Hi Judy for 200 exercise instructions are going to be really useful and your visuals are great nobrainer, for smaller groups yes just you being you.
Interested in what that new toy is you mentioned so you can draw direct on screen?
Wishing you continued success I know ‘you’ don’t need luck for your presentation
Pete
JR
10 October 2017
Thanks! The gadget is an Ipad pro with an Apple pencil and Goodnotes
Mary
13 October 2017
I love the hand-drawn slides! Using graphics in this way is so engaging and gives you the chance to work with emerging metaphors in a way that pre-prepared slides never could. There’s actually a big crossover between the skills needed for graphic recording or facilitation and those needed for using clean language.
Sharon Small
13 October 2017
This is fantastic Judy. Love seeing the ‘gadget’ in action! I am a flip chart girl and it is so fun knowing that there is something now that works as easily as that for larger groups, online and live.
Your posts are always so inspiring and loving the way you introduce Clean to others!
Brian McKinney
13 October 2017
I was going to suggest that the most effective PowerPoint would be Improper PowerPoint; since you have discovered the iPad, I will not dwell on that. PowerPoint can be effective. Many presentations I’ve seen crowd too much information on a slide and too many slides in a presentation. Clearly you’re not one of those people. This is probably not an inherent flaw in
PP, although the frequency of its occurrence makes me wonder.
The true disadvantage I find in PP is that it tends to look stiff, manufactured, formal, mass-produced, impersonal. The slides are almost always laid out in straight lines, the print may vary in size but rarely in font, it’s difficult to give PP any sense of freedom and creativity. I usually have the sense, in PP presentations, that if I do my part, I will be experted by an experter,so that I will be an expert when it’s over. It’s almost impossible to develop any role for the speaker but what my friend Paul Scheele calls “the sage on the stage” rather than “the guide on the side.” (I don’t know this to be original with Paul that’s where I heard it first.) And yet, it seems to me, it is the latter role you want to play when helping people learn how to use clean language, metaphor, team-building, facilitation, and all the things you do.
The iPad/pencil, by contrast, is immediately personal, individualized. It’s not stiff or mass produced, but rather a free-flowing, Individual work. It’s yours, and it invites others in. Hmmm. Seems to go back to McLuhan’s hot and cool media. Stay with the cool.
JR
16 October 2017
Thanks guys! @Brian I didn’t know you were a friend of Paul’s. I think he used to know David Grove quite well, years ago, when they both did NLP training together. There’d be some great stories to collect if you happened to have an opportunity
Comments from original on judyrees.co.uk
Peter taylor
10 October 2017
Hi Judy for 200 exercise instructions are going to be really useful and your visuals are great nobrainer, for smaller groups yes just you being you.
Interested in what that new toy is you mentioned so you can draw direct on screen?
Wishing you continued success I know ‘you’ don’t need luck for your presentation
Pete
JR
10 October 2017
Thanks! The gadget is an Ipad pro with an Apple pencil and Goodnotes
Mary
13 October 2017
I love the hand-drawn slides! Using graphics in this way is so engaging and gives you the chance to work with emerging metaphors in a way that pre-prepared slides never could. There’s actually a big crossover between the skills needed for graphic recording or facilitation and those needed for using clean language.
Sharon Small
13 October 2017
This is fantastic Judy. Love seeing the ‘gadget’ in action! I am a flip chart girl and it is so fun knowing that there is something now that works as easily as that for larger groups, online and live.
Your posts are always so inspiring and loving the way you introduce Clean to others!
Brian McKinney
13 October 2017
I was going to suggest that the most effective PowerPoint would be Improper PowerPoint; since you have discovered the iPad, I will not dwell on that. PowerPoint can be effective. Many presentations I’ve seen crowd too much information on a slide and too many slides in a presentation. Clearly you’re not one of those people. This is probably not an inherent flaw in
PP, although the frequency of its occurrence makes me wonder.
The true disadvantage I find in PP is that it tends to look stiff, manufactured, formal, mass-produced, impersonal. The slides are almost always laid out in straight lines, the print may vary in size but rarely in font, it’s difficult to give PP any sense of freedom and creativity. I usually have the sense, in PP presentations, that if I do my part, I will be experted by an experter,so that I will be an expert when it’s over. It’s almost impossible to develop any role for the speaker but what my friend Paul Scheele calls “the sage on the stage” rather than “the guide on the side.” (I don’t know this to be original with Paul that’s where I heard it first.) And yet, it seems to me, it is the latter role you want to play when helping people learn how to use clean language, metaphor, team-building, facilitation, and all the things you do.
The iPad/pencil, by contrast, is immediately personal, individualized. It’s not stiff or mass produced, but rather a free-flowing, Individual work. It’s yours, and it invites others in. Hmmm. Seems to go back to McLuhan’s hot and cool media. Stay with the cool.
JR
16 October 2017
Thanks guys! @Brian I didn’t know you were a friend of Paul’s. I think he used to know David Grove quite well, years ago, when they both did NLP training together. There’d be some great stories to collect if you happened to have an opportunity