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A danger of using slide decks for technical design reviews is loss of important technical information. In order to summarize something in a slide or slide deck, the presenter thins-out information without its raw data and divorces it from the plots, graphs, and other technical analyses.
Slide decks are useful to the presenter to pull together a meeting. Slide decks are terrible for the reviewers who need to review technical information and make decisions from it.
In this episode, I review some alternatives.
The podcast blog includes extra information, links, and citations.
Send us a message
If your team is still catching problems too late — let's talk.
→ Schedule a free discovery call: Dianna's calendar
Get the full framework.
→ Pierce the Design Fog
ABOUT DIANNA
Dianna Deeney is a product development process strategist with over 25 years of experience in regulated industries. She is president of Deeney Enterprises, LLC, where she helps product development teams make better decisions upstream — before costly design mistakes get built in.
By Dianna DeeneyA danger of using slide decks for technical design reviews is loss of important technical information. In order to summarize something in a slide or slide deck, the presenter thins-out information without its raw data and divorces it from the plots, graphs, and other technical analyses.
Slide decks are useful to the presenter to pull together a meeting. Slide decks are terrible for the reviewers who need to review technical information and make decisions from it.
In this episode, I review some alternatives.
The podcast blog includes extra information, links, and citations.
Send us a message
If your team is still catching problems too late — let's talk.
→ Schedule a free discovery call: Dianna's calendar
Get the full framework.
→ Pierce the Design Fog
ABOUT DIANNA
Dianna Deeney is a product development process strategist with over 25 years of experience in regulated industries. She is president of Deeney Enterprises, LLC, where she helps product development teams make better decisions upstream — before costly design mistakes get built in.

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