PowerPoint Is Evil

Power Corrupts.
PowerPoint Corrupts Absolutely.

By Edward Tufte


Genevieve Liang  
Imagine a widely used and expensive prescription drug that promised to make us 
beautiful but didn't. Instead the drug had frequent, serious side effects: It 
induced stupidity, turned everyone into bores, wasted time, and degraded the 
quality and credibility of communication. These side effects would rightly lead 
to a worldwide product recall.

Yet slideware -computer programs for presentations -is everywhere: in corporate 
America, in government bureaucracies, even in our schools. Several hundred 
million copies of Microsoft PowerPoint are churning out trillions of slides 
each year. Slideware may help speakers outline their talks, but convenience for 
the speaker can be punishing to both content and audience. The standard 
PowerPoint presentation elevates format over content, betraying an attitude of 
commercialism that turns everything into a sales pitch. 

Of course, data-driven meetings are nothing new. Years before today's 
slideware, presentations at companies such as IBM and in the military used 
bullet lists shown by overhead projectors. But the format has become ubiquitous 
under PowerPoint, which was created in 1984 and later acquired by Microsoft. 
PowerPoint's pushy style seeks to set up a speaker's dominance over the 
audience. The speaker, after all, is making power points with bullets to 
followers. Could any metaphor be worse? Voicemail menu systems? Billboards? 
Television? Stalin?


AP/Wide World Photos 
Tufte satirizes the totalitarian impact of presentation slideware.  


Particularly disturbing is the adoption of the PowerPoint cognitive style in 
our schools. Rather than learning to write a report using sentences, children 
are being taught how to formulate client pitches and infomercials. Elementary 
school PowerPoint exercises (as seen in teacher guides and in student work 
posted on the Internet) typically consist of 10 to 20 words and a piece of clip 
art on each slide in a presentation of three to six slides -a total of perhaps 
80 words (15 seconds of silent reading) for a week of work. Students would be 
better off if the schools simply closed down on those days and everyone went to 
the Exploratorium or wrote an illustrated essay explaining something. 

In a business setting, a PowerPoint slide typically shows 40 words, which is 
about eight seconds' worth of silent reading material. With so little 
information per slide, many, many slides are needed. Audiences consequently 
endure a relentless sequentiality, one damn slide after another. When 
information is stacked in time, it is difficult to understand context and 
evaluate relationships. Visual reasoning usually works more effectively when 
relevant information is shown side by side. Often, the more intense the detail, 
the greater the clarity and understanding. This is especially so for 
statistical data, where the fundamental analytical act is to make comparisons.

GOOD

Graphics Press 
A traditional table: rich, informative, clear. 

BAD 

Graphics Press 
PowerPoint chartjunk: smarmy, chaotic, incoherent.  
Consider an important and intriguing table of survival rates for those with 
cancer relative to those without cancer for the same time period. Some 196 
numbers and 57 words describe survival rates and their standard errors for 24 
cancers.

Applying the PowerPoint templates to this nice, straightforward table yields an 
analytical disaster. The data explodes into six separate chaotic slides, 
consuming 2.9 times the area of the table. Everything is wrong with these 
smarmy, incoherent graphs: the encoded legends, the meaningless color, the 
logo-type branding. They are uncomparative, indifferent to content and 
evidence, and so data-starved as to be almost pointless. Chartjunk is a clear 
sign of statistical stupidity. Poking a finger into the eye of thought, these 
data graphics would turn into a nasty travesty if used for a serious purpose, 
such as helping cancer patients assess their survival chances. To sell a 
product that messes up data with such systematic intensity, Microsoft abandons 
any pretense of statistical integrity and reasoning.

Presentations largely stand or fall on the quality, relevance, and integrity of 
the content. If your numbers are boring, then you've got the wrong numbers. If 
your words or images are not on point, making them dance in color won't make 
them relevant. Audience boredom is usually a content failure, not a decoration 
failure. 

At a minimum, a presentation format should do no harm. Yet the PowerPoint style 
routinely disrupts, dominates, and trivializes content. Thus PowerPoint 
presentations too often resemble a school play -very loud, very slow, and very 
simple.

The practical conclusions are clear. PowerPoint is a competent slide manager 
and projector. But rather than supplementing a presentation, it has become a 
substitute for it. Such misuse ignores the most important rule of speaking: 
Respect your audience.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Edward R. Tufte is professor emeritus of political science, computer science 
and statistics, and graphic design at Yale. His new monograph, The Cognitive 
Style of PowerPoint, is available from Graphics Press (www.edwardtufte.com).

http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/11.09/ppt2.html

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