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How Lawyers Can Win More Business With Their Client and Conference Presentations
By Dave Paradi, MBA, Co-author of "Guide to PowerPoint"
Presentations are one of the most common avenues
for lawyers to communicate their expertise and convince potential
clients to hire them for legal work. These presentations may be in
conference settings or in a client office. After a recent review of ten
presentations (with a total of over 450 slides) posted on the web sites
of top law firms such as McMillan Binch Mendelsohn, Gowlings, Cassels
Brock and Aird & Berlis, some areas for improvement are apparent.
By improving the communication of their message to clients and
potential clients, lawyers can increase their billings.
The common issues found in the presentations can
be separated into two categories. The first are design issues such as
templates and use of slide layouts, which can be solved by marketing
and administrative staff. The more critical issues are with the content
and can only be solved by the lawyers who specify the content and what
format it should take. Here are solutions to five problems that were
seen over and over in the presentations.
Use less text
Lawyers are so familiar with text on printed documents, that it
seems they think that slides should be filled with text as well. There
were some instances where points were made using graphics or visuals,
but generally few and far between. Prof. Richard Mayer in his book
"Multimedia Learning" found that visuals combined with explanatory text
increased the understanding of the audience. To have better impact,
lawyers should look for more visual ways to present some of the
information they have. It will break up the long periods of text that
the audience sits through and help the audience remember the topic
better.
Make the message clear
In many cases the text on the slides is a statement of relevant law
or statute, which is important to support what is being said. But
relatively few times did the slide also include text stating the key
point, leaving the audience wondering what the message really was. It
is necessary to include references to the law, but lawyers must also
give the audience an explanation of what that law means to the audience
and their business if the audience is expected to act upon the
presentation. Meaningful text should also be short and concise, instead
of the full sentences and paragraphs observed far too often in legal
presentations.
Use diagrams to increase visual impact
One of the easiest ways for lawyers to start replacing text with
visual formats is to use simple diagrams. Many times a table could
replace a text list. On one slide the lawyer listed examples of two
types of documents by creating a long sentence. It would have been more
effective to create a simple table listing the two types of documents
in columns, which would have better visually differentiated the
examples. One good use of tables was shown in a chart that contrasted
how a particular law is applied in different jurisdictions. Diagrams
are also a better way to show relationships than simply paragraphs of
text. A Venn diagram is a good way to show where items overlap and
where they are distinct.
Group ideas instead of continuing ideas over multiple slides
When there are a number of items to be discussed in a section of
the presentation, it was good to see that lawyers no longer use the
annoying former practice of reducing the font size to squish all the
text on a single slide. But what has now happened is that the points
are split across multiple slides with each subsequent slide title
saying "(continued)". By the last slide in this group, the audience
cannot remember how all the points fit together. A better approach
would be to consider how the ideas can be grouped into sub-groups and
present each sub-group with its appropriate slide title.
Use callouts to highlight scanned documents
Lawyers use scanned documents as examples in their presentations,
but too often the scanned image was put on the slide and was virtually
unreadable due to the small size of the text on the image. The lawyer
is then forced to use a laser pointer or try to explain something the
audience can’t really see, leaving the audience frustrated. A
better approach is to use callouts that take the salient point of a
scanned document and superimpose it on top of the scan in larger
readable text, highlighting the key point the lawyer wants to make.
By integrating more visual representations of
ideas into their presentations, lawyers can stand out from the barrage
of text that usually represents a presentation and clients will be more
compelled to act upon the presentation, resulting in higher billings.
Dave Paradi’s Think Outside the Slide™ approach helps
presenters get results by showing them how to quickly create effective
PowerPoint presentations. He is the co-author of "Guide to PowerPoint",
part of the Prentice Hall Series in Advanced Business Communication. He
offers a free PowerPoint e-course, newsletter and articles on his web
site at www.ThinkOutsideTheSlide.com.
©MMVI Dave Paradi
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