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Ban PowerPoint from Meetings and We Can Increase Productivity by A Minimum of 25 Percent

Jeff Bezos Banned PowerPoint and It's Arguably the Smartest Management Move He's Ever Made

Make your meetings shorter and smarter with this absurdly simple leadership technique.

BY GEOFFREY JAMES, CONTRIBUTING EDITOR, INC.COM
@SALES_SOURCE
INC.COM

Jeff Bezos recently banned PowerPoint from meetings at Amazon, insisting that meetings instead start with the attendees silently reading a hard-copy document containing the information needed to discuss the issue.

This is not surprising, considering there's significant scientific research that the use of PowerPoint reduces organizational intelligence. However, replacing PowerPoint with "briefing documents" (as Bezos has done) isn't just good science; it's also an incredibly smart financial move, for the following three reasons:

It saves time. PowerPoint communicates at the speed that the presenter talks; a briefing document communicates at the speed that the audience reads. A presentation that would take an hour (without interruptions or discussion) is condensed to merely five minutes.

It saves time. Because a briefing document provides the important information at the beginning of the meeting, everyone is literally "on the same page" and discussion is shorter and more to the point. Furthermore, since a presentation needs a presenter, one must attended the meeting to get the information. With a briefing document, people who need just the information (but don't need to participate) can simply read the document and skip the meeting.

It saves time. A briefing document eliminates the three worst PowerPoint time wasters: a) "They-can't-pin-this-Jello-to-the-wall" presentations, b) "I-didn't-prepare-so-I'm-using-my-standard-slide-deck" presentations; and, worst of all, c) "For-the-love-of-god-will-you-please-get-to-the-damn point?" presentations.

Did I mention that it saves time? Good, because as I've pointed out previously, the average executive spends around 50 percent of his or her time in meetings (one third of which are totally useless). This is a huge productivity drain, above and beyond PowerPoint's infamous ability to reduce organizational intelligence.

So let's do the numbers. Since briefing documents are (at least) twice as time-efficient as PowerPoint and tend to eliminate the most useless meetings, by replacing PowerPoint with briefing documents, Bezos effectively increased company-wide management productivity by at least 25 percent.

I've been researching and writing about office technology and management technique for over 20 years. There are few if any technologies or techniques that, when implemented, have anywhere near that kind of dramatically positive effect on productivity.

But that's not all. Banning PowerPoint in favor of briefing documents cost Bezos and Amazon exactly $0.00. For all practical purposes, that's an ROI of, well, infinity.

Pretty smart, eh?

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| 1686 views | | 11 replies (last ) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1fevn3O6

11 replies (most recent on top)

One of our BTC expat supervisors actually berated our team insisting we improve our PowerPoint skills to keep up Houston. It was implied this would be a factor in the ranking.

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Post ID: @2ayb+1fevn3O6

@1pvq+1fevn3O6
PowerPoint at Amazon is only used for a one-way meeting and lectures with no discussion or decision making.

PowerPoint at Amazon is not acceptable as a way to deliver information that is the basis for discussion and decision making. We use text-based documents instead, which we try to keep reasonably short (under 6 pages).

Employees start the meeting by reading the document and often commenting on it, either with pen when it's printed, or electronically if it is online (always the case nowadays).

PowerPoint requires verbal presentation skills that not everybody has, especially with so many non-native English speakers.

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Post ID: @1htt+1fevn3O6

The whole “Amazon doesn’t use PPT” is a myth. I’ve been working there now for a few months, I use PowerPoint a few times a week. Not quite as often as at XOM, but yea we use it all the time. There are some specific meetings where we don’t use it, and for good reason, but most meetings we use it.

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Post ID: @1pvq+1fevn3O6

You guys are clueless. Haven't you heard we're now using dashboards to generate even more data to extend PowerPoint presentation time and frequency?????

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Post ID: @1xai+1fevn3O6

… b-b-but …. Exxon literally invented the bullet point …. http://wiredpen.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/esso-1982-korky.pdf

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Post ID: @1oiq+1fevn3O6

Also make all weekly meeting with Presidents and VP’s to happen every 2 weeks.

Save many FTE’s for all the knowledgeable workers having to prep their id--t (sponsored) managers for those weekly meetings.

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Post ID: @1mue+1fevn3O6

No PowerPoint??!!!

How will we communicate with our managers ????

By….taking.,., and actually listening??

Oh the inhumanity !!!!

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Post ID: @1dna+1fevn3O6

Then there would be nothing to do

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Post ID: @1uya+1fevn3O6

PowerPoint serve a purpose, but the amount of time and money spent to make pretty slides is ridiculous. Why present when there is no action other than to toot your own ho-n.

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Post ID: @1vup+1fevn3O6

Funny but true story...In 2010 when we first began working with XTO the managers at USP came back from there first meet and greet and were shaking their heads and commenting to themselves-they don't use PowerPoint-how do they get anything done !"

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Post ID: @1nal+1fevn3O6

If we did this in Annandale you could shut down the 3rd floor….. oh and PPLE…….

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Post ID: @1iqh+1fevn3O6

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