Microsoft "Cameo" Breaks the Barrier

Speaker

Raltman01
Director, BetterPresenting
Webinar Details
  • Date and Time
    Tue, Jun 04, 2024 at 9AM Pacific / 12PM Eastern
  • Duration
    1 Hour
  • Cost
    $0 (Free)
  • Can't Attend?
    Register and we'll send you the recording after the webinar.
  • The "Sign in" link will NOT appear until one hour before the webinar start time.

Handouts


Description

Now available to all Microsoft 365 users, Cameo just might be the answer to your dreams if you have wanted to better integrate your virtual self with your slides. Cheaper than using a mixer and easier than Open Broadcast Software, Cameo takes your camera output and drops it right onto your slide.

Using Cameo effectively involves a bit of redesign and some strategic thinking, without which Death by PowerPoint remains one false move away.

This session will get you started with this exciting feature and introduce you to best practices. It is for all virtual presenters who want to up their games.

In partnership with
 

 

About Rick Altman

Rick Altman has been hired by hundreds of companies, listened to by tens of thousands of professionals, and read by millions of people, all of whom seek better results with their presentation content and delivery. He covers the whole of the industry, from message crafting, through presentation design, slide creation, software technique, and delivery. He is the host of the Presentation Summit, now in its 16th season as the most prominent learning event for the presentation community.

Away from the conference, he regularly leads private presentation skills development workshops within organizations and is working on the fourth edition of the popular and provocatively-titled Why Most PowerPoint Presentations Suck, and how you can make them better.

Altman came to presentations through publishing and graphic design. He claims to have invented desktop publishing back in 1982 and can show a galley sheet of type that was produced by connecting his Osborne 1 computer to a typesetter across town with a 300-baud modem (that cost $800). An avid sportsman, he was not a good enough tennis player to make it onto the professional tour. All the rest of this has been his Plan B…





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