Complex systems
Posted: Mon Dec 23, 2024 4:56 am
This is such a puzzle – where does the audience member start? Who is responsible for what? Why is there so much small text? This kind of slide should be marked internal-only for starters, there’s too much strategic detail that a client or prospect has no hope of retaining in a 30-minute presentation.
So how do we turn this into something elegant and memorable?
First cut down the number of steps. Can you collapse two or three into one parent category?
Next cut down the number of words. Rewrite the copy into short statements (tip: rewriting is often better than simply ‘editing’) with clear actions in each.
Assign a colour and icon to each party, this will enable the audience to easily see which tasks they’re responsible for, and what they can rely on you to do.
Finally choose a clean visual – arrows and phone number sweden chevrons are great for this kind of thing. And with a few design flourishes, they can look really classy too.
Et voila! An easy-to-understand roadmap that won’t take 30 minutes to explain.
Sometimes, however, you need a system to look complicated, because it is complicated. A robust machine learning program designed to find patients the best health insurance takes information from lots of different sources and is constantly improving itself. Additionally, we want it to be safe and secure, due to the customer data it’s handling. We also want it to create meaningful insights for healthcare providers and patients. They say Rome wasn’t built in a day, and complex systems like that don’t just develop on the back of a beer mat.
So how do we turn this into something elegant and memorable?
First cut down the number of steps. Can you collapse two or three into one parent category?
Next cut down the number of words. Rewrite the copy into short statements (tip: rewriting is often better than simply ‘editing’) with clear actions in each.
Assign a colour and icon to each party, this will enable the audience to easily see which tasks they’re responsible for, and what they can rely on you to do.
Finally choose a clean visual – arrows and phone number sweden chevrons are great for this kind of thing. And with a few design flourishes, they can look really classy too.
Et voila! An easy-to-understand roadmap that won’t take 30 minutes to explain.
Sometimes, however, you need a system to look complicated, because it is complicated. A robust machine learning program designed to find patients the best health insurance takes information from lots of different sources and is constantly improving itself. Additionally, we want it to be safe and secure, due to the customer data it’s handling. We also want it to create meaningful insights for healthcare providers and patients. They say Rome wasn’t built in a day, and complex systems like that don’t just develop on the back of a beer mat.