book a call a day before and practice "handing off" control of the slides in Zoom. Alternately, the person sharing their screen should prepare to move to the next slide when cued. Everyone should also have an up-to-date copy of the presentation, so it can continue if somebody drops out of the meeting.
Keeping Murphy's Law in mind, having your notes in one or two other places is a good idea. Consider using your phone and a printed copy to ensure that you can rely on one of the two additional sources for your notes if everything goes wrong.
To record yourself giving a PowerPoint presentation on Zoom, launch Zoom and PowerPoint; be sure to close all other applications. Create a new Zoom meeting, select Share Screen , select your PowerPoint presentation, and click Share . Launch your PowerPoint slideshow. In Zoom, choose Record > Record on This Computer . Your computer is now recording.
Join the Zoom meeting from your iPad using Zoom's mobile app for iOS. Open your PowerPoint presentation and tap Share Content from the meeting controls. You can use PowerPoint's annotation and drawing tools to make notations on your slides if you like.
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Sharing slides as a Virtual Background
While you can share PowerPoint presentations or share Keynote presentations in meetings, you can also share your presentation as a Virtual Background for an immersive sharing experience. Sharing your slides as a Virtual Background allows your participants to view your video imposed directly on the screen share. It also allows you to manage your presentation directly from within the Zoom meeting controls.
Note : Sound, transitions, or animations embedded in slides are not supported.
If the presenter records the meeting locally , the recording will also have the video embedded on top of the slides. If the host or another participant uses cloud recording , the recording will record the slides and video as a normal screen share recording.
This article covers:
How to share a presentation as your background
Change slides, change video size and position, remove your video from slides, prerequisites for using virtual background to share a presentation, presenter requirements.
- Zoom desktop client for Windows or macOS: Global minimum version or higher
- System meets the requirements for Virtual Background
- PowerPoint or Keynote (macOS only) installed locally
Viewer requirements
- Zoom desktop client for Windows, macOS, or Linux: Global minimum version or higher
- Zoom mobile app for Android or iOS: Global minimum version or higher
Note : If a participant is joining from the Web client, a Zoom Room, or 3rd party endpoint, they will view the slides as a normal screen share, and the presenter's video will not be imposed over the slides.
- Click Advanced .
How to manage slides and video
To reposition or change the size of your video:
- Click Resize My Video .
If you want to stop imposing your video on top of the slides and have it sent as a separate video feed:
How-To Geek
How to zoom in and out on part of a powerpoint presentation.
Magnify parts of your presentation by taking advantage of PowerPoint's different zoom features.
Microsoft PowerPoint lets you zoom in and out on a specific part of your PowerPoint slideshow, which can be handy both while editing and for drawing attention to important objects or ideas during the presentation. Here’s how to do it.
Whether you’re in normal view or slideshow view, PowerPoint lets you zoom in and out as the need arises. There are a few ways you can do this, depending on which view you're in.
The first method is by using the zoom bar at the bottom-right of the window (which isn’t available in the slideshow view). This method is convenient as the zoom bar is immediately accessible. To use the zoom bar, click and drag the bar left or right to zoom out or in, respectively. You can also resize the slide to fit your current window by clicking the box to the right of the zoom bar.
Another method is using the “Zoom” tool, found on the “View” tab.
In the “Zoom” window, you can select a zoom percentage from the list of available options or enter a precise percentage into the “Percent” box. Once ready, click “OK,” and your slide will zoom to the selected amount.
Those two methods are great for when you're editing and need to take a closer look at something. But if you’re in the middle of giving your presentation and want to zoom in on a specific part for emphasis, you can do that too.
Select the magnifying glass from the presenter view and then click the part of the slide you want to zoom. Once zoomed in, you can click and drag to move the slide around. When you’re finished, click the magnifying glass again to zoom back out.
One last tip: In both normal and slideshow view, you can hold the Ctrl key while scrolling your mouse wheel to zoom in and out. This also works if you want to resize your slide thumbnails .
That’s all there is to it!
Three Ways To Share PowerPoint On Zoom
If you're looking to give a PowerPoint presentation during your Zoom meeting, you may be wondering how to share your slides to help you engage your audience with clear and compelling visuals. We’re here to help.
Whether you're presenting to colleagues, clients, or students, you can easily use Zoom to share your PowerPoint slides and make a great impression.
To screen share a PowerPoint presentation in a Zoom meeting, you have three options. The first option is using dual monitors to share a slide show and view the presenter's notes on another monitor simultaneously.
The other two methods use single monitors to either start the slide show in a window or full screen . We discuss each method in detail, so whichever way you choose to share your PowerPoint over Zoom, we’ve got you covered.
How To Share PowerPoint With Dual Monitors 🤓
How to share powerpoint in a window 👀, how to share powerpoint in full screen 💻, frequently asked questions 🤔.
Important disclosure: we're proud affiliates of some tools mentioned in this guide. If you click an affiliate link and subsequently make a purchase, we will earn a small commission at no additional cost to you (you pay nothing extra). For more information, read our affiliate disclosure .
If you have multiple monitors and want to present your PowerPoint on one monitor while viewing the presenter's notes on another, this one is for you:
- Open the PowerPoint file you want to present.
- Start or join a Zoom meeting.
- Click on "Share Screen" in the meeting controls.
4. Select your primary monitor, then click "Share". If you're not sure which monitor is your primary, select the one that PowerPoint opens in.
5. Switch back to PowerPoint and click on the "Slide Show" tab.
6. Begin the presentation by selecting the "Play from Start" or "Play from Current Slide" options. If you correctly shared your primary monitor, participants will see the PowerPoint in the slide show view.
7. To view your slide notes and control the presentation, use the presenter's view on your secondary monitor.
8. If you're not sharing the correct monitor, you can click on "Swap Displays" to switch the monitor used for the slide show view in PowerPoint.
9. Your audience will now see your PowerPoint presentation and hear its audio (if you selected the "Share computer sound" checkbox).
Note: Stop sharing your screen at any time by clicking on the "Stop Share" button in the Zoom meeting window.
If you want to access meeting features like in-meeting chat or manage participants while sharing your PowerPoint presentation, follow these steps:
- Open your PowerPoint presentation.
- Click on the "Slide Show" tab and select "Set Up Slide Show."
3. Under "Show type," select "Browsed by an individual (window)" and then click "OK."
4. Start or join a Zoom meeting.
5. Click on "Share Screen" in the meeting controls.
6. Select the PowerPoint window that's displaying the slide show in a window, then click on "Share."
Your PowerPoint presentation will now be shared in a window during the Zoom meeting, allowing you to access other meeting features while presenting your slides.
To present your PowerPoint in a Zoom meeting on full screen, follow these steps:
- During your Zoom meeting, open the PowerPoint file you want to present.
- Switch back to Zoom and click on "Share Screen" in the meeting controls.
- Select the monitor you want to share, then click "Share."
- Go back to PowerPoint and click on the "Slide Show" tab.
5. Begin the presentation by selecting the "Play from Start" or "Play from Current Slide" options. The green border indicates the monitor you are currently sharing.
Can I share a PowerPoint presentation before a Zoom meeting starts Yes, you can upload your PowerPoint file to the Zoom meeting room before the meeting starts by clicking on the "Upload" button in the "Share Screen" window. This way, you'll be able to access your presentation easily during the meeting.
Can I annotate my PowerPoint presentation during a Zoom meeting Yes, when you share your screen with the PowerPoint presentation, you'll see the "Annotate" button on the top of the Zoom meeting window. Click on it, and you'll be able to draw, highlight, or use other tools to annotate your slides.
Can I share only a part of my PowerPoint presentation on Zoom Absolutely! When you select the window containing your PowerPoint presentation, you can choose to share only a specific slide or a portion of the presentation.
Can participants interact with my PowerPoint presentation during a Zoom meeting? Sure they can, if you allow participants to control your screen, they'll be able to navigate through your PowerPoint presentation and interact with it as if they were in the same room with you.
Can I use animations and transitions in my PowerPoint presentation during a Zoom meeting? Sure, when you share your screen with the PowerPoint presentation, all animations and transitions will be visible to the participants.
By following the steps outlined in this guide, you can share your PowerPoint slides with ease and make a great impression on your audience.
Use simple and clear visual aids to ensure that the presentation is easy to follow for everyone.
With a little practice and preparation, you'll be able to present your ideas effectively and confidently using Zoom.
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Use zoom for PowerPoint to bring your presentation to life
If you would like to make your presentations more dynamic and exciting, try using zoom for PowerPoint .
To add a zoom, go to Insert > Zoom .
To summarize the entire presentation on one slide, choose Summary Zoom
To show selected slides only, choose Slide Zoom
To show a single section only, choose Section Zoom
When you create a zoom in PowerPoint, you can jump to and from specific slides, sections, and portions of your presentation in an order you decide while you're presenting.
Note: See the Requirements table below regarding which versions of PowerPoint support the features described in this article.
Summary zoom
A summary zoom is like a landing page where you can see the pieces of your presentation all at once. When you're presenting, you can use the zoom to go from one place in your presentation to another in any order you like. You can get creative, skip ahead, or revisit pieces of your slide show without interrupting the flow of your presentation.
Create a summary zoom
Go to Insert > Zoom .
Select Summary Zoom .
The Insert Summary Zoom dialog box opens.
Select slides you want to include in your summary zoom. These become the first slides of your summary zoom sections . To learn more about using sections in PowerPoint, see Organize your PowerPoint slides into sections .
If you already have sections in your presentation, the first slide of each section is preselected by default. If you don't want to include certain sections in your zoom, deselect them. Then, if you want PowerPoint to get rid of any sections you didn't include in your summary zoom, clear the check box next to Keep unused sections in your presentation . Don't worry—the slides in the sections you're discarding will still be part of your presentation.
Once you've selected all the slides you want to use for your summary zoom, select Insert . Your summary zoom is created, and it appears as a new slide just before the first slide you included in your summary zoom.
Add or remove sections from your summary zoom
Once you've created a summary zoom, you might still want to add or remove sections of your presentation. If you've made changes since first making your summary zoom that you want to capture, you don't have to start from scratch—just update your summary zoom.
Select your zoom, and then select the Format tab on the ribbon.
Select Edit Summary , choose the sections you want to have in your summary zoom, and then select Update .
Note: You won't be able to add or remove sections from your presentation in this view, just from your summary zoom.
A slide zoom can help you make your presentation more dynamic, allowing you to navigate freely between slides in any order you choose without interrupting the flow of your presentation. They're a good option for shorter presentations without lots of sections, but you can use slide zooms for lots of different presentation scenarios.
Slide zooms help you drill down into multiple pieces of information while feeling as though you're staying on the same canvas.
Create a slide zoom
Select Slide Zoom .
The Slide Zoom dialog box opens. Select the slides you want to use in your slide zoom.
Once you've selected all the slides you want to use, select Insert .
An item for each slide you selected in step 3 is added to the slide. Select each item in turn and drag to arrange them on the slide.
Tip: If you want to, you can create a slide zoom quickly by simply selecting the slide you want from the thumbnail pane and dragging it onto the slide you'd like to have your slide zoom on. This way, you can create slide zooms and change them quickly, and arrange them however you like simply by clicking and dragging.
Change the preview image of your slide zoom
Your slide zoom by default will be a preview thumbnail image of the slide, but you can choose a new image from your PC or the web to represent the section or slide you'll be going to.
Select Change Image to choose a new picture from the web or your PC to use instead of the thumbnail.
Choose or search the web for the image you want. When you've selected the image you want, select Insert .
You can also choose various looks for your zooms from Zoom Styles —you can change the border, add visual effects, or pick from any of the border and effect combinations in the gallery.
Section zoom
A section zoom is a link to a section already in your presentation. You can use them to go back to sections you want to really emphasize, or to highlight how certain pieces of your presentation connect. To learn more about using sections in PowerPoint, see Organize your PowerPoint slides into sections .
Create a section zoom
Select Section Zoom .
Select the section you want to use as a section zoom.
Select Insert . Your section zoom will be created.
Tip: If you want to, you can create a section zoom quickly by simply selecting the section name you want in the thumbnail pane and dragging it onto the slide you'd like to have a section zoom on.
Change the preview image of your section zoom
Your section zoom by default will be a preview thumbnail image of the slide, but you can choose a new image from your PC or the web to represent the section or slide you'll be going to.
More zoom options
Zoom for PowerPoint truly lights up when you make it your own. Select the Format tab of the ribbon to get to the Zoom Tools , which you can choose to create just the look and feel you're going for when you present.
Choose to return to the home page or continue through your presentation
If you want to return to the zoom slide after viewing sections or slides in your summary, slide, or section zoom, make sure the Return to Zoom check box is selected. If you want to move on to the next slide after viewing part of your zoom, uncheck it.
(If you're working with a summary zoom or a section zoom, you'll return to the zoom slide by default when you're presenting after going to the section. If you're using a slide zoom, you'll move on to the next slide by default after viewing your slide zoom.)
Make the background of your zoom transparent
Another way you can change the look of your zoom is by choosing to adopt the background of the slide where your zoom lives to make the zoom almost indistinguishable from the main canvas while you present. Select Zoom Background to make your summary, section, or slide zooms blend in to their home slide.
In the Zoom Styles group, select Zoom Background . The zoom will adopt the background of the home slide.
Change the transition options of your zoom
By default, your zooms will use the zoom transition when you present, which is what helps make the zooms feel so lively. However, if you don't want to use the zoom transition, or if you want to change the duration of the transition, you can do so.
In the Zoom Options group, make sure the box next to Zoom Transition is checked if you want to use the zoom transition when presenting your zoom.
If you don't want to use the zoom transition when presenting, uncheck the box next to Zoom Transition .
To change the timing of the zoom transition, use the up and down arrows next to the Duration indicator to change how long the zoom transition lasts.
Requirements
See the following table for details on the minimum version numbers required in PowerPoint to create or play zoom links.
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April 4, 2024
11 Best Websites for Making a Presentation (And How to Choose One For Your Needs)
Here are 11 of the best websites and programs to create free presentations online
Co-founder, CEO
The best websites for making presentations equip you with all the tools needed to build a professional, attractive, and informative slide deck quickly and efficiently. But with dozens of slide makers claiming to be the best, it’s hard to choose an app that suits your needs best.
We’ve done the legwork for you and scoured the web for the best presentation websites. We based our evaluation on factors such as functionality, ease of use, AI sophistication, collaboration tools, and value for money. Below is the result — a comprehensive overview of the 11 best web-based slide creation apps based on our findings.
Short on time? Summary of the best sites for making a presentation
1. plus ai — best all-round presentation maker.
Key Features
- Adds easy-to-use AI to Google Slides
- Affords customization options for slide templates, colors, and logos
- Allows slide deck generation via different methods
- Facilitates collaboration within teams on Google Workspace
- Features a setting-rich but straightforward user interface
- $10/month for Basic and $20 for Pro versions when billed annually ($15 and $30, respectively, with monthly billing)
Plus AI is a powerful and user-friendly presentation maker that’s suitable for any purpose, whether you’re a professional, student, or amateur user.
Plus AI gives you a robust selection of AI slide creation methods. You can generate presentations straight from text, work on them slide-by-slide, design them from scratch, or use existing templates. Regardless of the method, the tool’s AI technology does all the heavy lifting design-wise and the interface is a breeze to navigate, so you can sit back and focus on the content.
Meanwhile, the customization options allow you to tailor the slides to your desired aesthetic, content type, and audience, and you can create your presentation in 80 languages. The resulting slide decks are elegant, professional, and appropriate for any use case.
Plus AI is an affordable presentation maker, with pricing that starts at $10 per month with annual billing, or $15 when billed monthly. Each of the plans includes an AI extension for Google Docs; this feature helps you compose and edit text. If you’d rather not spend money without taking the tool for a test drive, Plus AI offers you a 7-day free trial.
Here are the key pros and cons of Plus AI — they should help you decide if this presentation maker is right for you:
- Generates professional and visually appealing presentations in minutes — no design skills needed
- AI function allows you to edit and format slides without manual effort
- Lots of ways to customize the presentation
- Vast selection of templates and example presentations
- Text-to-slide and from-scratch creation
- Allows team collaboration in Google Workspace
- Integrates with Google Slides and Microsoft PowerPoint
- Budget-friendly plans and a 7-day free trial
- Plus creates presentations in Google Slides or PowerPoint format, which may be harder for newer users to edit
2. Canva — Best free presentation site
- Offers mobile presentation templates
- Web- or mobile-based Canva app supports collaboration
- Remote Control feature lets you run the presentation from your smartphone
- Canva live feature allows viewers to join QA sessions during a presentation
- Presenter mode lets you see your speaking notes and upcoming slides while you present
- AI assists in slide creation and can present on your behalf
- Individual Free Plan: $0 per month
- Individual Pro Plan: $14.99 per month
- Teams Plan: $29.99 per month
Canva is a web-based template editor with graphics creation tools and a powerful presentation builder in its free plan. Canva offers you an array of slide templates designed for virtually any purpose, along with a suite of customization tools to tailor the presentation to your topic and setting.
Canva has made a noticeable effort to optimize presentations for the smartphone. The app’s most striking feature is its selection of mobile presentation templates, which don’t lag their desktop-based peers in either aesthetics or utility. But whether or not your presentation is designed for a mobile screen, Canva lets you run it right from your smartphone, with a presenter view that shows your notes and upcoming slides. The audience can likewise engage with your presentation from their mobile devices during Q&A sessions.
Depending on your use case, you may be able to get away with Canva’s comprehensive free plan. The free Canva has presentation creation and editing tools and gives you access to a huge selection of professional templates. However, it’s the $14/month Pro plan that lets you unlock all the premium tools and graphic assets. And if you need Canva to collaborate with teams, you’re looking at $29.99 per month for the first 5 users.
To help you decide whether Canva is worth trying out, we’ve made this quick summary of the app’s pros and cons:
- Solid free plan with basic features and a large selection of graphic assets
- Optimized for mobile presentations
- Elegant templates for any use case
- Intermediate design skills required
- No direct integration with Google Workspace or Microsoft 365 (possible through third-party apps)
3. Prezi — Best slide tool for creative users
- Web-based tool for creating presentations, videos, and infographics
- Asset library includes templates, ready-to-use story blocks, and stock images from Unsplash and GIFs from
- Integrates with Webex, Zoom, Microsoft Teams, and other video conferencing apps to show presentations and the presenter on the same screen
- Lets you convert PowerPoint presentations to Prezi
Pricing (all plans are billed annually)
- For students/educators: $3-8 per month
- For individuals: $7-19 per month
- For businesses: $15-29 per month
Prezi is a web-based tool for creating presentations, videos, and infographics that are suitable for business and educational settings. The tool offers a wealth of image and icon assets, as well as templates to get you started on your slide deck. The templates do not constrain your creativity with linear slides the way PowerPoint does — you can create your presentations on an open canvas. Prezi even lets you import and customize PowerPoint presentations in its app. And, with the help of Prezi’s new AI tool, you can create and edit entire presentations quickly.
One of Prezi’s most defining features is its integration with popular video conferencing apps, such as Webex, Zoom, Teams, and Meet. Crucially, Prezi lets your slides appear on the same screen as your own video feed while you’re presenting.
Prezi offers three pricing tiers. Students and educators get the least expensive options, with plans that range between $3 and $8 per month. For individual users, plans cost $7-19 per month, while business users pay between $15 and $29 per month. All of Prezi’s plans are billed annually, but you can try the tool for 14 days without committing to a subscription.
If you’re not sure whether this presentation tool is right for you, consider Prezi’s pros and cons below:
- Design freedom and for creating unique and attractive slides
- Graphic assets are readily available
- Integrates with video conferencing apps
- AI assistant generates and edits presentations
- Inexpensive plans for students and educators
- Video and infographic creation part of each plan
- 14-day free trial
- Design skills required to create quality presentations
- Lack of integration with Google Slides and Microsoft PowerPoint
- No monthly billing options
4. Visme — Best for graphics and special effects
- Tools for creating special effects and animating graphics
- Ability to import and edit Microsoft PowerPoint presentations
- AI designer helps create a presentation draft
- Integration with Google Drive, DropBox, Mailchimp, Slack, and other apps
- Presentation analytics tools
- Basic package: $0/month
- Starter package (individual): $12.25/month
- Pro package (individual or team): $24.75-$79+/month
Visme is a web-based app for producing various types of visual content, including presentations. The app’s most distinct feature is its suite of special effects you can use to make the slides’ content and graphics more engaging. The app also lets you animate the images and insert video and audio features into the slides.
Visme integrates with a whole host of other platforms and apps. These integration options are largely designed to let you import content seamlessly into Visme. For example, you have the option of importing your PowerPoint files into Visme, enhancing them there, and exporting them back in the .ppt format if you like. That said, Visme does not work as an extension in popular slide makers, like Google Slides or PowerPoint.
You have three main pricing options with Visme. The Basic plan is free, but you’re limited in access to collaboration tools, assets, interactive, and AI features. The more comprehensive Starter plan costs $12.25 per month (billed annually), and equips you with Visme’s more premium tools. Finally, the Pro team plan sets you back $79/month for a team of 5 and lets you use Visme’s entire suite of interactivity and collaboration functions.
Here are a few vital pros and cons if you need help deciding whether Visme is right for you:
- Vast selection of special effects
- Ability to animate graphics on the slides
- Simple file movement between different web-based apps
- Free plan available
- Free plans extremely limiting
- No direct integration with Google or Microsoft slide tools
5. Powtoon — Best for slides with animation
- Templates with configurable graphics and animation
- Customizable fonts, colors, and logos
- Access to stock images, videos, and soundtracks
- Lite plan: $50/month ($15/month when billed annually)
- Professional plan: $190/month ($40/month when billed annually)
- Agency: $117/month (annual billing only)
Powtoon is a visual web-based content creation platform with tools for making videos, animations, and presentations. The app’s presentation function lets you build slides using professional templates, in which you’re free to customize the fonts, colors, logos, and graphics. You can even animate the graphics and build custom avatars to present on your behalf — it’s one of Powtoon’s unique selling features.
Powtoon’s suite of slide tools includes a database of royalty-free stock images, video footage, and music. You can use all of these assets in your slides, or upload your own as you see fit. However, how much of these shiny tools you can use in your slide decks depends on the chosen plan.
There are three pricing plans available, and the discrepancy between monthly and annual payments is striking. Most presentation sites charge a few dollars more if you opt for monthly instead of annual billing, but Powtoon’s monthly prices easily triple and quadruple. For example, the Lite plan costs $15/month with annual billing, but $50 if you wish to pay every month instead. You get very basic features with this plan, especially as far as animation and interactivity are concerned. Likewise, the Professional plan jumps from $40 to $190 if you choose monthly payments. You get a bit more for your buck, but some rudimentary features are still absent (like font uploads). Meanwhile, the Agency plan costs a whopping $1400 annually (no monthly option), and this plan gets you all of the app’s bells and whistles.
Not sure if investing in a product like Powtoon is worth it? Consider its pros and cons below:
- Comprehensive animation and video creation features
- Graphic and audio assets available with subscription
- Fonts and logos can be uploaded
- Most customization, animation, and AI features only come with the expensive Agency package
- Monthly payment options are not reasonable
6. Haiku Deck — Best site for image editing options
- Minimalistic interface
- Graphic design tools for improving slide aesthetics
- Pre-loaded templates and image assets
- Cloud-based file sharing for team collaboration
- AI presentation builder (Haiku Deck Zuru)
- Pro plan: $9.99 per month billed annually, or $19.99 monthly
- Premium plan: $29.99 per month, billed annually
Haiku Deck is a web, desktop, and mobile-based presentation builder with a significant focus on design aesthetics. The app’s design tools allow you to refine the graphics in the preloaded templates and images you’re using in the slides. You can source the images right from Haiku’s repository, which boasts over 40 million assets.
To help you create your slide decks, Haiku offers its AI assistant. The AI feature can create new presentations from your outline, or enhance your existing drafts. Since the AI learns from other Haiku users, its algorithms are now trained to outfit slides with contextually relevant imagery and graphics.
Haiku Deck’s pricing has two tiers: Pro and Premium. The Pro plan costs $9.99/month when billed annually and affords full access to the slide creation tools. Meanwhile, the Premium plan will set you back $29.99/month (again, billed annually), and equips you with features such as analytics, live web tracking, and priority support.
Here’s a summary of Haiku Deck’s most prominent pros and cons:
- Visually appealing slides
- Large database of graphic assets
- Advanced tools for editing images
- Capable AI-powered slide builder
- No free plan
- No integration with Google Slides or Microsoft PowerPoint
7. Zoho Show — Best presentation site for budget-minded users
- Clean interface with tools changing depending on the task
- Library for templates, slides, and fonts to facilitate team collaboration
- Over 100 templates
- Imports/exports PowerPoint files
- Presentations can be controlled from smartphone or smart watch
- For individuals: Free
- Professional Plan: $2.50/month and up (billed annually)
- With Zoho Workplace Standard: $3.00/month (billed annually)
Zoho is a web-based suite of business tools, and Zoho Show is its slide creation app. Zoho Show is a straightforward, inexpensive, yet fully functional slide maker that offers most of the same features you’ll get from pricier presentation sites. You can build your decks using over 100 preloaded templates, work on PowerPoint presentations before exporting them to their original file format, and run your slideshow from a smart device. Show’s most unique feature is its clean, contextual interface that only displays tools that are relevant to your current task (whether that’s handy or limiting depends on your preferences).
Zoho Show’s pricing has three tiers. First, there’s the Free plan. This package lets you build basic presentations, but you miss out on key collaboration features and have limited access to graphic assets. Next, you get the more comprehensive Professional Plan, which costs $2.50; you must sign up for Zoho WorkDrive and have a team of 3 people to get this plan. Finally, you can get the entire Zoho Workplace suite for $3/month — this option unlocks the full functionality of the Show app and lets you use other Zoho tools, such as their Office Suite, Mail, and Workdrive.
Have a look at Zoho Show’s pros and cons below to see if this presentation website is right for you:
- Interface automatically shows tools relevant to the task
- Ability to add custom fonts and embed files into slides
- Templates, graphic assets, and collaboration tools included
- Supports PowerPoint file formats
- Subscription to Zoho Workdrive or Workplace required to access paid plan — unnecessary if all you need is a presentation tool
- Some plans require a minimum of 3 users
- Free individual plan limits use of graphic assets, templates, and collaboration tools
- No direct integration with Google Slides
8. Pitch — Best presentation site for use in business and sales
- Lets you build presentations with AI, from a template, or from scratch
- Supports custom fonts and colors
- Provides team collaboration tools
- Allows you to embed presentations on the web
- Offers engagement analytics tools
- Pro plan: $25/month
- Business: $100/month
Pitch is a web-based presentation maker designed primarily for business use. The app helps streamline slide deck creation with its AI tool, which generates a first draft based on your prompts and leaves your team with the task of refining the slides to your liking. The slides have shareable links, so your entire team can collaborate on the slide deck. You can even invite consultants from outside your workplace to edit the presentations.
Once your slide deck is complete, Pitch allows you to embed it on the web in your CMS — much like you’d do with a YouTube video. And to give you a feel for how audiences engage with your presentation, Pitch equips you with engagement and analytics performance tools.
There are three pricing options with Pitch. The free plan comes with all the presentation creation functions, but you get no tracking and limited collaboration tools. The Pro plan costs $25/month (or $22 per month when billed annually), and gives you more freedom to use Pitch in a team environment. Finally, the Business plan costs $100/month (or $85/month with yearly billing) and gives you access to the full suite of features.
Can’t decide if Pitch is the best presentation website for your team? Have a look at its most vital pros and cons:
- AI slide creation feature
- Performance analytics tools
- Integration with various productivity and collaboration apps
- Media asset library
- Engagement tracking only available in paid plans
- No integration with Google Slides or Microsoft 365
9. Beautiful.ai — Best site for no-frills AI-generated presentations
- AI-powered presentation maker
- Slide creation from user’s prompts
- Automated slide formatting
- File sharing within the team (requires Team Plan)
- Graphic assets database
- Pro: $144 per year
- Team: $40/month per user with annual billing ($50 with monthly billing)
- Enterprise: Pricing available on request
Beautiful.ai is an AI-powered presentation builder that leverages full automation to make slide creation quick and easy. All you need to do is enter a prompt for your slide deck, and beautiful.ai will generate your first draft. These AI-generated drafts are quite simplistic in terms of both content and graphics, but they serve as a good starting point. Moreover, beautiful.ai’s presentations are formatted consistently, which should save you time as you edit each slide.
You get three pricing options with beautiful.ai — Pro, Team, and Enterprise. The Pro package is meant for individual use, and costs $144 per year (there’s no way to pay monthly). The plan equips you with the AI slide maker but limits your use of assets and team collaboration features. The Pro plan costs $50/month for each user, or $480 annual for each license you purchase. This plan affords access to more customization and teamwork functions and lets you use graphic assets. Finally, the Enterprise plan includes all the features of the Pro plan, but with more dedicated training and support for your team. You’d have to reach out to beautiful.ai’s sales team to get a quote for the Enterprise plan.
Beautiful.ai helps create slides quickly and with little skill. However, if you’re not sure this app is right for you, consider its most vital pros and cons below.
- Quick way to create and format slides
- Inexpensive plan for personal use
- Elegant slide templates
- No integration with Google Slides or Microsoft 365
- Slide content is very basic
- Limited customization and branding options
10. Google Slides — Best for Google Workspace Users With Basic Presentation Needs
- Basic presentation creation tool
- Limited selection of templates, fonts, and colors
- Supports import/export of PowerPoint files
- Allows collaboration within the Google Workspace
- Free with a Google account
Slides is the web-based presentation tool you get with your Google account. This rudimentary app features a limited library of templates, fonts, and colors, along with a basic suite of tools for formatting the text and graphics in your slides. You can insert your own image, video, and audio files into the slides, but there is no access to a library of royalty-free assets.
Despite its functional constraints, Google Slides is a useful app because it lets teams using Google Workspace collaborate easily on presentations. To get the most of Slides, though, you need to boost its functionality with a suitable extension. Google Gemini now works as an extension within the app, but for the $30 it costs you, the output is disappointing. All Gemini knows does is generate simple, low-quality images; it won’t help you produce, format, or edit presentations.
In contrast, an app like Plus AI leverages artificial intelligence algorithms to give Google Slides powers it lacks on its own. By using the Plus AI extension, you can create entire Slides presentations from a single prompt, automate slide editing and formatting, and access a rich library of templates and ready-made slide decks. Meanwhile, Plus AI’s customization features help you brand your presentations with custom fonts, colors, and your company logo.
Not sure if Google’s slide creation tool is right for you? Have a look at its pros and cons below.
- Allows collaboration in the Google Workspace
- Compatible with PowerPoint files
- Supports AI-powered slide-creation extensions, such as Plus AI
- Free to use with a Google account
- Limited capabilities without third-party apps
- No library with image, video, or audio assets
11. Microsoft PowerPoint — Best For Highly Skilled Presentation Designers
- Vast library of slide themes, variants, and layouts
- Database of stock images and videos
- Massive array of slide editing, formatting, and customization tools
- Supports collaboration in the Microsoft 365 ecosystem
- As a standalone product: $159.99 (one-time fee)
- With Microsoft 365 apps, for home use: $6.99-$9.99/month
- With Microsoft 365 apps, for business use: $6.00-22.00/user/month
PowerPoint is one of the world’s oldest presentation builders that’s been part of Microsoft’s arsenal since the early 1990s. To this day, PowerPoint has been the most commonly used presentation app. But there’s a reason we’ve ranked it last on our list. Buoyed by its popularity, PowerPoint hasn’t evolved much over time; you won’t get anything beyond the most basic and uninspired presentations out of it unless you’re an advanced user with lots of time on your hands.
The app’s user interface immediately overwhelms you with options and settings. Some of these seem similar in how they function, and you won’t know which tool to use until you’ve experimented with them all. Apart from the cluttered interface, PowerPoint disappoints with its simplistic selection of templates and designs.
You can use Microsoft’s Copilot to forgo the tedious task of creating your own PowerPoint presentation, but beware: like Gemini, Copilot is still limited in its slide-making abilities. You can get it to create a slide deck from a single prompt, but the output will feature basic and repetitive along with lifeless images.
PowerPoint’s pricing is a bit convoluted at a glance — you get different options whether you want the standalone product ($159.99) or the entire Microsoft 365 suite. If you choose the latter, the Home options range in price between $6.99 and $9.99 per month, while the Business plans cost between $6.00 and $22.00 per month per user.
We don’t believe that PowerPoint is worth your time considering the vast selection of more powerful and user-friendly presentation apps on the market. However, you can review the app’s pros and cons below and decide for yourself.
- Massive selection of design and customization tools
- Integrates with Microsoft Copilot
- Lets team members using Microsoft 365 work on the same presentation simultaneously
- Overwhelming user interface
- Very basic templates and designs
- Creating professional presentations is a challenge for novice users
- AI assistant cannot produce elegant, content-rich slide decks
How we ranked the best presentation sites
To make your selection process simple and effective, we ranked the best presentation websites based on these vital criteria:
- Functionality
- Level of AI sophistication
- Ease of use
- Collaboration options
Integration with popular slide creation tools
Value for money, functionality .
The best presentation sites are loaded with handy functions that enable you to make visually appealing, info-rich, and engaging presentations with little effort and minimal editing. These include customization tools, templates, image assets, and graphics refinement features.
Level of AI sophistication
AI technology is at the forefront of slide makers’ drive to create the best product for their clients. AI-powered presentation sites save you from spending long hours on writing content, digging up graphics, and then formatting every slide — AI handles these tasks for you. But not all AI slide creators are made equal. Some leave you with rudimentary decks that feature repetitive content and unrelated imagery. Others give you a solid starting point for an informative and captivating presentation.
Ease of use
The best presentation sites greet you with an intuitive and uncluttered interface that takes you minutes (if not seconds) to master. But usability goes beyond navigating the UI. That’s why we also assess the simplicity with which you can actually produce presentations. Simply put, how easy is it to create and edit slides? Do you need advanced design skills to manipulate the graphics and give the slide deck your desired aesthetic ? The best slide makers take these questions into account, so that their product makes presentations a breeze. You worry about the content, and let the app do the rest.
Collaboration options
High-quality presentation apps allow team members to create, edit, and give feedback on presentations remotely. That’s because today’s business needs, along with hybrid work arrangements, mean that more and more teams are forced to collaborate electronically. Features such as cloud-based file sharing and integration with communication platforms help different members of your team work on the presentation from wherever they are.
Google Slides and Microsoft PowerPoint are the most commonly used presentation programs in the world. These two giants are the natural, go-to option for slide creation in the corporate, educational, and institutional world. Any presentation app that’s worth its salt should integrate with at least one of these tools. At the very least, a quality independent slide app should be able to import and export files that can be used in Google Slides or PowerPoint.
The best presentation apps are usually not free, but the money you pay for them should be worth the features and benefits you get in return. That’s why we’ve evaluated each of the slide makers above based on the balance between their price point and their offerings.
How to choose the best presentation website for your needs?
You can’t really go wrong by opting for any of the 10 presentation sites above; however, to get a tool that’s tailored to your use-case, you’ll have to do a bit more research and analysis. The four steps below should help you zero in on the optimal presentation maker for your needs.
- Consider the purpose of the presentation. Some slide tools cater to sales teams (think Pitch), others to graphic-minded users (Haiku Deck comes to mind), while others, like Plus AI, are excellent all-rounders.
- Decide on the level of customization you need. How concerned are you with personalizing and branding your slide decks? If a generic, templated presentation is all you need for a school project, investing in a feature-rich, customizable tool may be overkill. But if you need your slide decks to feature custom colors, fonts, and convey your brand identity, opt for a tool (and pricing package) that has this functionality.
- Decide if you want AI help. Unless you’re a skilled designer with a passion for creating and formatting slides, AI can be incredibly useful. Consider this: would you rather spend hours on refining your slides and ensuring consistency, or have the AI tool produce a uniformly formatted first draft? Check out the best AI presentation makers here.
- Factor in your budget. Most presentation sites have similar pricing, with monthly plans ranging between $0 and $40. However, some charge more — much more. Of course, the higher price points generally translate into richer offerings that may include other apps for visual content creation. Consider whether you need these extras or if a capable slide creation tool will suffice.
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- Washington State University
- Go to wsu twitter
- Go to wsu facebook
- Go to wsu linkedin
Final provost candidate on campus Monday
The final candidates for the role of Washington State University provost will be visiting the Pullman campus tomorrow.
Candidate C will make a presentation to members of the WSU community from 3–3:50 p.m. Monday, April 8 insider PACCAR 202. Their presentation will also be available to watch via Zoom , with a recording available for the following three days.
The names of the finalists as well as information about their work experiences and educational background, will be available on the Provost Search website the day before their presentations.
The two prior candidates for the provost role made their presentations April 1 and 4.
Members of the university community will be able to weigh-in on the candidates via a survey that’ll become available following each presentation.
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Here is how you can do that-. Step 1: First, start or join a Zoom meeting. Step 2: Click on " Share Screen " and select the " Advanced " option. From there, select " PowerPoint as Virtual Background " and select the file you want for your presentation. Then click on " Share ".
In this step-by-step tutorial, learn how to best present Microsoft PowerPoint slides in Zoom Video Conferencing.⌚ Timestamps0:00 Introduction1:19 Share entir...
Switch back to Powerpoint and click the Slide Show tab. Begin the presentation by selecting the Play from Start or Play from Current Slide options. PowerPoint will display the slide show in a window. In Zoom, start or join a meeting. Click Share Screen in the meeting controls. Select the PowerPoint window and then click Share.
Step 3: Share your screen on Zoom. From your Zoom meeting window, click on "Share Screen" and select the window with the Presenter view of your presentation. That's it! You'll now be able to look at the presenter notes on your screen while your audience views the slide open in your Presenter view window.
Our eight pro tips for presenting over Zoom may help you feel more prepared, comfortable, and confident. Read on to find out more. 1. Plan out your Zoom background/location ahead of time. You can ...
2. Use Zoom to present. Now that the windows have been separated, you can easily use Zoom to present the slideshow window. While in a meeting, click on the 'Share Screen' button and select the browser window with Google Slides on top. Finally, hit 'Share' to start the screen-sharing session.
Kinda. To access the feature (beta at time of writing) click the "Advanced" tab in the "Share Screen" popup, and select "Slides as Virtual Background". This is what it looks like from the attendee's perspective. And yes, you appear twice on the screen. Once on top of your slides, and again beside them.
Roughly speaking—and by that I mean super specific—the Ultimate Guide to Giving Virtual Presentations on Zoom contains six thematic parts, seventeen chapters, 29,584 words, eighty four precision-crafted interface screenshots to show you how to do cool things, high-production instructional videos full of fun, insights, marvellous techniques to marvel at, and did I mention that it's twenty ...
Step 2: Copy and paste the link into your browser bar. Then, click the Show Presentation button. This will launch in fullscreen presentation mode, and now you're ready to shine. Step 3: Click Share Screen on your Zoom account and choose the browser with the Piktochart link.
Step 4. Click on the Slide Show tab in the PowerPoint window and begin the presentation by selecting Play from Start or Play from Current Slide. Step 5. To stop screen sharing of PowerPoint, hover over the meeting controls at the top of your screen and select Stop Share.
In this article I am using the Zoom app in Windows 10. The six options are: Share your entire screen/desktop. Share the Slide Show window. Share the editing window with a clean look. Run the Slide Show in a window and share that window. Use Presenter View to show the audience your slides while you see Presenter View.
5 TIPS FOR DELIVERING GREAT ZOOM PRESENTATION / If you follow these 5 tips, you will ace your online presentation- and it'll be memorable too! Sometimes (lik...
At the bottom of the Zoom meeting window, click "Share Screen." If you're using a single monitor, you will immediately start sharing your screen. If you're using dual monitors, you'll need to click the screen that your presentation will be shared on. In our case, that will be "Screen 2." To begin sharing that screen, click "Share" at the bottom ...
Invite a guest speaker to share thoughts with your participants. Around the Horn. If the group is small, you can ask participants to check in with a one-breath statement or do the same to conclude ...
These are the four components: Title: Write the title of your story out, keep it short and sweet, and make sure it's direct and reflects what you're trying to convey. The who and what: Draw yourself, 2-3 people who are involved in your story, and a symbol or icon representing an object or thing that's in your story.
A Zoom video conferencing tutorial--how to record yourself while giving a presentation using the Zoom video interface. Although Zoom video conferencing is a...
Start Presenter View Preview by pressing Alt+F5. In Zoom, share a portion of the screen from the Advanced sharing options. Make the current slide larger in Presenter View and adjust the sharing rectangle so you just share the current slide portion of the screen in Zoom. Deliver your presentation. Full detailed article.
To record yourself giving a PowerPoint presentation on Zoom, launch Zoom and PowerPoint; be sure to close all other applications. Create a new Zoom meeting, select Share Screen, select your PowerPoint presentation, and click Share. Launch your PowerPoint slideshow. In Zoom, choose Record > Record on This Computer.
In fact, change the content format every two to four minutes to keep things dynamic and magnetic. 4. Heighten the humanity. If you're delivering a presentation from a stage, it's automatically ...
In the meeting controls toolbar, click Share Screen. Click Advanced. Click Slides as Virtual Background. Browse and select the presentation file. Click Open. Once the presentation is imported, the slides will be shown as your virtual background. If your video is on, by default it will be imposed over the slides.
Select the magnifying glass from the presenter view and then click the part of the slide you want to zoom. Once zoomed in, you can click and drag to move the slide around. When you're finished, click the magnifying glass again to zoom back out. One last tip: In both normal and slideshow view, you can hold the Ctrl key while scrolling your ...
5. Click on "Share Screen" in the meeting controls. 6. Select the PowerPoint window that's displaying the slide show in a window, then click on "Share." Your PowerPoint presentation will now be shared in a window during the Zoom meeting, allowing you to access other meeting features while presenting your slides. 👀.
This is a quick guide on how to use the free version of zoom to record a presentation with picture in picture of both your slides and your webcam.
If you would like to make your presentations more dynamic and exciting, try using zoom for PowerPoint . To add a zoom, go to Insert > Zoom. To summarize the entire presentation on one slide, choose Summary Zoom. To show selected slides only, choose Slide Zoom. To show a single section only, choose Section Zoom.
For individuals: $7-19 per month. For businesses: $15-29 per month. Prezi is a web-based tool for creating presentations, videos, and infographics that are suitable for business and educational settings. The tool offers a wealth of image and icon assets, as well as templates to get you started on your slide deck.
The final candidates for the role of Washington State University provost will be visiting the Pullman campus tomorrow. Candidate C will make a presentation to members of the WSU community from 3-3:50 p.m. Monday, April 8 insider PACCAR 202. Their presentation will also be available to watch via Zoom, with a recording available for the ...