Avoid These Filler Words When Writing for Your Presentation

content composition

Filler words

presentation content

presentation tips

Rick Enrico

SlideGenius

Even the most complex ideas can be sufficiently explained using simple terms.As American founding father, Thomas Jefferson wrote, โ€œNever use two words when one will do.โ€ Keeping things short and concise keeps a presentation from rambling and confusing people.As weโ€™ve discussed previously, the conversational tone works when presenting to an audience. However, our everyday speech doesnโ€™t always translate well into written form.Avoid using words that may work in everyday situations but not in writing slide content.Here are ten common filler words to remove from your deck:

Got

Youโ€™ve got to stop using โ€œgot.โ€ Say it properly: stop using โ€œgot.โ€See the difference?The latter sounds more certain, succinct, and direct.

Just

If you just canโ€™t stop, then youโ€™re just not doing it right. Unless youโ€™re not speaking in the context of justice, avoid using โ€œjust.โ€ It needlessly lengthens your writing.This is also sometimes used in combination with โ€œgot.โ€: โ€œYouโ€™ve just got to learn proper etiquette.โ€Keep it simple. Say โ€œLearn proper etiquette.โ€ instead.

Really

Really? Avoid using โ€œreallyโ€ in your slides.Itโ€™s okay to use it in everyday conversations when insisting on and emphasizing a point. However, using it in writing makes you sound like youโ€™re trying too hard to convince someone to take your side.Remove it, and youโ€™ll sound more believable and credible. No, really.

Then

If youโ€™re narrating a sequence of events, then you can use this word.Readers easily understand that sentences in succession are connected, with or without bullet points. Your flow will remain the same without it.

Maybe

Nothing reeks of uncertainty more than โ€œmaybe.โ€ It works for lightly declining a party invitationโ€ฆmaybe.Remove it to sound more certain.

Basically

It basically doesnโ€™t contribute anything to your sentences, except for one useless adverb to add to your word count.Even if you mean to imply that the statement is a summary, it still sounds condescending to your audience. Youโ€™re implying that they wouldnโ€™t understand what youโ€™re talking about in its non-basic form.Unless youโ€™re writing a college paper and your professor is strict about word counts, remove it entirely.

Literally

The word literally means โ€œwithout exaggeration or inaccuracy.โ€Unfortunately, people use this word when they should be saying โ€œfiguratively.โ€ Its use as an intensifier is both totally incorrect and terribly irritating.If something is what it really is, remove it or use an appropriate adjective instead.

Amazing

Amazingly, its overuse the main cause of its decline.Simply saying that something is amazing convinces nobody. Itโ€™s in no way superior or even equal to substantial explanation and demonstration of a truly amazing thing.

Things

When youโ€™re talking about things, no one really understands what youโ€™re talking about.Be specific when writing for your deck. Use a noun that describes a specific object or concept. Otherwise, just remove it.

Stuff

The difference between stuff and things is minimal, except that stuff is even more general and overused. Itโ€™s commonly used to give conversations a warm and informal feel, as if you were speaking with friends.In a professional setting, it makes you sound like you donโ€™t know what youโ€™re saying. Free yourself of stuff.

Conclusion

Just because they work in everyday life doesnโ€™t mean you should use them in your presentation slides.Keep your writing style different between speaking and writing to optimize your messageโ€™s effectiveness and your audienceโ€™s engagement.Check out our presentation portfolio for some effective examples, or contact us now for a free quote!

References

Literally.” Dictionary.com. Accessed July 02, 2015.”Why Conversational Tones Work for Corporate Presentations.” SlideGenius, Inc. May 7, 2015. Accessed July 02, 2015.Featured Image: โ€œWriting? Yeah.โ€ by Caleb Roenigk on flickr.com

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