Stop making slides people ignore. Use one powerful visual per idea and focus on solving a single, real problem for your audience.
Nobody wants to read your slides.
That’s the first rule of any presentation. They didn’t show up for a wall of text; they could’ve gotten that in an email. They’re here to listen to you.
So, rule number two: burn the novel. Every slide gets one idea.
Just one.
If you're talking about the Pomodoro Technique, the slide is just a picture of a tomato timer. Maybe the number "25". That's it. You do the rest. You explain how a 25-minute timer and a 5-minute break can help you focus. You tell them how a tracker can help build the habit.
This works for any study habit.
For Active Recall, put a single question on the slide and let it hang there while you explain the idea of pulling information out of your brain instead of just pushing it in. For Spaced Repetition, show a calendar with widening gaps between review days. You provide the context.
The presentation isn't the information. The presentation is the performance of the information.
People are in that room because they’re overwhelmed and what they’re doing now isn’t working. Your job is to give them a tool they can use tonight.
Don’t list theories. Give them a plan.
Tell them to pick one technique—just one. Maybe it's Pomodoro. Get them to pull out their phones, download a habit tracker like Trider, and set a real reminder for their first session. Make it specific: 4:17 PM. The whole point is to get them one small win. That’s it.
Success is just a bunch of small wins strung together.
That graph is what happens to your audience's attention. It’s high when you start, falls off a cliff in the middle when you show all your bullet points, and maybe comes back at the very end. Your job is to fight that middle part. The dip.
And visuals are how you do it.
I once saw a guy give a talk on personal branding. In his professional headshot, you could see his old Honda Civic in the driveway with a coffee cup still on the roof. Nobody remembered his "three pillars of branding." Everyone remembered the coffee cup.
Visuals are everything. A surprising photo, a simple diagram, a single statistic in a huge font. Anything but another bullet.
Practice.
But don’t memorize your script. Know your ideas well enough to just talk about them. Your slides are just cues. Glance at the tomato timer, then turn to the audience and talk to them.
Tell a story. If you're nervous, just say so. It’s better than pretending to be a robot.
A good presentation feels like a conversation, not a lecture. You’re there to connect, not just "present."
And when you’re done, just stop. No weak "any questions?" trail-off. End on your strongest point and let the silence do the work.
Stop waiting for the airline to tell you your flight is delayed. Flight tracker apps use the plane's own data to send you instant, accurate alerts for delays and gate changes, often long before they appear on the departures board.
Forget food trackers that feel like a second job; the best app is the one you'll actually use. Prioritize speed and simplicity over complex features, because consistency is what drives results, not perfect logging.
Manual timesheets are a liability of errors and lost hours that cost you money. An employee time tracking app is the baseline for accurate payroll, profitable project quotes, and understanding if your business is truly profitable.
Stop sending "where are u?" texts by using the location-sharing apps already on your phone like Google Maps or Apple's Find My. For more than just the basics, dedicated apps offer advanced safety features like crash detection and driving reports.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
Get it on Play Store