Where You See SlideShow, I See SlidesHow — And Now You Can’t Unsee It

Have you ever stared at a deck so plain it could double as an early 2000s Word document? You know the type: black text, white background, 12-point font, bullets that multiply like rabbits.

And then it hits you:

“SlideShow” is really just “SlidesHow.”

Now you can’t unsee it.


SlideShow? No — Slides How.

Every slide is a question: How are you telling your story? How are you guiding attention, building understanding, sparking emotion, or making people care?

Slides aren’t a teleprompter for the presenter. They’re not a storage locker for every thought you couldn’t trim from the script. They’re your co-narrator.

So when we say “SlideShow,” think “SlidesHOW” — as in:

  • How does this slide move the story forward?
  • How does it feel to read this?
  • How does the design help, or hurt, the message?

If you’re just showing slides, you’re not showing how.


The Problem with Black-and-White Thinking

When we rely on black text on a white background, we’re not just making a design choice — we’re making an engagement choice.

It’s the default, the no-risk path, the lowest common denominator of visual communication. But default slides don’t start conversations. They don’t stick in memory. They don’t move people.

They whisper when you needed a drumroll.


What Slides Should Be

  • A canvas, not a printout – Use space, contrast, motion, and imagery to tell your story visually.
  • Visual anchors – A single chart, a photo, a bold quote — these are anchors, not add-ons.
  • Conversation starters – The best slides raise questions in the audience’s mind before you’ve even said a word.
  • Designed for impact, not for reading – If your audience is reading while you’re talking, they’re not listening.

SlideSHOW or SlideHOW: Choose Wisely

Next time you’re building a presentation, try this simple exercise: Read the word “SlideShow” and mentally split it.

Ask yourself:

❓ How is this slide helping me SHOW what matters?

❓ How is this slide showing HOW I think?

❓ How is this slide different from just handing them a PDF?

Because once you’ve seen “SlidesHow,” there’s no going back. And maybe — just maybe — your audience will thank you with applause instead of polite silence.


TL;DR (or TL;DW if it’s a webinar):

Stop building slide shows. Start building SlidesHow. Design like it’s a story. Present like it’s a performance. Because every slide asks: HOW are you showing what matters?

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