Celebrating it’s 20-year anniversary, PechaKucha — an informal fast-paced presentation format created in 2003 by two architects in Japan — has exploded into a global phenomenon now being used at 1,300 ...
A PechaKucha presentation at Tokyo Design Week. After death and taxes, the next unavoidable thing in life may be lousy Powerpoint presentations. And for anyone who’s ever struggled to simultaneously ...
“Students, please remember to monotonously read every slide word-for-word when you present to the class.” Said no teacher ever. As I prepare for my presentation this week at the Florida Educational ...
PechaKucha returns to Kalispell featuring an evening of speakers who each have just under 7 minutes or 400 seconds to present their thoughts during an event on Jan. 30. Organized by the Kalispell ...
At software giant Autodesk, employees know what CEO Carl Bass likes to see in a presentation. Twenty slides. Six minutes and 40 seconds’ worth of material. Such are the requirements of PechaKucha, a ...
PechaKucha. It’s not a Pokémon or an obscure ingredient in your mother’s spice rack. It’s a concise, effective means of presentation⎯20 slides, set to 20 seconds each. One straight shot — pay ...
Why do it? Pecha Kucha presentations put specific time and image constraints on presentations to help students make concise, oral-visual presentations that are designed to engage the audience (and ...
Pecha Kucha, Japanese for “chit chat,” is the new communication style of telling a story using exactly 20 slides, for exactly 20 seconds each, for exactly 6 minutes, 40 seconds of presentation time.
PechaKucha, Japanese for “chit-chat,” is a worldwide presentation format that invites speakers to talk on stage for six minutes and 40 seconds while 20 slides transition at 20-second intervals in the ...
A presentation in the true style of Pecha Kucha is 20×20: 20 images displayed for 20 seconds each. The presentation is timed so that it advances on its own, and the speaker talks along with it, making ...