p cubed framework

A presentation is made of three component parts; the story (p1), the supportive media (p2) and the delivery of these (p3). The value of a presentation is the product of these three factors, the p cubed value.

The three components are discussed in more depth in their individual sections. This section deals with the p cubed value, the product of preparation, design, and delivery.

Some key posts include:

This is all your fault.

It’s conference season once again and I’ve had my vaccination booster. Sadly it will be wall to wall text dense slides, with little structure or purpose, read outloud in a…

Delete your slides

I received a question via Twitter about #presentationskills and where I might focus beginning the journey of improvement. As with so many things, the more I considered the issue the…

Design affects function

Simple design changes in the supportive media  make dramatic differences to the audience’s perception of value in a presentation. The overall value of a presentation (p cubed) is the product…

My boss won’t like it.

“I would love to change presentation style but my boss won’t like it,” is a familiar lament heard when considering improving presentations.This resistance may be perceived, explicit, limited or simply…

  • This is a document. I am reading it. Out.

    If you turn on the radio, you can…

  • I’ve SEEN things you people wouldn’t believe..

    The first post on this blogsite was 15/iii/2013….

  • What makes a great presentation?

    I recently saw a tweet from someone at…

  • p cubed value of a presentation

    Your presentation is the product of three component…

  • A good presentation doesn’t need slides, does it?

    An interesting question and a good topic for…

  • The sigmoid curve of preparation

    The (perceived) overall value of a presentation, the p…

  • It’s alright for you, you’re gifted

    I have been working and thinking deeply on…

  • Breaking Bad (habits)

    Have you ever struggled to give up a…

  • It’s not about making pretty slides

    The purpose of a great presentation is to…

  • This is all your fault.

    It’s conference season once again and I’ve had…