Want a Better Army? Eliminate PowerPoint
Recently, the Army started the first in a series of monthly sessions/discussions about what it doesn’t do well or could do better. The process is being called Unified Quest. After the series of meeting which will last until April, recommendations will be made to General George Casey. He is the the chief of staff, for internal reform on everything from combat maneuvering to homeland defense to cyberwar.
Read More: Army Brains: Kill PowerPoint, ‘Counterinsurgency
Want Smart Leadership? No More PowerPoint. If this year’s Unified Quest is any indication, PowerPoint hater H.R. McMaster, a one-star general serving in Afghanistan, is going to go from slideshow dissident to prophet in a few short years. Several participants derided the Army’s over-reliance on PowerPoint openly. One recounted stories of briefings in tactical-operations centers where otherwise intelligent officers simply read PowerPoint slides out loud — even as the slides were visible on an overhead projector.
Another observed: “That’s not the way our school system is oriented” in civilian life, making it difficult for young soldiers and officers, who are used to learning in a collaborative or social environment, to ingest information through rote absorption of slides.
No one quite articulated a vision of what comes after PowerPoint. (Keynote, maybe?) And some bemoaned “Death by PowerPoint” even as they projected their own PowerPoint slides. But it only takes a few well-placed cracks in a wall to send it crashing down. There may not be many more Lawrence Sellins — the officer who became an internet celebrity for his anti-PowerPoint rant — in the Army’s future.
Maybe this will help. A little piece I did called “Avoiding Death by PowerPoint“
And check out the discussion around this posting: Learning Circuits Big Question: Avoiding Death by PowerPoint
And here are some other helpful resources: Presentation Resources for DPW Webinar (PowerPoint)
Presentation Tip: Highlighting a Small Piece of a Model in PowerPoint 2007
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Thanks for the collection of resources. Your "Avoiding Death by PowerPoint" was especially helpful.