Designing the emotional current
These slides come from a presentation we created for a software company aiming to raise a sense of urgency among clients through a story that showcases market volatility. The goal was to help audiences feel the stakes, reflect on their own position, and recognize what it takes to be successful.
Take a look at the sequence of four slides. The open water in the intro slide (in the actual slide, the water moves) evokes uncertainty and vulnerability without stating it directly. This allows the audience to project their own challenges. In the second slide, the presenter and the design ask the audience about their current state of business. The question with three stark options invites reflection and ownership but without accusation or hype. In the third slide, the labels "Dying, Surviving, Thriving" float on open sea, and the metaphor of the rowing team anchors the items in such a way as to balance the ominous environment with some hope. The quotes from Forbes amplify the gravity of the visual story, convincing the viewer that the drama is real. I like how the story ends: the final build tells the audience, "You can thrive too," without a speech bubble but rather with an aspirational image.
There are a few guidelines here we can learn, even without needing graphic design skills. Set emotion before setting expectations. A strong image (in this case, a video with moving water that announces uncertainty) can prime how people interpret what comes next. Consider asking a question first before giving an answer. In this sequence, the presenter is asking: What is your state of business? The evidence from Forbes contributes to the right kind of emotion, meaning that they give the audience permission to feel concern and urgency without feeling manipulated. And since we're sophisticated about negative emotions, we do the same for the positive ones, not telling people that someone can be successful but showing what better looks like.