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Visual Aids and Props Ideas

Introduction

For Presentations, Training Courses Design and Public Speaking

The use of good visual aids - especially physical 'props' which people can hold and touch - is one of the best techniques for adding interest, humour and variety to presentations, training, and public speaking.

People remember more of what they are told if the experience is multi-sensory, rather than just listening to spoken words or reading printed words on a screen. Visual aids, particularly 'props', have a physical presence, texture, feel, perhaps smell also, which can create powerful and memorable metaphors.

Here are some simple examples of visual aids to use for various themes and metaphors. The hats and clothing props can be worn by the presenter while making a certain point, or better still given to a training delegate or member of the audience to wear.

You don't need to buy the real thing - usually children's toy versions or party shop novelties will achieve the same result, and in many cases a better one.

Over-sized props (joke-shop inflatables for example) that you keep with you at the front or on stage can be particularly effective, especially for a big audience for whom a small prop might have less impact. Smaller props - like fruit and vegetables or chocolate snack bars - are fun to pass around the audience, or throw (with due care), more so if the items have interesting shapes, textures, smells, etc.

Using good and imaginative visual aids brings a talk or presentation to life, and injects a lot of irresistible humour.

In fact usually the humour will come from the audience, when they see the prop on you, or better still when they see one of their colleagues wearing or holding or otherwise showing off an imaginative prop.

Send your own ideas and suggestions (all listed will be attributed).


Props

Trash can/rubbish bin - a powerful symbol for illustrating various concepts and themes, notably about different the different ways people and societies regard waste, plus other quite different metaphors. 

For example: 'What goes in comes out' (or 'garbage in garbage out' - the famous GIGO acronym); one person's trash is another's treasure (different attitudes, different societies/geography); recycling and environmental issues; also relate sorting rubbish to time management and task scheduling/prioritising; brainstorming and creativity - discarding ideas at face value can be wasteful; also metaphors for valuing/discarding people and their contributions/experience etc. 'Out with the old and in with the new' is often not a wise approach. 

Change management always entails waste, and challenges of how to manage the disposal and abandonment of what went before. Conversely, when changing activities/resources using Pareto ('80-20 rule') methods we should be prepared to discard or stop things which are unproductive, to shift energies to being more productive (thanks N McGonigal).

(Picture/slide of) cheeseboard with cheeses - this is an amazingly potent, sophisticated and versatile symbol for training, group work and presentations. A cheeseboard is very symbolic of variety, choice, and diversity, and so is a very effective and flexible image for many different subjects and themes which relate to these aspects of work and life. For example, to emphasise choice, and to invite students/participants to choose what they want/need from activities such as training courses and conferences, opportunities, even life itself. 

More profoundly, cheese-making is one of the earliest 'production' processes known to humankind, and yet it endures after thousands of years - because it works so well and is so widely useful and appealing. 

 As a presenter/trainer/facilitator you can extend the idea and sensory experience still further, by using a real cheeseboard of real cheeses, and thereby add extra impact to a particular message or presentation. Cheeses come from many different regions and from all over the world. Cheeses symbolise cultural and national diversity, local style, physical and sensory differences, and are a very memorable enjoyable metaphor, especially to support points about the richness of variation, and choice or selection. Cheeses are made in different ways, and are borne of many different traditions. They have their own different characteristics, which make them suitable for different purposes and functions. 

Increasingly, it is important to convey similar points about the diversity of people and staff. This is a very flexible metaphor, so you'll no doubt discover many more ways of using it, either as a pictorial image, or the real thing - perhaps as a convenient and tasty lead-in to the lunch break.. And as an incidental point of interest, see the slang term 'big cheese' (often used in referring to a boss) - whose origins may surprise many. (Thanks Catherine Logue, Training for Learning Co, Adelaide, Australia.)

WD40 or oil can - the role of a facilitator and the process of facilitation. The concept of lubricating and liberating, without actually becoming part of the machinery or structure, enabling people and teams to work better - enabling them to do it, not doing it for them. You can also read out the qualities and purposes listed on the oil can, some of which are apt metaphors for the facilitator's role, for example 'frees sticking mechanisms' and 'loosens parts' (thanks Paul Carter Organisational Consulting). 

Lemon - a great visual and tactile prop - better still give everyone a lemon to take home. A lemon can be used to reinforce very many points and themes, including: stimulate as many senses as possible when presenting - a lemon does this - touch, colour, smell, humour, sharpness, simplicity, etc., lemons are great props for train-the-trainer and presentations training, also good for making any point about impact and making things memorable.

Builder's hard hat - building (compiling information, assembling facts, evidence, etc), also obviously safety, being properly prepared and equipped for the job.

Chef's hat - preparation (of anything), mixing, blending (teams, etc), selecting ingredients (identifying and choosing quality components, people, suppliers, methods, etc).

Toolbox with tools - toolkit (set of products, tools, methods, materials, documents, etc., each designed for a specific purpose, and related to the other tools in the kit).

Loaf of bread and pack of butter or margarine - stick to the basics, ensure you do the 'bread and butter' business/activity.

Knitting needles and ball of wool - 'stick to the knitting' metaphor, do the essentials before taking risks.

Chopsticks - try new things, experiment, practice, new experiences.

Orange - goodness, simplicity, it is what is says, clarity.

Tools - for making specific points or representing specific ideas, actions, priorities, aims, etc., eg:

Hammer - impact and power themes and ideas.

Six inch nails - when you want to make a point or a number of 'points'.

Police helmet - checking, monitoring, knowing and applying the rules.

Rugby scrum-cap or hocky mask - protection (of customers, business, information, territory, etc.)

Lone ranger or zorro mask - discretion, be mindful of competitors, guard sensitive information (plus lots of jokes besides...)

Army helmet or flak jacket - protect, fight, dig in for a struggle, 'call to arms', a rallying call for a special effort.

Miners light (head-band or hand-held) - seek, look, find, search - great for customer prospecting themes, and researching information.

Magnifying glass - seek, discover, examine, probe, research, etc.

Big textbook - research, facts, evidence, know your facts, product knowledge, understand the detail (can also be used as a humorous threat in the event of breach, failure or transgression, referring to the 'throw the book at someone' expression).

T-square or set-square, or ruler - accuracy, measurement - "...if you can't measure it you can't manage it."

Spirit level - level playing field, fairness, even-handedness, careful construction (of anything), establishing a good platform.

Brick - strength, robustness, durability, reliability.

Chocolate snack bars - be good to yourself, enjoy yourself, life balance, work-rest-play, etc.

Binoculars or telescope - field research, competitor intelligence and information, forward planning, looking ahead, probing for answers, vision.

Globe (inflatables are easy to find) - travel, global markets, widen search for customers, partners, suppliers, sourcing, transport, import, export, international law, currency conversion, exchange rates, time differences, cultures, ethnicity, people - really you can do mostly anything with a globe.

Big clock - time, and time management, scheduling, planning.

Old mobile phone/cell-phone - technology change, pace of change, ways of communicating, product development, market development, usability, lifestyle.

Old style alarm-clock - deadlines, wake-up call, call to action.

Sign-post or milestone (make one out of card) - planning, milestones, direction, project-management.

Goggles - don't be blinded by science, gobbledegook, waffle, misinformation, protect your judgement and vision.

Big spectacles - vision, inspection, scrutiny, apply your intelligence (like 'Brains' from Thunderbirds).

Football or rugby ball - play, have fun, exercise.

Big egg-timer - get on with things, the sands of time...

Dice, big fluffy dice - risk-taking, leave nothing to chance, understand the odds of success before taking risks.

Lawyers wig (and gown?...) - be legal, act within the law, apply the law.

Beachball - rest, relax, take a break, take your holidays, and ensure your staff do too.

Dumbell - exercise, keep fit, healthy body healthy mind.

Nodding dog (from the back of a car) - be somebody, make a difference, don't just be a nodding dog, don't surround yourself with 'yes-men', don't be a 'yes-man'.

Bucket of rocks, pebbles and sand - time-management ideas and the 'big rocks in first' story.

Big rock - search (leave no stone unturned).

Juggling balls - creativity, juggling tasks and priorities (keeping all the balls in the air), using different parts of the brain, relaxation and stress-prevention, fun, practice makes perfect, dexterity (better still, teach yourself how to juggle - it's easy - then you can teach the whole audience - use lemons or potatoes if the budget won't stretch to juggling balls for everyone...)

Spinning plates - keeping many tasks going, practice, learning new things, see the juggling list above.

Top hat (and tails? - easy to hire) - going up-market, going after bigger business, improving quality, aspiring to greater higher things, increasing performance, positioning with the market leaders rather than the price-cutters - lots more on the themes of improvement and setting higher aims.

Old-style mobile phone - pace of technology change, different perspectives and attitudes, changing fashions and trends.

Conductors baton - orchestrate, co-ordinate, manage, timing, time-management, turn up the volume or tempo, and anything else related to managing resources and timescales.

Large framed picture or print of a famous masterpiece with an obvious message or theme - a picture tells a thousand words, use diagrams, pictures and images when you need to communicate clearly.

Whisk - mix and blend resources, people, team-building, shake things up (change).

Wooden spoon - change and check (add, stir and taste) cycle of improvement, the simplest tools are often the best, simplicity, multi-tasking.

Big silver spoon or steel ladle contrasted with a wooden spoon - inspire people, don't suggest failure (wooden spoon is metaphor for last place).

Pack/deck of cards - keep your cards close to your chest, discretion, secrecy, shrewdness, calculated risk.

Doctors stethoscope - diagnose before taking action, empathy and understanding, listening skills, active listening, professionalism, expertise, consultative approach.

Indoor fireworks - attention, impact.

Torch - light the way, lead people, find the best direction, discover, adjust to strange unknown situations, illuminate facts, shed light on uncertainty, dispel rumour and misinformation.

Air freshener spray - atmosphere, environment, duty of care, working atmosphere, clear the air (dispel rumour and bad feeling).

Whip - excitement, action, drive, determination.

Doctors-style leather case - professionalism, expertise, consultative approach.

Spinning top - balance, fairness, equity, equality, non-discrimination.

Cardigan, pipe and slippers - ageism, respect the knowledge/experience/feelings of older workers, avoid stereo-typing people and making assumptions about age and character.

Baseball cap - avoid stereo-typing young people, develop and invest in youth, different culture, attitudes, bigotry.

Camera - respect people's privacy, avoid work encroaching/impinging on personal lives.

Telephone directory - find new people, prospective customers, suppliers, contacts, networking.

Old-style telephone - communications, talk, it's good to talk (rather than email).

Flowers - say thanks, acknowledge efforts.

Carrot - incentive, incentivise, motivate, reward, motivational styles and methods.

Medal on a ribbon or a trophy - give recognition, motivate, achievement.

Baseball bat or big stick - X-Theory management, autocratic management, bullying, harassment.

Paper plane - aim high, explore, strive.

These are just some examples - you'll think of many more. The possibilities are endless..

Send your own ideas and suggestions (all listed will be attributed).




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