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Method 1
Method 1 of 3:

Choosing the Right Number of Slides Based on Design Choices

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  1. PowerPoint presentations are useful to provide an overview and a general description of a given topic. Your presentation should not be encyclopedic. Don’t go overboard including every little detail, citation, or factoid which may inform the conversation on the issue you’re presenting. Too much information will burn your audience out and you’ll be left with a bunch of people more interested in lunch than in what you have to say. [1]
    • Keep the presentation about you, not the slideshow. [2] The slides are there to support what you have to say. They should be just one part of your presentation, not the whole thing.
  2. PowerPoint presentations are at their most effective and powerful when they adopt a clean, minimalistic style. [3] For instance, if you have one slide whose heading is “Habitats,” with three bullet points beneath reading “Forest,” “Desert,” and “Ocean” with a description of each habitat following, you would do well to instead allocate three separate slides to the three different habitats, and include a summary and image of each on the appropriate slide.
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  3. [4] Your PowerPoint slideshow should always be designed to reinforce your verbal explanations with visual images. Sometimes it works to put words on a screen, but generally, your text should be limited. Do you need the graphics as a starting point from which you will explain results, trends, predictions, or specific outcomes? Are you using visuals merely to keep your audience engaged, to provide humor, and/or to accommodate diverse learning styles? These and other relevant questions should guide your decision-making process when settling on the right number of slides for your presentation.
    • Go through your entire presentation and ask yourself if you really need a given slide. If the answer is no, or if you find you can deliver the info verbally instead, eliminate it.
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Method 2
Method 2 of 3:

Using Time to Determine the Right Number of Slides

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  1. If, during your practice run, you find that your time has elapsed before you could get through your whole presentation, you’ll know that your presentation has too many slides. [5] Head back to the drawing board to edit it accordingly.
    • If your presentation ended well before the time limit you’ve been given, try to extend the amount of time you spend on each slide, or add extra slides to expand on the info introduced in the presentation.
    • Solicit advice from family and friends during your practice presentation. If they feel there are too many or too few slides, or if they feel certain sections of the presentation felt rushed or slow, adjust your presentation to correct these deficiencies.
  2. If you speak quite quickly, you will be able to get through a great number of slides. If, on the other hand, you speak more slowly, you’ll probably require a smaller number of slides. Use your rate of speech to determine how many slides your presentation can accommodate.
  3. If you have ten minutes to present, you might need upwards of 60 slides. On the other hand, you might also need just ten slides. Whatever number you settle on, do not include more slides than you can get through in your allotted presentation time.
  4. [6] If you have a lot of info that would be of use in your PowerPoint, or have graphs, tables, or images available that could improve your presentation, use them. While you don’t want to include so many slides that you can’t get through them all in the allotted time, neither should you feel constrained to the point that you don’t include valuable information or graphics in your slideshow.
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Method 3
Method 3 of 3:

Moving Beyond Formulaic Answers to Finding the Right Number of Slides

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  1. Everyone seems to have their own idea of how many slides is enough. [7] Some people think five slides is enough for thirty minutes, others think ten is enough for twenty minutes, and still others think ninety or more could be right for twenty minutes. In fact, each presentation is different, and needs to be approached on its own merits.
    • One well-known formulation for PowerPoint presentations is the 10/20/30 rule. This rule dictates that you should use about ten slides for a twenty minute presentation, and each slide should utilize thirty point font. In other words, each slide should be about two minutes in length. [8] Perhaps the 10/20/30 rule works for you. If it does not, don’t feel as if you’re using the wrong number of slides.
    • Others argue that an average slide should be onscreen for no more than two minutes, and can be onscreen for as little as 15 seconds. [9]
  2. Some topics require a few slides and a lot of exposition. Other topics require many slides with only minimal explanation. For example, if your presentation is on a particular product or a single beautiful landscape, then many slides containing photographs may be more effective than a few slides featuring text. Think about how you can combine a number of text-based slides into a few image-based slides with some accompanying text, and vice versa.
  3. If you're presenting highly detailed or technical information to a group of people who are very familiar with the industry terms and metrics that you're presenting, you might include a lot of slides that you move through rather quickly, but which are necessary to provide supporting material and demonstrate that you know what you’re talking about. If you’re presenting the same data to a high-school business class, you might need to condense the slides you’re presenting and edit the presentation so that you can explain each concept in language which the layman will understand.
  4. [10] If you’re presenting in a large venue like an auditorium but you only have a small projection screen for your PowerPoint slides, you should minimize the importance and number of your slides and focus instead on the spoken aspect of your presentation. Similarly, if you’re presenting outside or in a brightly-lit environment, you might want to consider keeping the number of slides in your presentation to a minimum since they might be too hard to see in the glare.
    • If, on the other hand, you’re in a more intimate environment and can control the lighting, you might be inclined to utilize a greater number of slides. As always, however, don’t feel obligated to use many slides just because you can.
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Community Q&A

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  • Question
    It is my first time using PowerPoint. I have just completed page seven, but I need more pages. How do I get more?
    Community Answer
    Click on the tab, "Home," on the top left of your PowerPoint window and then find "New Slide" in the second section, "Slides," which is now shown below the tabs. You can then either click on the symbol to simply add a slide or click the little arrow to decide between different slide layouts.
  • Question
    What is the importance of slide presentations for grade school students?
    Community Answer
    Slide presentations are greatly important for school students, most projects require them as visual aids, or sometimes the entire project IS the slide presentation. If you put enough effort into your presentation, it will dramatically improve your grade, which opens up your options to different colleges and careers!
  • Question
    I want to present one slide on time spent on various work done. How will I get the right bullet point?
    Community Answer
    I suggest doing a separate slide for each topic and not using bullet points but instead a picture or small explanation on your screen to not distract your audience. I avoid bullet points, which I think seem sort of unprofessional.
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      Tips

      • If your slide has embedded video, or you aren’t using one slide for each point of your presentation, you can spend longer on each slide. [11]
      • Treat each slide on its own merits. If one slide needs to be onscreen for two minutes, so be it. If it needs to be onscreen for ten seconds, that’s fine too.
      • If you have a slide with no pictures but several bullet points, each of which you intend to talk about for fifteen to twenty seconds, you might spend well over a minute on that slide.
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      Warnings

      • When you take all of these factors (detail, technicality, audience size and awareness, etc.) into consideration, you can see that the only short answer to "how many slides should I use" is: "it depends."
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      About This Article

      Article Summary X

      1. Break complex slides into several simple slides.
      2. Include audio and video support only as needed.
      3. Time your presentation.
      4. Match the number of slides to the subject matter.
      5. Tailor to your audience.

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      Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 222,412 times.

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      • Tom James

        Jun 29, 2017

        "This helped by sticking to the basics and most vital factors to consider when preparing a Powerpoint slideshow."
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