Transcript for:
How to Use Microsoft PowerPoint

Hi everyone, Kevin here. Today, we are going to  learn how to use Microsoft PowerPoint in under 20   minutes. With PowerPoint, you can create, edit,  and share professional-looking presentations so   you can land your message. Let's start with how  you can even get PowerPoint. To get PowerPoint,   you can head to the following address,  PowerPoint.new. This will let you use   PowerPoint for free in your web browser. This  will drop you into a blank new presentation.   If you would like to use the PowerPoint  app, head to the following website. You   can also click on the card in the top right-hand  corner. On this page, click on the text that says   get Microsoft 365, and you'll see the various  options available. When you launch PowerPoint,   you'll land on the home screen, and this helps  you get started. In the top left-hand corner,   you can kick off a blank new presentation. To the  right of that, you also have a number of different   themes that you can start from. It's well worth  looking through here to see if one of these might   match your needs. Right down here, you can view  more themes, or over on the left-hand side, you   can also click on new. They both go to the same  place, and this will show you an exhaustive view   of all the different available templates and also  themes. Let's click back into home. Right here,   we have a search field, so you can look for an  existing presentation that you've worked on,   and down below, you'll see all of your recent  presentations, making it really quick to get back   to work on your presentation. In the top left-hand  corner, let's click into a blank new presentation.   This now drops us into a brand-new presentation,  and I have lots of work to do to get this ready,   but before we start working on this presentation,  in the top left-hand corner, let's click on this   floppy disk icon to save the presentation.  You can also press the shortcut key control S.   This opens up a save dialogue, and I'll  call my file the Kevin Cookie Company   All Hands. Down below, you can choose a  location for your file, and by default,   it places it in OneDrive. I would recommend  uploading it to Microsoft's cloud, or basically   Microsoft servers. There are a few benefits to  doing that. For one, it'll automatically save   your presentation as you're working on it. You'll  also be able to jump back to previous versions of   your presentation, and it also makes it really  easy to share it with others. Right down below,   I'll click on save. I'm now all ready to start  working on my presentation, and here I can see   my very first slide. Over on the left-hand side, I  can see that I have one slide in my presentation.   Right over here, I'll click to add my title, and I  want to build out an All Hands deck for the Kevin   Cookie Company. I'll title it All Hands, and for  the subtitle, I'll type in Kevin Cookie Company.   Of course, I need more slides. To add another  slide, over on the left-hand side of the ribbon,   under the home tab, there’s the option to add a  new slide. I'll click on this, and this inserts   the second slide into my presentation. If I hover  over this, you'll see that the shortcut key to add   a new slide is control M. I'll press control M,  and that adds yet another slide. I can also click   down here, and you'll see this line appear. I can  press enter on my keyboard, and that will also add   a slide. You might have noticed that the slide  layout is a little bit different on this slide   compared to my very first slide. As I insert a  slide, you can always click on this dropdown,   and here you can select your layout up front, but  you can also change it retroactively. Up here,   I'll click on this icon, and this allows  me to change the layout. I’ll select this   one with a section header, and that now changes  the layout. I now want to start building out an   outline for my deck. To navigate up my slides, I  can click on the up arrow, and that'll move me up,   or I can also move down throughout my slides.  Right up here, I want to add a slide where   we talk about the customer feedback that we've  been hearing here. It's not entirely positive,   but it's worth mentioning. On the next slide,  I want to discuss opening the new factory. I'll   add a slide for that, and right here, this will  be the last slide, and we'll say thank you. Now,   on second thought, we should probably also discuss  the revenue numbers that we've seen here the last   year. To add a new slide in between, I can place  my cursor right here and click, and then hit the   enter key, and that adds another new slide, and  for this, let's title this revenue. Looking at   my outline here, we start with customer feedback,  and unfortunately, that's not entirely positive,   so perhaps it makes sense to move this at  the end of the presentation. To move a slide,   I could simply press and hold on it, and I can  move it to a new position. I can also press the   control key to select multiple slides, and  I can move multiple slides at once. You can   also press the shift key to select multiple  slides. Down in the bottom right-hand corner,   you can also click into the slide sorter, and  here too, you can also move slides around to match   exactly how you want your presentation to appear.  Down below, let's click back into the normal view.   Back in the main view, I've been thinking a  little bit more about this customer feedback,   and it is unfortunately negative, and I don't know  if I want management to see that. What they don't   know can't hurt them. I can right-click on this  item, and here's the option to delete the slide.   I could also simply press the delete key on my  keyboard, and that removes the slide altogether.   Now that I've finished my outline, I am ready to  apply a theme. Otherwise, things will just look   a little bit too bland. Up on the top tabs,  let's click into the option titled design,   and here I can select any one of these themes.  When I hover over it, I can preview it down below   on my presentation. I can click on this icon, and  I can view the full set of different themes. Now,   this one titled organic is very appropriate  because we only use organic ingredients here at   the Kevin Cookie Company. I'll select this option.  Over on the right-hand side, there's another   category titled variance, and here I can apply  different variants of this theme. This applies a   slightly darker background, or maybe here a little  bit lighter. I have all these different options.   If I want to jump back to another theme at any  point, I can expand this category, and here I can   very quickly change it, or I can even go back to  the base theme by clicking on this one right here,   and we're right back to where I started from. Over  on the right-hand side, you can also adjust the   slide size. You can also format the background,  so you could set the background to whatever you   want it to be. And one of my favorites, in the  top right-hand corner, there's an option called   designer. I'll click onto my first slide with  all hands, and then let's click on designer.   This will look at the content of the slide and  recommend a design based on it. So here we see   that the slide says All Hands, and here it's  recommending different designs that incorporate   hands. That's pretty clever. I'll choose this  first one where the hands are raising in the   air. My manager will really like that touch, and  look at that. That looks really slick. Here, the   hands raise up in the air. That's nice. In the top  right-hand corner, I'll close this out. I think   I'd like to build out my very own theme. Now, I  could go through each individual slide and try   to apply a theme, but that'll take a lot of work.  Instead, up on top, let's click on the view tab,   and right here, there's an option called slide  master. Let's click on that. Over on the left-hand   side, I see all the different layouts, and at the  very top, I see the root layout. Any changes that   I make here will carry through to every single  slide throughout my presentation. Here, I could   adjust things like the colors. I could adjust the  fonts, the effects, the background styles. Let me   select this gray gradient background. I'll move  PowerPoint over, and you can even drag in images.   I'll pull in the logo for the Kevin Cookie  Company, and here I can click on these handles   to resize the logo. I think that's a good size,  and I'll place it right here alongside the title.   I think this slide master looks good. Right  up on top, make sure you're in slide master,   and then you can close out of this view. And  just like that, it has now applied this style   to all of the different slides in my presentation.  And here's the true magic. I can now insert a new   slide and look at that. It automatically uses that  image and that background. I'll delete this slide.   I now want to start adding some content to  my presentation. I'll go to my second slide   for the new factory, and here I could enter in  some text. I'll paste in some details of the new   factory. Now, of course, this is just a bulleted  list, and it's a little bit dense. I think I can   make it more visual. I'll highlight all of this  text, and on the home tab in the center, there's   an icon for smart art. This will turn it into a  visual. I'll click on this, and I see all these   different options for smart art. You can simply  hover over them, and you can preview what it'll   look like. I'll select, let's go with this option  right here. With this option selected, I now get   two new tabs up on top. Here I have smart art  design and also format. If I click into design,   here I could adjust the look and feel. I could  also change the colors. Let me click into colors,   and I like this one right here. I think that goes  along nicely with our logo. Over on the left-hand   side, I could also add additional bullets. For  example, our general manager of this factory,   who else could it be but Cookie Monster? I'll type  that in. This now looks really good. I'll select   this object and move it over to the left-hand  side. This is highly sensitive information on   this slide, and I want to make sure that everyone  knows that this is confidential. Up on top,   let's click on the insert tab, and you can insert  all sorts of different items directly onto your   slide. You can insert a table. You could insert  pictures. You could insert shapes, icons. Here,   you could even insert audio and video under media.  There are all sorts of different items that you   could place on your slide. I just want some  basic text. I'll click on text box, and then I   could click anywhere on my slide. I'll click here,  and then I could type in the text, confidential.   With this object selected, up on the home tab,  here I could adjust things like the font. Now,   I want to make sure that everyone takes this  seriously, so there's no better font than Comic   Sans. Here, I could also adjust the font size.  Let's make it really large, maybe 72. And here,   I can even adjust the color. Now, up on top,  I also have shape format, and here, I could   adjust all sorts of different settings related to  this object. I can also click on this icon, and   this opens up a pane on the right-hand side that  exposes all of the different settings. Currently,   I'm in text options. Here, I could click on color,  and let's say I apply some transparency to it,   just so it sits on top of the content, but  it's not the main focus. That looks about   right. I'll close this out, and here, I could  also rotate the text, and let's place it right   on top of the slide. As I move the text object  around, you'll see these guidelines appear that   help me align this text on the slide. So here  it's perfectly centered and middle aligned.   I think this slide could also use some pictures of  the new factory. Up on top, I'll click on insert,   and then let's click on pictures. You have a few  different options. You could pull pictures in from   this device, stock images, or also online images.  I'll select stock images, and right up on top,   you have all sorts of different categories of  stock images, but I just want the basic picture   of a factory. I'll type that in. I like this  picture of people working and this exterior shot.   They both look good. I'll click on insert. This  now inserts the two photos onto my slide. Now,   I could reposition these and adjust these.  With these images selected, up on top,   I have picture formatting controls, and I could do  all sorts of things like adjust the color. I could   also apply different artistic effects. Here, you  have different picture styles, but I'd rather have   Designer just do it for me. I'll select both of  these pictures and press control X. Next, I will   insert a new slide by pressing enter, and here,  I'll paste the two pictures onto this slide. On   the home tab, let's go over and click on Designer,  and let's see what it comes up with. Look at   these. These are some fancy designs. I like this  one where it's cut out on the edge. I'll click   on that, and here, that's now changed both of my  photos. I can now cut this, and I can now bring   it back to slide number two and paste it in, and  that looks really nice. I couldn't have done that   on my own. One problem is my confidential text  now sits under the photo. If someone shared this,   I couldn't blame them. That's because this text is  a lower layer. I can right click on it, and I can   now bring that to the front. Up on top, I can also  click into shape format, and there's something   called the selection pane. I'll click on that, and  here, I see all the different objects on my slide.   Whatever item is on top is on the topmost layer.  That's the confidential text. Here, if I move it   to the bottom, it now sits under everything, and  here, I can move it to the top. Now, on second   thought, as I'm working on this presentation,  I don't know if I need to be able to see this   text until I'm all done. Over here, I can click  on this icon, and that'll hide that object. That   looks fine for now. I'll close out of this pane.  This slide contains a lot of information, and when   I present it, I just want to talk about each item  individually. We can use an animation to bring in   each one, one at a time. Let's click on animations  up on top, and then I'll select this object,   and I can choose my animation. I want it to fade  in. I'll select this, but currently, it just all   fades in at once. Over here, I can click on effect  options, and here, I can have it fade in one by   one. So here, it'll bring in one, then the next,  and then the next, and they'll fade in on click.   Over on the left-hand side, I see this star icon  indicating that I have an animation on this slide.   You can pull off all sorts of fancy animations in  PowerPoint. If you're interested in going deep on   animations, be sure to check out the video in the  top right-hand corner. Over on the left-hand side,   let's click on slide number three and delete it,  and here, I'm now on the revenue slide. Up above,   let's click on insert, and right in the center,  you can also insert a chart directly onto your   PowerPoint slide. You can bring in a  chart from Excel, or you can make it   directly within PowerPoint. You have all the  different charting options that you would find   in Excel. I'll insert a column chart and then  click on okay. This inserts my column chart,   and I get a mini version of Excel directly within  PowerPoint. Here, I'll change it to look just at   this first column, and over here, I'll close  this out, and right up for the series one,   let me change this to cookie revenue in millions.  Now, up above with this chart item selected, here,   you could add different chart elements. You could  adjust the layout. You can change the colors,   and you could also change the chart style. Just  like with all the other objects that we've seen,   you can customize an object to your heart's  content. We had such fantastic results in Q4,   and I want to make sure to draw attention to  that. Up on the top tabs, let's click on insert,   and then click on shapes, and here, I'll  insert an oval. To make it a perfect circle,   press the shift key and then drag, and here, I  get a perfect circle. I think that looks good.   With this object selected, let's go up to the  formatting controls, shape fill, and here,   I'll select no fill. Then, let's click on shape  outline, and I'll click on the eyedropper, and I   can take a color from anywhere else on my slide.  I'll take this yellow color from my logo. I'll   click there, and that applies it to this circle.  Right up above, I'll click on shape outline again,   and let's add some more weight. Let's increase it  to maybe six, just so it really stands out. Now,   people won't miss that we set a new record.  I want to make sure that no one misses these   great results, and I think the morph transition  can help me really call this out. Up on top,   let's click on the transitions tab, and there  are all sorts of different transitions that   you can apply between slides, but a very  special one is called morph. To use morph,   let's right click on this slide and then go down  to duplicate. I now have two identical versions of   this slide. Over on the right-hand side, let's  close out of this pane. On slide number three,   I'll press the control key and then move my mouse  wheel out, so I zoom out. You could also use this   zoom control in the bottom right-hand corner.  And here, I'll take the oval while pressing   the shift key, and I'll expand it so it's larger  than the slide. I'll zoom out a little bit more,   and let me zoom out. Then on this slide, let me  click on this morph icon. Now, it'll morph from   that larger circle to the smaller circle. So with  morph, it'll look at where the object is on this   previous slide. It's this large size, and then  it'll morph down or shrink down to this smaller   size, so let's preview what this looks like. Here,  as I call that out, it'll zoom in on this point,   so that way no one will miss it. Up on the top  ribbon, over on the right-hand side, I have all   sorts of different controls that I can use to  modify morph. For example, maybe I want it to   take a little bit more time, so I could increase  the duration. If you want to learn about all the   different fancy ways that you could use morph, be  sure to check out the video in the top right-hand   corner. While I'm presenting, I also want to make  sure that I call out that we're going to celebrate   this milestone. Down at the very bottom, I have  this one icon that says notes, and I can click on   that, and that toggles on notes at the bottom. I  could hover over this line, and I could expand the   space for my notes. And here, I'll type in some  text to make sure that I tell the org to celebrate   this milestone. You could press the control key  with your mouse wheel, and you can zoom in or out   on your notes to make it easier to read. Here, I  can minimize notes again, or here, I could toggle   it away. I'd really like for my teammates to come  in and review this deck before I share it out with   the organization. In the top right-hand corner,  I can click on this share icon, and I have a few   different options, but I'll click on the first  one titled share. This opens up a dialogue where   I can type in email addresses to share with, and  right up here, I can also set the permissions.   Once I'm all done, I can click on send, and this  will send out a copy of the presentation. Once I   share this presentation with others, up on the  top tabs, I can click on insert, and over here,   I can insert a comment. So, this way, we can  have a conversation about this presentation,   and I can even at mention different people in my  organization. Here, I'll simply enter, let me know   what you think, and then send this out. Here, I'll  close out of this pane. I feel like I'm all ready   to present this presentation now. Up on the top  tabs, let's click on the option titled slideshow,   and right here, there's an option called rehearse  with coach. This is well worth trying out. This   allows you to run through your presentation, and  it'll give you feedback on how you present. It'll   even give you a very handy report at the end. Once  you're ready to share your slides, over on the   left-hand side, you can start presenting from the  beginning or the current slide. A helpful shortcut   key, you can press F5 to start presenting. I'll  click on this. This now opens up my presentation.   When I move my mouse, I see various controls  on the bottom. I can also right-click my mouse,   and I can also see all of those same controls.  For instance, let's say I want to open up a laser   pointer. I could go down to pointer options  and select laser pointer, and I could then   move that around the slide. To exit presentation  mode, simply press the escape key. If you have   two monitors, you'll see an experience that looks  like this, where you'll see the current slide that   your audience can see here. You have all of your  different controls down below. Say, for example,   you want to open up the laser pointer. Over on the  right-hand side, you see the next slide coming up,   and here you'll see all of your different meeting  notes that you attached to the slide. Here too,   I could also end the slideshow. Along  with presenting your presentation live,   you can also prerecord it. Up on the top tabs,  click on the record tab, and here you can start   recording from the beginning. When you click on  this, this opens up the record interface. Here,   you'll see all of your notes up above, and you  could even turn on a teleprompter to scroll   through your notes. Down below, you'll see  the current slide, and you also have various   annotation tools. Once you're ready to record,  you can simply click on this red record button,   and this will now record your presentation. Once  you're done, you can stop, then click on export,   and you can export your presentation as an  MP4. All right, well, that was a quick look   at how you can get started using PowerPoint. One  important thing to keep in mind, the PowerPoint   presentation complements your presentation and  helps you convey and land your key message.   The PowerPoint itself should not be the  center of attention or the focus. To   watch more videos like this one, please consider  subscribing, and I'll see you in the next video.