Book Image

Mastering Prezi for Business Presentations

By : Russell Anderson-Williams
Book Image

Mastering Prezi for Business Presentations

By: Russell Anderson-Williams

Overview of this book

Prezi is a tool for delivering presentations in a linear or non-linear format. This cloud-based software enables users to structure presentations on an infinite canvass in a way that is much more engaging and visually stimulating to the audience. "Mastering Prezi for Business Presentations" is a must read for anyone already using Prezi who wants to take their presentations to the next level. It covers all of the technical elements of the software, whilst also looking at the practicalities of using Prezi in a business environment. This book covers all the technical elements of Prezi and also teaches the reader how to think for Prezi, and approach their design in the best way. This is an essential resource for people who want to use Prezi seriously. As well as covering best practices for inserting imagery, sound, and video, this book also covers topics for business users like collaborating and sharing Prezis online, using Prezi at a meeting to brain storm with overseas colleagues, and how to 'Prezify' PowerPoint or Keynote slides. "Mastering Prezi for Business Presentations" will escalate you from Prezi user to master with ease.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Mastering Prezi for Business Presentations
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Prezi text editor


The text editor in Prezi has had a wonderful makeover in recent months. There are now some lovely new features within it that will make your life much easier, including the number one must have feature at the very top of every Prezi user's wish list for some time. Yes you guessed it, a spellchecker!

Spellchecker

Now when you spell something incorrectly, Prezi will underline the word it doesn't recognise with a red line. This is just as you would see it in Microsoft Word or any other text editor.

To correct the word, simply right-click it and select the word you meant to type as shown in the following screenshot.

It's been a long time coming, but it's finally here.

Text drag-apart

So a colleague of yours has just emailed you the text they'd like to appear in the Prezi you're designing for them. That's great news as it'll help you understand the flow of the presentation. What's frustrating though is you'll have to copy (Cti+ C) and paste (Ctr+ V) every single line or paragraph...