Apr 6, 2021
Try presenting in Teams meetings from PowerPoint
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Hello Office Insiders, I’m Lishan Yu, a program manager on the PowerPoint team. You might have heard that we announced the PowerPoint Live in Teams feature at Microsoft Ignite last month. Today, I’m excited to show you how to check out this new experience, and start presenting in Teams meetings from PowerPoint.
Presenting in Teams meetings
Presenting in a meeting used to be as simple as clicking Slide Show in your PowerPoint deck. Nowadays, even though you may not be in the same room as your audience, we believe your flow to present should be as easy and intuitive – clicking the Present in Teams button in PowerPoint is the only step you need to take to present the deck in your Teams meeting!
How it works
Give the feature a try next time you need to present in a Teams meetings:
- Join a Teams meeting or an ad-hoc Teams call.
- Open your presentation in PowerPoint for Windows.
- Click the Present in Teams button in the top right corner.
Scenarios to try
Ready to take the PowerPoint Live feature for a spin? Try some of the scenarios below.
As a presenter :
- After clicking the Present in Teams button in PowerPoint, notice that you can see both the chat and your content at the same time in Teams (and don’t feel like you’re missing out on the discussion).
- Take advantage of features like grid review and slide notes to present more effectively.
As an audience member :
- If you joined late, move back through the deck and quickly catch up without having to ask the presenter to stop and recap what was already shared.
- Interact with and experience the richness of the content being presented such as better video quality, live web links, and more.
- Make any adjustments you need to more fully enjoy the presentation (i.e., use high-contrast mode).
Requirements
In order to try out the feature, you will need to:
- Have the latest Teams desktop app installed.
- Store the presentation on OneDrive for Business or SharePoint.
- Join a Teams meeting before clicking the Present in Teams button in PowerPoint for Windows.
- Be using an Office 365 E3/A3, Office 365 E5/A5, or Microsoft 365 for Government license.
Availability
This feature is rolling out over the next several days to Insiders running Beta Channel Version 2104 (Build 13926.20000) and later.
We’d love your feedback, so please let us know how you think. To get in touch, do either of the following:
- Inside the app, select the Help button in the top-right corner of the app.
- Respond to this post or tweet at @OfficeInsider .
Learn what other information you should include in your feedback to ensure it’s actionable and reaches the right people. We’re excited to hear from you!
Sign up for the Office Insider newsletter and get the latest information about Insider features in your inbox once a month!
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The Ultimate How To Guide for Presenting Content in Microsoft Teams
Sharing / presenting content in Teams meeting is at the same time simple but is also has some options available that may not be known enough by everyone. This guide lets you get started and dive deeper what happens when you share your window, document or desktop in Microsoft Teams.
This article will be updated when there are new features or based on feedback.
Updated 22.3.2021 Presenter View section.
Community: I am happy to add Mac and iOS screenshots into the article as well if someone is willing to collaborate & provide them. 😎💪
Teams Desktop: sharing a screen (Windows)
Opening the sharing with Microsoft Teams Desktop (in the New Meeting experience mode).
This opens the Share Tray. From it you can choose to start sharing
- Your Desktop (Screen share)
- Specific application (Window)
- Whiteboard application: either Microsoft Whiteboard (natively with Microsoft 365) or available 3rd party Whiteboards
- PowerPoint document
TIP: When you choose to share something using Teams Desktop you can choose to include your computer sounds to meeting. This is a must-have option if you are playing music or video to your participants. You can not toggle this on later – you need to choose this when you start sharing.
When you choose to include computer sound included with the sharing you need to have configured the speaker for computer and Teams meeting to be the same one.
If you have multiple monitors available for your Microsoft Teams you can choose any of those displays.
And you have the sharing open. Shared area is marked with red rectangle around it. You will find the more smaller Teams meeting control window in one of your desktops – and if you have the camera on it will show the video.
But more importantly you can use that small window to control camera, audio or sharing (ending it with one press). Or you can click on the small window (not on meeting toolbar) and it will expand back to the full size.
You can use that same icon to stop sharing in the expanded window.
Tip: If you have two screens available you should consider presenting your PowerPoint presentation so that you share the external screen and project your presentation there (PowerPoint – Slide Show – Monitor). Share that external screen to Teams meeting so you can be sure that whatever you show in that screen it is shown to attendees. Just check that your second screen is not a ultra-wide display or 8k (or preferably even 4k) because the content is going to be tough to read and view by attendees. FullHD screen works the best here.
Tip2: when you are presenting PowerPoint in external screen (and sharing that to Teams meeting) do they advantage of inking and pen if you are using a device with touch screen (like Surface)!
Tip3: if you have an embedded video in your PowerPoint and you use screen/display sharing to present it to the audience: Don’t forget include computer sound with your share!
Teams Desktop: sharing a PowerPoint
You can choose from your recent PowerPoint documents in the list
- A PowerPoint document you opened or edited in Microsoft Teams (in a team you belong to) or in your OneDrive
- Browse for more
This list of sharing PowerPoints is causing often some big questions. PowerPoints will appear in the list once you edit or open the PowerPoint presentation in Teams or OneDrive (there may be some short delay). Generally it applies to the next meeting you join. Make sure you prepare for the meeting by opening the document in advance. Simply uploading a presentation to OneDrive or Teams does not bring it to the list – you need to open/edit it as well.
Browse-option lets you choose a PowerPoint from your OneDrive or from your computer.
What this one lacks is the ability to choose a file from a team you belong to.
TIP: Use OneDrive syncing to have an easy access to files in the most relevant teams you belong to .
Once you are sharing the PowerPoint you can see it in the presenter view mode! This feature is generally available ! This makes it easy to do presentations using Teams – without having to have a PowerPoint desktop app open at the same time. Seems to work only on Teams Desktop with new meeting experience mode at the moment.
The presented area (PowerPoint) is shown surrounded with a red rectangle.
Updated 22.3.2021. There are other controls in this as well for jumping between slides and accessibility controls.
I have a another article diving deeper to Presenter view in here !
NEW: PowerPoint Live has now laser pointer and inking capabilities. Read about them here !
Once the presentation is shared you can move back and forth easily with arrows in the screen.
Note: there is the “eye” icon. If you press that one it locks the PowerPoint for the participants so that they see the same slide as you do: they can not browse the deck on their own. This is called private viewing disable (arrows for other participants will be disabled). Private viewing is enabled on default.
Note: if you are a presenter in the meeting where a PowerPoint is shared to you can take control of the shared PowerPoint to advance slides. This does not ask for any confirmation and the feature is really useful when you have multiple presenters who use the same slide deck. Just be careful that everyone else are not presenters – or they know not to touch it.
You will get a warning that someone has taken the control and can easily take it back.
Whoever is in control of the presentation has also the control to disable/enable private viewing mode. As can be seen in the picture above (with Take control) the eye is missing and arrows are greyed out: this means someone else than you have the control and they have disable the private viewing.
Note: When you share PowerPoint to a meeting this way participants can click links you have in your presentation. Thank you Joe for this reminder!
If you add a online video to your presentation your participants can activate that on their own as well. It is good also to note that if you hit “play” it doesn’t reflect to attendees (=they need to play the video themselves)
Teams Desktop: sharing a Whiteboard
When you choose Microsoft Whiteboard from the Share Tray you are taken directly to the Whiteboard view. Everyone who is in the same organization as you are (the situation in January 2021) can co-author the Whiteboard with you. Once you are done you can Stop presenting (middle top screen) or share something else.
Teams web client: sharing a screen (Microsoft Edge)
Sharing looks a bit different when you are using Teams web client. Sharing is available in (new) Microsoft Edge and Google Chrome browsers. The toolbar is hovering on top of the meeting. From the toolbar you can open the share tray.
When you have the share tray open you can choose to share something of following
- Desktop (Screenshare)
- A specific PowerPoint document
- Whiteboard: either Microsoft Whiteboard or Freehand (3rd party).
- Entire screen
- Application window (a specific application only)
- With Microsoft Edge you have option to choose a selected, specific, tab
When(if) you have multiple monitors it is easiest to just share a one of them: it makes the sharing really simple and easy to manage: anything on that display is shared.
If you don’t have multiple monitors then you might want to just share a single application.
This is useful when you want to show something specific that runs in it’s own application but you can not share anything else on your screen.
Note: Teams is not in the list (not even on blurred ones) and nor is Spotify or ToDo. Not every application can be shared with this.
Note2: you can not share desktop audio to the meeting using Teams web client.
And the last option is to share a selected Edge tab – and if you have multiple Edge profiles open you can share from any of those by clicking the desired Edge active and choosing the tab.
In my example I chose to share one of my screens. You don’t get much feedback – you just click on the screen and hit Share. In one of your screens you will have this toolbar:
You can end sharing using either that toolbar or you can navigate to your web Teams meeting and choose Stop sharing from the toolbar there.
Teams web client: sharing a PowerPoint
This list of sharing PowerPoints is causing often some big questions. PowerPoint presentations will be in the list once you edit or open the PowerPoint presentation in Teams or OneDrive (there may be some short delay). Generally it applies to the next meeting you join. Make sure you prepare for the meeting by opening the document in advance. Simply uploading a presentation to OneDrive or Teams does not bring it to the list – you need to open/edit it as well.
Note: there is the “eye” icon. If you press that one it locks the PowerPoint for the participants so that they see the same slide as you do: they can not browse the deck on their own. This is called private viewing disable. Private viewing is enabled on default.
Whoever is in control of the presentation has also the control to disable/enable private viewing mode.
Teams web client: sharing a Whiteboard
Sharing a Whiteboard is initiated simply by choosing Microsoft Whiteboard (or Freehand or other available 3rd party application) from the share tray.
I have found out that sometimes when you start sharing Microsoft Whiteboard to the meeting using Teams web client it doesn’t do anything. The solution is to try again.
Once the Whiteboard opens you can work on it normally – or choose to open it in the Whiteboard app to have a broader set of tools available.
When you are done you can choose the “Stop presenting” that is hovering on the left bottom area (left of meeting toolbar).
Teams mobile: sharing a screen
Were you aware that you can also share content using your mobile device? I have examples and screenshots using a Android device but these also work with iOS – the user interface might be slightly different.
You initiate the sharing via … menu selection in the mobile to open the list of options
You choose Share and you get to choose what to share
Yes – you can share your mobile device screen to the meeting. This is really useful if you have a application you want to show or train to others.
You may have to adjust settings to turn on allowing Teams to display over other apps.
After that one you may have reshare the screen. And you get the next warning.
And your screen is now shared. You can see the red block that lets you know what are of your mobile device screen has been shared.
And if you pull down notifications area you have option to return to Teams meeting (if you have been using some other app) and there is also the notification that you are sharing your screen.
When you are done sharing you can return to Teams meeting and then choose to Stop presenting.
Teams mobile: sharing a PowerPoint
Sharing a PowerPoint works really well on Teams mobile! It is in fact even better than the version in other clients.
You start by imitating the sharing (as with screen share) and choosing the PowerPoint instead. You get a screen:
From this screen you can choose to browser thought
- A PowerPoint presentation from any Team and channel you belong to!
- Choose a PowerPoint presentation you opened or edited most recently (as you notice compared to other examples that this isn’t 1:1 in sync.. There are differences so that is why I am really happy that you can browse through Teams for sharing)
Once you have selected the PowerPoint to present it is very straight forward from that moment.
Using Teams mobile you can also take control of a PowerPoint someone else is presenting (if you are a presenter in the meeting). This means that you can participate in a multi-presenter meeting quite easily by using just your mobile device and Teams!
You will get a warning before you take the control – in case you pressed Take Control accidentally.
Teams mobile: sharing a photo or video
Follow the steps laid out earlier and instead of screen or PowerPoint you select this time a picture (from device’s picture gallery) or a video (using device’s video camera). Since sharing a picture is very straight forward I use the video instead as example.
You get to see a preview of video first. You can switch to other camera (front/back usually) & position the device properly and once you are ready you just hit Start presenting .
And when you are done you can press on “Stop presenting” to end your video feed.
This video is different from showing your own video using Camera icon the meeting toolbar. Instead of being a attendee video this one is shown in the shared area for every participant in the meeting. This is useful when you have something in the same room/space that you want to share to others in the meeting. Possible use cases: a model on table, physical whiteboard, view from the window, interviewing someone, view in the outside, …
Best practices from my experience
The way I use to share content when in Microsoft Teams meetings is
- I share one of my screens (I have three screens so this is a natural choice for me). This way I know what is being shared all the time since I always share the same screen (the one in the middle, my camera is on top of that screen). Be careful what you drag to the shared screen. This is the way I share my PowerPoint presentations (projecting the presentation to the shared screen)
- If you have a touch-screen device (like Surface-laptop) you should use pen/inking to enhance the presentation experience. This also works when you are sharing the external screen & presenting from touch-screen device: make your presentation stand out!
- Prepare the content you share in advance. Open PowerPoints, apps, browsers etc so you don’t have to spend any time with them when you are live.
- Share your screen early rather than later. This will give you time to reshare.
- When doing a presentation with multiple persons using just the PowerPoint deck share it directly to Teams meeting so you can switch between speakers easily. With the new Presenter view -support this is now a good option.
- Make use of Teams features: Put everyone but real presenters else as attendee so they can’t start sharing their screen accidentally – and you can hard mute them as well. Use meeting options -setting before they join in.
- When people complain they don’t see the share: check that you are actually sharing your screen. If someone is seeing your share and some others not: those who can’t see your share need to leave and rejoin the meeting. Sometimes restarting your sharing can fix that issue too but usually the issue is in the participant end.
- I rarely use application / window -sharing.
- Sharing a video in Teams meeting (or in Live event) is usually ok but you can expect some quality drop – especially if you have a lower bandwidth. Have a backup link to the video available. People seem to struggle more with videos embedded inside a PowerPoint.
- Use Windows Focus Assist and Teams Do Not Disturb mode so you don’t get any unwanted popups on your shared screen. Microsoft Teams will also have a upcoming feature (currently usable in public preview) that let’s users to choose if Teams notifications do their own “toast” (pop-up banner) or do they go directly to Windows notification area (honoring the Focust Assist setting).
- Use Teams Desktop version + new meeting experience when possible. Check that you have the latest version.
More information or different view into this?
Check out Microsoft Support article about Sharing content in Microsoft Teams meetings .
I hope you have enjoyed this guide and it has provided to be useful. Please do drop a comment from below if you have any questions or you want to send me greetings!
Sharing is Caring! #CommunityRocks
Aiheeseen liittyy.
Published by Vesa Nopanen "Mr. Metaverse"
Vesa "Vesku" Nopanen, Principal Consultant and Microsoft MVP (M365 Apps & Services and Mixed Reality) working on Metaverse, AI and Future Work at Sulava. I work, blog and speak about Metaverse, AI, Microsoft Mesh, Virtual & Mixed Reality, The Future of Work, Digital Twins, and other services & platforms in the cloud connecting digital and physical worlds and people together. I am extremely passionate about Metaverse, AI, natural language understanding, Mixed & Virtual Reality and how these technologies, with Microsoft Teams and Microsoft Azure & Cloud, enable to change how people work together. Azure OpenAI Services - yes, I build AI solutions using those and other Azure AI services. I have 30 years of experience in IT business on multiple industries, domains, and roles. View all posts by Vesa Nopanen "Mr. Metaverse"
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How to Present PowerPoint Slides in Microsoft Teams
Ready to elevate your virtual presentations in Microsoft Teams? Discover three distinct methods to deliver flawless PowerPoint presentations.
A successful PowerPoint presentation extends beyond just the content—its delivery is just as important, especially in a virtual space like Microsoft Teams.
In Microsoft Teams, you can choose to present your slide deck by sharing your entire screen, PowerPoint window, or using the Microsoft Teams' PowerPoint Live feature. Let's explore how you can use each of these three methods and discuss their pros and cons.
Method 1: Share Screen
Sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams is pretty easy and straightforward. It's best to minimize or close unnecessary tabs before joining the Microsoft Teams meeting to avoid exposing sensitive information. Once you're confident in your screen's content, follow the steps below:
- A red border appears around your desktop, indicating you're sharing your screen.
- Present your PowerPoint slideshow.
Sharing your screen is a straightforward method, especially when you want to present other documents besides your PowerPoint slideshow. However, the downside is that you may accidentally reveal sensitive information.
Method 2: Share PowerPoint Window
If you want only to present your PowerPoint slide deck, it's best to share just that window. Here's how:
- A red border will appear around your PowerPoint window, indicating you're sharing just that window.
- Launch your slides in slideshow mode and start presenting.
- Open the Microsoft Teams window and click Stop sharing when you're done presenting.
Sharing just your PowerPoint window prevents accidental display of sensitive desktop content. Even if you switch windows, viewers only see the PowerPoint presentation.
However, this method also has its limitations. One of the main limits is that you can't view your PowerPoint speaker notes without the audience seeing them as well. You also can't access Microsoft Teams features like the chat and reactions during your presentation.
Additionally, If your network connection has low bandwidth or slow upload speed , sharing your screen can result in a blurry and stuttering presentation for the audience. Thankfully, the PowerPoint Live feature provides the solution to these issues.
Method 3: Use PowerPoint Live
Presenting with the PowerPoint Live feature is easy and provides additional benefits. Your audience only sees the slides, while you get to see all the extra controls that come with the presenter view. When using the presenter view in your presentation, you have a few helpful tools at your disposal:
- You can easily adjust the font size of your slide notes to make them more readable.
- To navigate between slides, simply click on the corresponding thumbnail.
- You can use the laser pointer, pen, or highlighter tools to draw attention to specific areas of a slide.
- Use the Standout layout to place your camera feed on the slide without the background.
- Use the Cameo layout to insert yourself into the slide, provided you've set up Cameo to record customized camera feeds .
Here's how you can use PowerPoint Live to share your presentation:
- When it's your turn to present, click Share .
- When you're done presenting, click Stop sharing in the top toolbar.
The PowerPoint Live feature tackles the limitations of sharing your entire screen or PowerPoint window. It also comes with really cool features like co-presenting and allowing attendees to click on links in the presentation.
Your Audience's View When Using PowerPoint Live
In addition to the main slide view, your audience also has access to the slide navigation, grid, and more options controls (the three dots icon below the slides).
This means they can navigate the slides at their own pace and change specific slide settings to suit their preference without affecting your view and that of others. If you find this non-ideal for delivering an engaging presentation , you can disable the audience's navigation control. To do so, enable Private view in the top toolbar.
By default, each meeting attendee joins as a presenter. This means they can share their own content or control someone else's presentation. If that's not what you want, you can change each person's meeting roles in Microsoft Teams to prevent it.
Deliver a Seamless Presentation Experience in Microsoft Teams
Presenting your PowerPoint slides in Microsoft Teams might seem tricky at first, but once you get the hang of it, it's a piece of cake. Practice makes perfect. So before your next Teams presentation, familiarize yourself with your chosen method to ensure an effective delivery.
How to present your video and content side by side in a Microsoft Teams meeting
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Professional presenting in Teams with no additional skills or software
Today we’re going to cover a little workaround—this probably qualifies as a life hack, actually—for presenting both your face and shared content—like a slideshow, your browser, a file—at the same time during a Microsoft Teams meeting. Basically, you can present like a newscaster in a meeting and it requires no additional software or skills to do it. It can really amp up your presentation, class, meeting, whatever.
For a video version of this post, press play below. You probably want to watch the video. I go through a bunch of demos on how to actually do this and discuss a bunch of the nuances to maximize the professional look, which may help make it all make more sense.
Microsoft Teams has announced some major changes and improvements when it comes to how people’s faces and content displays during meetings, but there’s still a big need—at least in my opinion—for sharing your face with content in a configurable side-by-side way (and there will remain that need even with the announced updates). Think of a newscaster with a graphic above their shoulder or a gamer live-streaming their play with their face in the corner.
I see this having a big impact on meetings where there is one or only a few main presenters, not really for meetings where many people discuss or brainstorm back and forth. It’s also fantastic if you’re a teacher presenting slides or a white board in your browser and you want to show your face to keep students more engaged.
You can even use this in a Teams live event if you want. It works better than the built-in side-by-side content and video feature if you ask me.
What this isn’t
To set expectations, what this won’t do for you is present multiple people’s faces at once on some background with other content. This isn’t a way to recreate the talking heads on cable news. It’s a way for one presenter to share their screen and with their screen show content and their camera video feed at the same time.
How to do it
Alright, so let’s cover what we’re really doing here. It’s actually really simple. To share your face and your content at the same time
- Open the content you want to share (slide show, browser, file, white board, etc.).
- Open an app that shows a live feed of your webcam. - On Windows, you can use the Camera app (open the Start menu and search Camera ). If your camera feed comes through flipped horizontally, here's a way to troubleshoot that . - On macOS, open QuickTime Player and click File > New Movie Recording . - On Chrome OS (Chromebooks), use the included Camera app . - You can also go semi-pro and download VLC Player (a free, well-respected, open-source video player), set it to capture device then set the window to always on top . - And you could make use of the fun features of Snapchat's Snap Camera (though I've heard this app has security risks, so download at your own risk). This app would also let you change the background of your video feed, I think (please test for yourself). You won’t be recording anything. You’re just using the app to display your webcam’s live feed. Note: QuickTime doesn't show its buttons if you move your mouse away, but Windows's Camera app does. If that bothers you, consider whether it's more important to you whether you can share your face and your content simultaneously... or your have your face come through even with minimal buttons showing. Or test with the other camera apps I mentioned above.
- Align the apps in a way that makes sense. Perhaps make the camera feed large and the content small above your shoulder (à la newscaster) or use the split screen feature in Windows (known as window snapping ) or macOS (known as split view ) to put the content side-by-side taking up the whole screen (or almost all of it).
- In your Teams meeting, share your screen.
That’s basically it. Your success with this method isn’t about Teams. It’s about how well you manage and share your content. For example, you can easily display a PowerPoint slideshow (use option 2 in this article for presenting the slides as a resizable window), a browser, and your camera feed to discuss big-picture topics with your slides and a demonstration with the browser.
You can open a whiteboard from Office 365 in your browser and split-screen the whiteboard with your camera feed. If you’re a teacher or professor, it’s absolutely worth having a second device with a pen to write and sketch. For example, you could use an iPad to sketch on the whiteboard while you also have it open and displaying the whiteboard live in the browser next to your camera feed, all which is shared via your screen in Teams.
As handy as this trick is, there are a few down sides:
- I haven’t tested, but I very much doubt you could do this on your tablet or phone.
- You can’t get rid of the top bars of the apps if you’re not pushing to full screen.
- This whole thing works best if you have a second monitor. It can work if you only have one, but it can be annoying to have to jump between your content and Teams to check in on the chat. If you’re using one monitor, I suggest setting your Windows Taskbar or macOS Dock to automatically hide. Enable do not disturb in Windows or macOS. I also suggest you join the meeting on your phone to follow the chat as a workaround.
- This will impact bandwidth, probably a lot. If people in your meeting are complaining about your shared content coming through delayed, slow, or choppy, have them turn off incoming video for everyone one else—which actually disables your incoming video feed too—and it should improve things while still showing your shared screen. That said, this is a high-bandwidth action and it could end up being so choppy that it ultimately fails. There's not much you can do to recover other than reverting back to the standard sharing mechanisms.
Is there a way to record the screen?
Yes! If you want to record what you're presenting, you can always record the meeting using the built-in meeting recording features in Teams. With this method you can get the transcript, which is handy. It also automatically uploads the video to Microsoft Stream—Office 365's video service—and makes it available to all participants (as long as they're in your organization). The recording is also automatic outside of you pressing start and stop; super simple to use. However, with this method, your video will have all the other participants' faces displaying.
In many situations, seeing the faces would be unprofessional or even breaching privacy if shared (and what's the point of recording if not to share?). The simplest way to do it is to use Microsoft Stream to record the screen you're sharing. I should point out that Teams also uses Stream with its recordings (as mentioned in the previous paragraph). When I reference Stream in this paragraph, I'm talking about using it separately from Teams. Record the screen you're sharing in the meeting; do not record the meeting from Teams. If you have a license to use Teams and record a meeting, you likely have a license to record your screen without added cost and all you need is a browser to do it. Follow these instructions for that.
If you want some more control and are willing to invest time time or money, you can look into OBS Studio or Camtasia . I personally use Camtasia for both screen recording and easy-to-use, but still powerful video editing, and I like it a lot. (I'm not paid to say that.)
Can I present PowerPoint slides with video and still get presenter view?
Turns out you can! I published a separate post and video after this question came up a bunch of times. It requires two screens to pull off, which, if you present in Teams regularly, you should really invest in anyway . Trust me. You also need a camera app that can be set to always stay on top of other windows (so your slides don't overtake your video). The video below or post linked above will run you through everything you need to do.
What about OBS?
(If you don't know what OBS is, feel free to skip this section.)
Now, some of you probably have the instant response of, “Hold up, Matt, there are already ways to do this. Just use OBS Studio or another video encoder.” And my reaction to that is: bless your hearts. And that’s coming from a New Yorker! There are more than 75+ million daily users of Teams, and almost all of them will be scared by your use of the word studio and completely lost by the term video encoder .
Let’s be real: they shouldn't have to use a video encoder or advanced software to configure their video and content. Teams offers a difficult enough learning curve without them needing to dive into the rabbit hole of video production. Does this option offer green screen background removal? No. Does it let you drop multiple faces into one feed? No. But it does let you do the one thing so many people have been requesting: video and content side-by-side presenting, all without any additional software or skills.
What this article covers is as easy as moving some windows around and sharing your screen, meaning it’s something any presenter can do. If you want to do something more complex using a video encoder, by all means go for it. In fact, watch John Moore’s overview of using OBS to do something similar and definitely more slick, but more complex.
So that’s pretty much it! Anyway, I’d love to hear if this would be useful for you and how’d you’d put it to work in your organization. Leave any questions or comments below and requests are always taken into account.Happy newscasting!
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Sharing a ppt with an embedded video in a Teams meeting
I am a teacher who is just learning how to use teams for online teaching, and I am having an issue with a video in my powerpoint presentation when using the share feature in a Teams meeting. The powerpoint works perfectly until i get to the last slide that contains my embedded Youtube video. The meeting participants can see the screen with the video on it, but when I hit play on my end, it doesn't play for them (video or audio). But they can click on the play button on their respoective screens and play the video independently.
Is there something I may be doing wrong, or is this just the way it works? I need everyone to be viewing the video at the same time. And I did disable their ability to click through the ppt on their own.
Thanks for your help.
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- Microsoft Agent |
Hello Alison,
According to my tests, it’s a normal behavior if you share the PowerPoint file directly. As a workaround, you can share your desktop so that you can play the video for all the students at the same time. By the way, remember to select Include system audio when selecting Share in your meeting controls so that the students would hear the audio.
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Share slides in Microsoft Teams meetings with PowerPoint Live
PowerPoint Live in Teams gives both the presenter and audience an inclusive and engaging experience, combining the best parts of presenting in PowerPoint with the connection and collaboration of a Microsoft Teams meeting.
When you’re the presenter, you have a unique view that lets you control your presentation while staying engaged with your audience, seeing people’s video, raised hands, reactions, and chat as needed.
And if you’re an audience member, you can interact with the presentation and personalize your viewing experience with captions, high contrast slides, and slides translated into your native language.
Here’s how it works:
Tip: Are you an audience member? Jump down to learn more about how you can interact during the presentation.
Presenter view
Present your slides
If you're in PowerPoint for the web, select Present > Present in Teams .
Your slides will appear in the Teams meeting, with your Notes next to them.
Navigate through the slides
Use the navigation arrows to go forward and backward.
Use the thumbnail strip to jump ahead or backwards.
Select Go to slide to see a grid view of all slides in the presentation. Select one to jump to it.
Stay connected to the audience
One of the benefits of using PowerPoint Live to present instead of sharing your screen is that you have quick access to all your meeting tools you need to engage with the audience and to read the room in one view. This is especially true if you’re presenting from a single screen.
Turn Chat on or off to view what your audience is saying.
See audience reactions and raised hands in real-time.
Change the Layout of your presentation and choose how your live camera feed appears in your presentation, like Standout or Cameo . It helps the audience read your non-verbal cues and keeps them engaged.
Use the Laser pointer , Pen , Highlighter , or Eraser to clearly reference items on your slides.
Audience view
As an audience member, you’re able to personalize your experience without affecting anyone else. Try these options to find what works best for you:
Note: If presenters don't want people to be able to independently navigate through a PowerPoint file they are sharing, use the Private view toggle to turn it off.
Click any hyperlink on slides to get more context right away.
Interact with videos on slides to adjust the volume or jump to a timestamp and consume it at your own pace.
Use a screen reader to get full access to the slide content.
Switch to a high contrast view to make the slides easier to view if you have low vision. Select More options > View slides in high contrast .
Your viewing experience will be at a higher fidelity, letting you see crisp text and smooth animations. PowerPoint Live also requires significantly less network bandwidth than typical sharing, making it the best option when network connectivity is a problem.
Independent magnifying and panning
You can zoom in and pan on a presentation slide without affecting what others see. Use your mouse, trackpad, keyboard, touch, or the Magnify Slide option as applicable.
To zoom in or out on a slide, do any one of the following:
Hover over the slideshow and pinch or stretch on trackpad.
Pinch or use the stretch touch gesture (on a touch-enabled device).
Press the + or – keys.
Hover over slide, hold down Ctrl key and scroll with mouse wheel.
In the More Actions menu, click the + or – buttons.
To pan around your slide, do any one of the following:
Press the arrow keys.
Click and drag using a mouse.
Click and drag on a trackpad.
Use one finger to touch and drag (on touch-enabled device).
When done zooming and panning, press Esc to reset your screen.
Important:
PowerPoint Live is not supported in Teams live events, CVI devices, and VTC devices.
If you're using Teams on the web, you’ll need Microsoft Edge 18 or later, or Google Chrome 65 or later, to see the presenter view.
Presenter view is hidden by default for small screen devices but can be turned on by selecting More options below the current slide and then Show presenter view (or by selecting the sharing window and then pressing Ctrl+Shift+x).
Meetings recordings won’t capture any videos, animations, or annotation marks in the PowerPoint Live session.
When you share from Teams, the PowerPoint Live section lists the most recent files you've opened or edited in your team SharePoint site or your OneDrive. If you select one of these files to present, all meeting participants will be able to view the slides during the meeting. Their access permissions to the file outside of the meeting won't change.
If you select Browse and choose to present a PowerPoint file that hasn't been uploaded to Teams before, it will get uploaded as part of the meeting. If you're presenting in a channel meeting, the file is uploaded to the Files tab in the channel, where all team members will have access to it. If you're presenting in a private meeting, the file is uploaded to your OneDrive, where only the meeting participants will be able to access it.
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Microsoft Teams announces freely move toolbar for improved presentations
published on June 4, 2024
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- Microsoft Teams introduces movable presenter toolbar for screen sharing.
- Presenters can now optimize video playback for smoother presentations in Teams.
- These features are in preview for Teams Public Preview or Microsoft 365 Targeted Release.
Microsoft Teams is introducing two new features designed for the screen-sharing experience for presenters in virtual meetings.
Previously, the Presenter toolbar in Teams remained fixed at the top of the screen during screen sharing. This new update lets presenters to drag and reposition the toolbar anywhere on their screen.
This customization ensures that the toolbar doesn’t obscure important areas of the content being shared, such as menus or captions.
Teams now offer a new “Optimize” button on the Presenter toolbar. This button allows presenters to manually optimize video playback for a smoother viewing experience for meeting participants. This feature is particularly useful in situations where automatic video detection fails or experiences delays.
How it works 1. Start your Teams meeting and, when the time comes to present, select Share from the toolbar to share your screen. 2. You can now move the Presenter toolbar from its default location at the top of the screen and reposition it in any area of your screen. Just click on any non-interactive area of the Toolbar or on the new drag handle. NOTE: The Presenter toolbar will also minimize after 4 seconds when not in use; when minimized, the toolbar will still display a red badge to clearly indicate the ongoing sharing session. 3. If you are sharing video or other high-motion content, you can click the Optimize?button on the?toolbar for a smoother playback experience.
These new features are currently available in preview for users enrolled in the Teams Public Preview or Microsoft 365 Targeted Release program.
The update applies to the new Teams client for Windows and macOS.
It’s important to note that only the presenter needs to be using the preview version for everyone in the meeting to benefit from these improvements.
In summary, these updates aim to provide presenters with more control and flexibility when sharing their screen in Teams meetings.
More here .
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These are the things that motivate me - creating informative and helpful content, pursuing my passion for motorsports and music, engaging in expeditions, maintaining a healthy lifestyle, and spending time with my adorable cat Taco.
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How to create and deliver a winning team presentation
Get your team on prezi – watch this on demand video.
Anete Ezera May 31, 2024
Team presentations are about creating a dynamic experience for your audience whilst working together to share valuable information.
You might need to do a team presentation in various situations. For example, in a school project, a team presentation lets each member highlight their contributions. In the workplace, team presentations are great for updating projects, pitching ideas to clients, or sharing research findings with stakeholders.
Using a platform like Prezi can really boost your team’s presentation. Let’s look at what makes team presentations effective and how you can create a successful one.
Team presentations explained
So what exactly is a team presentation? Simply put, in a team presentation you’re working with others to share information or ideas. Each person brings their strengths and viewpoints, making the presentation more engaging.
Typically, the team divides the content so everyone has a part to focus on. This involves planning, creating visual aids like slides, and practicing together. The goal is to ensure everything flows smoothly and the message is clear. By combining everyone’s efforts, you end up with a presentation that effectively shares your team’s insights and knowledge.
How to create a great team presentation: a step-by-step guide
When done right, team presentations can be a really rewarding experience for everyone involved. To make sure the creation process runs smoothly, follow this step-by-step guide.
1. Gather your team
To start, you need to get everybody together. Use this opportunity to discuss the purpose of the presentation and what you want to say. This way, everyone understands the goal and can be on the same page with the project.
2. Divide the responsibilities
During the discussion, pinpoint what each team member is good at and assign roles based on their strengths. For example, one person might be great at research, another at designing slides, and someone else might excel at public speaking. By dividing tasks this way, you ensure a high-quality presentation as everyone gets to contribute the best way they can.
3. Plan the content
When planning your content, outline the key points you want to cover. Break down the presentation into sections and decide who will handle each part. Make sure the content flows logically from one section to the next. This planning phase is crucial for a cohesive presentation.
4. Develop visual aids
Great visuals can make your presentation stand out. That’s where Prezi steps in to help you create engaging visuals that complement your content. Also, make sure to keep the design consistent and not too cluttered. Remember, visual aids should enhance your message, not distract from it.
5. Rehearse together
Practice makes perfect! Schedule a few rehearsals where everyone presents their part. Pay attention to the transitions between speakers to ensure they’re smooth. Rehearsing together helps you catch any issues and make sure everyone is comfortable with their role.
6. Get feedback
To improve your delivery, practice in front of a trusted audience of friends or colleagues, and get their honest opinions. They can give you feedback on any tweaks you can make to improve your presentation. Following this, you can then make any necessary adjustments based on their feedback.
7. Prepare for Q&A
Be ready to answer questions from your audience. To prepare, discuss potential questions with your team and decide who will answer which types of questions. This preparation helps ensure you can handle the Q&A session confidently.
8. Present with confidence
On the day of the presentation, stay calm and confident. Trust in the preparation you’ve done. Remember to engage with your audience, make eye contact, and speak clearly. Most importantly, support each other as a team, and have fun with it.
To learn more about delivering a successful presentation with two or more people, explore our article on co-presenting tips and techniques .
9. Reflect and learn
After the presentation, gather your team to reflect on what went well and what could be improved for next time. Learning from each experience helps you continually improve your presentation skills.
By following these steps, you can be sure that every aspect of creating a team presentation is covered, allowing maximum success.
What are the advantages of team presentations?
Collaborating as a team for presentations has many advantages, including:
The opportunity to work together as a team provides a sense of unity. Whether it’s in the workplace or an educational setting, relying on each other and sharing insights can really improve morale in any team. Also, being in a group provides motivation and excitement that you may not necessarily experience in solo presentations.
Understanding of each other
In education and business settings, working on a team presentation means interacting with other members. Hearing other’s opinions and suggestions can help in getting to know your team better, which can help in other aspects of work or school.
Promotes teamwork
The ability to work together effectively for a team presentation can improve other team interactions further down the line. It’s a great opportunity to get everyone involved, especially those who might usually shy away from group discussions. This creates a more forthcoming team for the future.
Less opportunity for errors
Having more than one person contributing to a presentation means that there’s less chance of making mistakes. There’s going to be more than one person looking over progress, which means that any initial errors will likely be spotted by someone in the team. Even when working on your own sections, the chance to rehearse together means that you can all pick up on potential mistakes before the big day.
Diverse perspectives
Having a whole team involved means that several different viewpoints are brought together. Having each team member contribute their unique insights can lead to a richer and broader presentation overall. This ensures your presentation has a bigger impact on your audience.
Shared workload
With a team presentation, the workload is distributed among the group, making it more manageable. This should reduce the pressure off any one individual and allows for more thorough preparation before you take to the stage.
Improved audience engagement
Having multiple speakers can help to keep your audience interested. Each presenter will have different voices and styles of presenting, which can help maintain the audience’s attention throughout the whole presentation.
Demonstrates team strength
For business professionals in particular, creating and presenting a successful team presentation shows the power of your company. It portrays to your audience how reliable you are as a team and how you can work together to deliver great results. This is going to help you with future prospects and gaining the trust of clients, investors, and partners.
Top tips for creating and presenting your team presentation
Here are some top tips to help you nail a team presentation, with some advice on what to do and what to avoid.
Do: plan early
Start planning your presentation as soon as possible. Early planning gives you ample time to organize content, assign roles, and create visuals. Don’t wait until the last minute – good preparation is key to a smooth presentation.
Don’t: overload slides
Avoid cramming too much information onto your slides. Instead, keep them clean and simple with key points and visuals. Your audience should be listening to you, not reading dense text on the screen.
Do: practice together
Rehearse your presentation as a team several times. This helps ensure smooth transitions between speakers and a cohesive delivery. In addition, practicing together builds confidence and helps you refine your timing.
Don’t: ignore feedback
Constructive criticism can help you improve your presentation. However, don’t take feedback personally – use it to make your presentation stronger.
Do: engage your audience
Keep your audience engaged by incorporating questions or a brief activity into your presentation. This interaction helps maintain their interest and makes your presentation stand out.
Don’t: monopolize the presentation
Ensuring everyone on the team has a chance to speak values each member’s contribution and keeps the presentation dynamic and interesting.
Do: use effective visuals
Visuals are great for engaging your audience and capturing their attention! That’s why make sure to incorporate charts, images, and videos to illustrate your points. Compelling visuals can make complex information easier to understand – just make sure they’re relevant and support your message.
Don’t: forget to smile
A friendly demeanor can make a big difference. Smiling helps you appear confident and approachable, and it can put both you and your audience at ease. Remember, you’ve prepared well, so enjoy the experience!
Do: use Prezi
If you want to stand out, use Prezi for your presentation! Its dynamic, non-linear format can make your content more engaging and visually appealing. Prezi allows you to create a more interactive and memorable presentation experience and makes the presentation creation process even easier with AI-powered functionalities .
Don’t: rush through transitions
Transitions between speakers are crucial. Don’t hurry through them; take your time to smoothly hand over to the next person. This maintains the flow of the presentation and keeps the audience engaged.
Creating a team presentation is a fantastic opportunity to showcase your collective talents and knowledge. By following these tips, you’ll be well on your way to delivering a presentation that’s both impressive and enjoyable.
Why Prezi is perfect for team presentations: the power of Prezi AI
Prezi is the go-to platform for team presentations, thanks to its incredible AI features. Prezi AI makes creating a polished, professional presentation a breeze, allowing you to focus on your content while it handles the design.
With Prezi AI, you can simply provide a prompt about your subject, and it will suggest the best layout, color scheme, and design elements. This means you don’t have to be a design expert to create a visually stunning presentation. Prezi AI can even put your entire presentation together for you, ensuring that it looks cohesive and engaging.
One of the standout features is the Prezi AI text tool. It can suggest edits to improve your content, recommend the best way to display your text—whether it be in lists, bullet points, or paragraphs—and even adjust the length of your text to fit perfectly on your slides. This not only saves time but also means you don’t need to constantly double-check your work. You can present with assurance, knowing your presentation is professionally polished.
Presenting with Prezi is incredibly easy, making it ideal for both virtual and in-person settings. For virtual presentations, Prezi Video allows you to display your slides live next to you, creating a more engaging experience for your audience. Prezi’s collaborative features are perfect for team presentations, enabling the entire team to present together virtually. Each member can take turns presenting their sections seamlessly, making it feel as if you’re all in the same room, even if you’re miles apart.
Prezi AI takes the stress out of creating and presenting, making it the best tool for team presentations. With its intelligent design suggestions, text editing capabilities, and seamless virtual presentation features, Prezi ensures your team can deliver an impressive and professional presentation every time.
Here’s a summary of the key things Prezi AI can do
Build your presentation: Prezi AI can literally put together your team presentation for you. It will come up with the best theme and layout and put the whole presentation into action.
Suggest improvements: Prezi AI can offer suggestions to make sure your presentation looks visually appealing and engaging. By proposing matching color palettes, images, and layouts, Prezi AI helps you create a polished presentation that leaves a lasting impression.
Text editing: To make your message clear and concise, use the Prezi AI text editing tool. It can generate text based on prompts you provide as well as offer edit suggestions on existing text. This way, you know your text is correct and makes sense.
Team presentation ideas from Prezi
Here are some Prezi presentation examples that would work well as team presentations:
TED talks: From Inspiration to innovation
The Prezi presentation by Neil Hughes is a great example of a team presentation because it’s divided into sections, giving each participant a chance to share their insights. Incorporating videos for each section, where specific team members speak, effectively ensures that everyone has their say. This approach helps convey the message clearly and makes sure all voices are heard.
Adopting a gratitude frame of mind
The layout chosen for this presentation is ideal for a team effort. With four main points, each delved into further, it allows each team member to take responsibility for one point. This ensures a fair division of speaking time and workload among all team members.
UX design tips for product managers
Similar to the previous example, this serves as great inspiration for team presentations due to its division into five main points, each explored in detail. Assigning one team member to focus on each area allows them to dedicate their full effort to their section, resulting in a high-quality presentation overall. Additionally, this showcases how Prezi’s open canvas can create an immersive experience by zooming in and out of points, making your message much clearer.
Hopefully, these examples have given you more of an insight of what your team presentation could look like. Allocating one team member to each key point is a great idea to split the workload and ensure everyone gets their chance to speak and show off their expertise.
However, not all team presentations require every team member to be involved in the presenting stage. Sometimes, tasks may be split in a way where some participants focus on the creation process, while others focus on the presenting aspect. It purely depends on where the talents of your team members lie.
Wow your audience with a team presentation created with Prezi
Team presentations provide many positives that may not be attained with solo presentations. The opportunity to have different ideas and points of view can really broaden the perspective of your audience. They can deliver a sense of team unity and strength, which is particularly important in business. When it comes to educational settings, team presentations are a great opportunity to practice working in a group and identify each student’s strengths and weaknesses.
Creating a team presentation should be more about the content you’re sharing and less about spending hours on design. This is why utilizing Prezi AI to create your finished product is a great choice, as you can focus more closely on working as a team.
By using Prezi for your next team presentation, you can take your audience on an immersive journey through your words, ensuring your audience is hooked from start to finish.
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Hit Share and then copy that direct link. Now, back in PowerPoint, I'll follow the same steps from earlier. Click insert, then Online Video and I'll paste in that URL from Stream, hit Insert again, and then stretch it to cover the full size of the slide, and then I'll try it out.
Present your slides. If you're already in a Teams meeting, select Share and then under the PowerPoint Live section, choose the PowerPoint file you're wanting to present. If you don't see the file in the list, select Browse OneDrive or Browse my computer. If your presentation is already open in PowerPoint for Windows or Mac, go to the file ...
In this step-by-step tutorial, learn how to best present Microsoft PowerPoint slides in Microsoft Teams.⌚ Timestamps0:00 Introduction1:58 Example of the prob...
Use a presenter mode. After your meeting starts, at the upper-right corner of Teams, select Share content to choose a Presenter mode and other options. Meeting presenter modes and options. Under Presenter mode, choose the mode that you want. Also, be sure that your camera is turned on. Before starting the presentation, select Customize and ...
Sharing computer sound lets you stream audio from your computer to meeting participants through Teams. You can use it to play a video or audio clip as part of a presentation. To share sound, select Share content in your meeting controls and then Include computer sound (it's the switch on the top right of your sharing options). All sound from ...
In this step-by-step tutorial you will learn 5 presentation tips for Microsoft Teams that will make you a more confident presenter at your next virtual meeti...
Vary how you show up during your next presentation by exploring the different presenter modes in Microsoft Teams. Jennie from the #MicrosoftTeams team explai...
Give the feature a try next time you need to present in a Teams meetings: Join a Teams meeting or an ad-hoc Teams call. Open your presentation in PowerPoint for Windows. Click the Present in Teams button in the top right corner. Scenarios to try. Ready to take the PowerPoint Live feature for a spin? Try some of the scenarios below. As a presenter:
TIP: Use OneDrive syncing to have an easy access to files in the most relevant teams you belong to. Once you are sharing the PowerPoint you can see it in the presenter view mode! This feature is generally available! This makes it easy to do presentations using Teams - without having to have a PowerPoint desktop app open at the same time.
The seven options are: Share your entire screen/desktop. Share the Slide Show window. Share the editing window with a clean look. Run the Slide Show in a window and share that window. Use the PowerPoint sharing option in Teams. Use Presenter View to show the audience your slides while you see Presenter View. Present with your video beside your ...
Method 2: Share PowerPoint Window. If you want only to present your PowerPoint slide deck, it's best to share just that window. Here's how: Click Share and select Window when it's your turn to present. Enable Include computer sound if you have a video or to share and select your presentation from the list. A red border will appear around your ...
Microsoft Teams has recently introduced Presenter modes that allows you to put your video on top of or beside a screen or window that you share in a Teams meeting. This seems to work regardless of whether you share a window or a screen and the content can be slides, a browser, or any other content.
In Teams share the screen that has the slides on it; Deliver your presentation; Full detailed article. I have an article with full details, including screen captures, on PowerPoint Presenter View with 2 screens on a Mac. Video. The steps are very similar to using 2 screens in Zoom because sharing a screen is similar in Teams or Zoom.
On Teams for desktop, you can customize how you see your and other people's video during a meeting. Change how many people you see in the meeting window, prioritize seeing people with their cameras turned on, or reposition your own video on the screen. Notes: Gallery view of up to 49 participant videos is only supported in the Teams desktop app.
It's actually really simple. To share your face and your content at the same time. Open the content you want to share (slide show, browser, file, white board, etc.). Open an app that shows a live feed of your webcam. - On Windows, you can use the Camera app (open the Start menu and search Camera ).
It might take some time to process the recording, when it done, you can find the recording directly from the Chat tab. And to post it to the group on teams, click the " More options " button next to the recording and click the option " Get link ", then you can copy and paste the link to any team you want to share, or you can click Share ...
Learn how to share PowerPoint Slides in Microsoft Teams the correct way. There are different ways to present your PowerPoint slides in a Teams meeting. In th...
According to my tests, it's a normal behavior if you share the PowerPoint file directly. As a workaround, you can share your desktop so that you can play the video for all the students at the same time. By the way, remember to select Include system audio when selecting Share in your meeting controls so that the students would hear the audio.
Present your slides. If you're already in a Teams meeting, select Share and then under the PowerPoint Live section, choose the PowerPoint file you're wanting to present. If you don't see the file in the list, select Browse OneDrive or Browse my computer. If your presentation is already open in PowerPoint for Windows or Mac, go to the file ...
1. Start your Teams meeting and, when the time comes to present, select Share from the toolbar to share your screen. 2. You can now move the Presenter toolbar from its default location at the top of the screen and reposition it in any area of your screen. Just click on any non-interactive area of the Toolbar or on the new drag handle.
This is not how Teams and Zoom usually work. When you share your screen or slides, your webcam video is reduced to a small panel in the corner of the viewer's screen. A viewer can swap the video and the slides but then the video is large and the slides are small (and unreadable). As a presenter you have no control over what format the viewer ...
Plan the content. When planning your content, outline the key points you want to cover. Break down the presentation into sections and decide who will handle each part. Make sure the content flows logically from one section to the next. This planning phase is crucial for a cohesive presentation. 4.
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If you're leading a presentation and need to share your PowerPoint slides during a Microsoft Teams meeting, here's how: • Once your meeting is active, select...
How to generate AI video online. Open Kapwing AI. Start a new project and open AI tools by clicking on the lightbulb icon in the top left-hand corner of the editor. Describe video and edit. Enter a video topic and describe video elements in full detail. Then, select the size, text style, and duration of your video.
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