Tuesday, 26 November 2013

PowerPoint Balance Diagrams

Balance Diagrams

SmartArt Balance diagram
Have you seen the Balance diagram in PowerPoint's collection of SmartArt layouts? It's a really effective visual method of comparing the advantages and disadvantages of two different options.

You get two text boxes for headings and underneath them up to four items stacked on top of each other. The balance automatically tilts to the side with the greater number of items. Like all the SmartArt layouts, balance diagrams are very easy to do and you can format them with a couple of clicks.

Which of the two slides shown here is best, the balance diagram above or the more traditional opposing bullet points generated by the standard Comparison layout master seen below?

Death by PowerPoint
Of course, it's a matter of personal opinion but I would vote for the balance diagram as it is visually more striking and better attracts the audience's attention. The eternal bullet points seen in so many presentations rapidly induce that awful "death by PowerPoint" syndrome. Those nodding heads, the heavy eyelids, such ennui...

Show people something attractive and they might actually listen to what you're saying. Another advantage of the diagram is that it obliges you to keep your text short and sweet. Any more of this and I'll have to create a balance diagram in favour of balance diagrams.

Creating the Balance diagram

To create the diagram, insert a new slide using the Blank or Title and Content layout. On a blank slide, click the SmartArt control on the Insert tab, on a slide with a content placeholder, click the SmartArt icon.

SmartArt Graphics
When the Choose a SmartArt Graphic dialog appears click the Relationship category on the left, the Balance layout is the first one in the gallery.

The SmartArt task pane opens on the left hand side of the SmartArt diagram. Enter the two main headings next to the two bullet points that are not indented, in this case Pros and Cons. Then enter up to four items for the bullets that are indented. Your items are stacked with the first item entered shown at the bottom of the stack.

When you have finished entering your text items you can close the task pane by clicking the Close box in the top right hand corner. To open it up again, click the arrow on the left hand side.

SmartArt task pane
SmartArt Tools
That's the diagram completed and to make it look beautiful, you go to the Change Colors control on the SmartArt Tools Design tab and also experiment with the huge variety of SmartArt gallery options. You are sure to have a handsome diagram in no time at all.

But it can be frustrating when you can't get exactly the diagram that you need. You have to work within the constraints of the SmartArt layout. What if you want more than four items in the stack or you want to remove the headings at the top?

The trick here is to convert the elements of the SmartArt to individual shapes then you can have exactly what you want. The trade-off is that it takes a bit longer to do.

To reduce the SmartArt diagram to individual shapes you need to ungroup its elements twice. Click the outside edge of the SmartArt, click your right-hand mouse button and choose Group, Ungroup from the shortcut menu. Then repeat the process and you have the individual shapes which you can now manipulate as you see fit.

Ungrouped balance diagram
This graphic started it's life as a SmartArt balance diagram but we needed to have five items stacked on the Pro side of the scale and felt that the headings at the top were then not required.

Four items were added to the original diagram, enough to tilt the scale in the right direction. Then the SmartArt was ungrouped, the headings were removed by pressing the Delete key and the extra item for the Pro stack was copied and pasted from an existing one.

When you copy and paste shapes they never arrive in the right position; either drag them or use the keyboard when you want fine control and exact placement. Pressing an arrow key moves a selected shape, holding down the CTRL key as you move Nudges the shape precisely.



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Training Courses

If you've still got that "I just don't know what I'm doing" feeling then you might like to arrange a Microsoft PowerPoint training course for yourself or with some of your colleagues. It's really easy to book one of our courses and they're great value for money. See our website for full details.

1 comment:

  1. Is there a cloud based online version of this software? I mean can we logged in from the live account and edit or work later?

    Regards,
    Creately

    ReplyDelete