Friday, July 7, 2017

How To Animate Google Slides



welcome to pro tips for google slides, wherewe’ll look at some lesser-known but useful tips for getting the most out of google slidesto make this tool work for you! let’s look at some overall design tips forgoogle slides… when you’re in google slides, it’s easyto add new slides anytime by clicking the “+” icon in the corner.


How To Animate Google Slides, when you’re adding new slides, click thedrop-down arrow to see a list of pre-formatted layouts you can use.â  try to stick to these to ensure good accessibilityand formatting in your final presentation. when you’re ultimately presenting your slidesto an audience, there’s some variation in


screen sizes you might encounter, so it’sgood to think ahead a bit and plan for that. for example, if you’re projecting your slidesonto a tv screen, you’ll notice that most newer tvs have a widescreen format, whilesome older tvs have a much narrower screen. if you know in advance what kind of screenyou’ll be presenting on, you can account for that when designing your slides. head to file > page setup to look at yourslides’ aspect ratio settings. by default, google slides should generallystart in widescreen (16:9) format. this is ideal for most tvs, projectors, andfor online presentations over google hangouts and things like that. so, if you’re not sure what kind of screen


you’ll be presenting on, it’s generallybest to just leave this set to widescreen.â  but, if you know for sure that you’ll bepresenting on an older, narrower tv, you might want to change the page setup to standard(4:3) format. as you’re adding to your presentation, youmay find yourself feeling like you have a bunch of information to share on each slide,and you’re worried that you’ll forget it all in the heat of the moment when you’representing live to an audience. to help jog your memory, you may be temptedto add all of these juicy facts and information as large chunks of text onto each slide. but stop yourself! â you don’t have to dumpall of your notes and remarks as text onto


the slides for your audience to see! instead, keep your slides themselves cleanand simple, and use the notes panel below each slide to add reminders and informationto yourself to help jog your memory during your presentation. when you’re finished with your presentation,you can print a copy of your slides with your notes below that you can use when you're presenting--so you can have a paper copy if that's helpful. your audience will see your nice, clean slides,and doesn’t have to see your notes--but the “notes” panel lets you keep factsand information around to use when you need them. now, what if you’ve made your presentation, butrealize your colors are off, or you want to


tweak some of the look and feel of the presentation?â  for example, let’s say i want to make allof my slide titles maroon? head to slide > "edit master..." and you’llenter the “master slide view”. here, any changes you make will affect theformatting across all of your slides. so, if i change the heading here to be maroon, it will apply to all of the headings of thesame style in that slide format across my presentation. don’t worry--changes you make here won’taffect the actual content of your slides! that will all still be there when you exitout of the “master slide view”. but it will change the formatting consistently across your presentation.



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