Hate Long, Rambling Powerpoint Presentations? Try Pecha-Kucha

Hate Long, Rambling Speeches? Try Pecha-Kucha

A pecha-kucha event in Tokyo
Courtesy Mark Dytham and Astrid Klein

At a pecha-kucha, an event conceived by Tokyo architects Mark Dytham and Astrid Klein, presenters have 6 minutes and 40 seconds — or 20 slides, 20 seconds per slide — each to show off a talent, unveil an invention or just share an idea. The idea is to put limits on speeches and force the viewer to focus and think.

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October 20, 2010

It's the bane of students, business people and even the military: If you've ever yawned through a slideshow, you're probably familiar with that dreaded malady of modern times, known as "Death by PowerPoint."

Now, for the long-suffering audience, there's some good news. Tokyo architects Mark Dytham and Astrid Klein hit on the antidote to presentation overload — a style they dubbed pecha-kucha, Japanese for "chitchat" — and their elegant solution is taking the world by storm.

Dytham and Klein are easygoing by nature, but if there's one thing they can't stand it's slideshows full of hot air. So when the pair staged a forum featuring the work of their architect friends, they laid down one rule as simple as it was extreme.

"The problem with architects is they talk too much. So how could we find a way to stop them? You get passionate about whatever you're talking about and you go on forever and ever — so we came up with 20 slides, 20 seconds a slide," he says. He says 10 slides, 10 seconds per slide was too short and 30 slides, 30 seconds per slide was too long.

"We were trying to find a catchy 5 minutes or so for the architect to present," he says.

With speakers allotted a draconian 6 minutes and 40 seconds each, Dytham and Klein were able to pack 20 speeches — or rather, speechlets — into a single evening. Klein named these curious events after a quaint old Japanese onomatopoeia.

"We were looking for a name, and somebody says, 'It's just chitchat, it's pecha-kucha, pecha-kucha, pecha-kucha — people talking too much. So that's where we came up with pecha-kucha," she says.

Pecha-Kucha Goes Viral

At first, pecha-kucha (pronounced: peh-CHAKH-cha) was purely local. But then, something strange happened. Without any prompting or publicity, and to the astonishment of its founders, the format went viral.

In just the past three years, the speech events have taken root in hundreds of cities in the U.S. and worldwide, from Amersfoort, Netherlands, to Saragossa, Spain. New cities are added, on average, every 72 hours. Nearly a quarter of a million people every year gather in warehouses, old prisons and forest clearings for pecha-kucha nights — a spectacle that seems to belie the pretenses of the online age.

People really like to get together physically. We forget that on Facebook. They say they're 'social networks,' but they're not really; they're anti-social networks. People in a city want to get together and have a chat and a beer. And this was a way to pull people together.

- Mark Dytham, a Tokyo architect

"People really like to get together physically," Dytham says. "We forget that on Facebook. They say they're 'social networks,' but they're not really; they're anti-social networks. People in a city want to get together and have a chat and a beer. And this was a way to pull people together."

Since it began, in 2003, pecha-kucha has spawned imitators, like Ignite, and corporate consultants have appropriated the speed technique. Unwittingly, Klein and Dytham seemed to have stumbled across an apparently universal longing of audience members listening to those who pontificate: just get to the point.

It all began in a grungy basement club in downtown Tokyo, called Super-Deluxe. Pecha-kucha nights nowadays give the floor to just about anyone who's been struck by the muse. It's amateur hour meets college lecture meets vaudeville and performance art.

On any particular evening, the audience will have heard from a Finnish scholar wryly explaining the science of "partying," an aid worker trying to sell her book about human-rights abuses in the Congo, and a man doing card tricks on his iPad.

"It's just supposed to be a small glimpse," says Will French, an Australian artist who unveiled his invention at a pecha-kucha — a motorcycle-powered sewing machine. "And if it whets their appetite, then they can find out more. It's more like a performance itself rather than a lecture or a forum."

The Power Of Catching Only A Glimpse

But here's the irony of pecha-kucha: As TV news shifts ever closer to entertainment, and images flash by in a second or two, pecha-kucha's 20-second slides actually force the viewer to focus and think, Dytham says.

"We did the whole fundraising activity for Haiti; some of the images were quite moving — images of the first two to three days in Haiti," he says. "And when you have to look at those for 20 seconds — and you've got time to think about the images — that's very different from when you see images on TV, which are there for three seconds. ... You kind of miss the point."

Dytham and Klein knew they were on to something, when a request to start pecha-kucha nights came from Silicon Valley. The writer was a Microsoft employee and, a member of the team responsible for PowerPoint.

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Comments

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Katherine S (KitanaOR_Katherine)

Katherine S (KitanaOR_Katherine) wrote:

When I was in SF, I met a guy at a party that worked on the powerpoint team.

Fri Oct 22 08:03:29 2010

eric scoles (escoles)

eric scoles (escoles) wrote:

classic example of solving the wrong problem because it's easier than solving the right one.

Thu Oct 21 22:19:09 2010

David Speakman (DavidSpeakman)

David Speakman (DavidSpeakman) wrote:

Silicon Valley is in California - Microsoft's Power Point team is in Washington.

Thu Oct 21 16:02:46 2010

Greta Hotopp (PKN_NewHaven)

Greta Hotopp (PKN_NewHaven) wrote:

Astrid and Mark were cutting-edge thinkers and designers --thriving in Tokyo-- well before starting PechaKucha. The beauty of the events are not simply the format, but in the other details that make it "work" as a forum for innovation, creativity, and interaction. Those details are translated to other locations through their well-thought-out city agreements, often to great positive [local] effect. The integrated whole of their Tokyo team's contribution is tremendous and sophisticated, and evident in the large number of PechaKucha-enthusiast cities.

Thu Oct 21 11:44:03 2010

Greta Hotopp (PKN_NewHaven)

Greta Hotopp (PKN_NewHaven) wrote:

Astrid and Mark were cutting-edge thinkers and designers --thriving in Tokyo-- well before starting PechaKucha. The beauty of the events are not simply the format, but in the other details that make it "work" as a forum for innovation, creativity, and interaction. Those details are translated to other locations through their well-thought-out city agreements, often to great positive [local] effect. The integrated whole of their Tokyo team's contribution is tremendous and sophisticated, and evident in the large number of PechaKucha-enthusiast cities.

Thu Oct 21 11:40:04 2010

Greta Hotopp (PKN_NewHaven)

Greta Hotopp (PKN_NewHaven) wrote:

Astrid and Mark were cutting-edge in their thinking and their work --as foreign architects designing successfully in Tokyo-- before they started PechaKucha Night. The beauty of PKN goes beyond the format of the presentations to the critical details of what it takes to make an event "work." Through well-thought-out city agreements and light, effective oversight, the team in Tokyo has helped other cities translate that vision, often to tremendous positive [local] effect.

Thu Oct 21 11:25:52 2010

Larry Baum (lwbaum)

Larry Baum (lwbaum) wrote:

Science conferences often use presentation time limits almost as short: sometimes 10 minutes, sometimes 15 minutes. The reason for such brief talks is necessity. There are too many speakers and too little time. The quick format works pretty well.

Wed Oct 20 23:35:19 2010

e hart (scholarmom)

e hart (scholarmom) wrote:

Toastmasters does this every day of every week in every city, state, country, on every continent around the world and has been for over 50 years. The Japanese did not invent this. Sorry.

Wed Oct 20 21:43:35 2010

Toby Saunders (TobyNSaunders)

Toby Saunders (TobyNSaunders) wrote:

My hunch is that Japanese people are slightly more clever/conscious than other races of people; that is politically incorrect, I know... it might not be true... just a hunch... it isn't very important information anyway, all races of human should have equal rights. I have neanderthal ancestry... we aren't 'cave people'. I've witnessed a pecha-kucha presentation at the University of West Georgia from some art professors; frankly they seemed rushed... statements should be prepared before the thing, to avoid getting cut-off of having with awkward silence.

Wed Oct 20 21:28:03 2010

Gary Coyne (GSCoyne)

Gary Coyne (GSCoyne) wrote:

Yes, pecha-kucha could help, but a short bad PP is still bad. Every time there is text on the screen, your audience is reading (maybe) and not listening. A PP presentation should be done just as one talks with a pen and napkin over a beer or coffee. Those can go for hours and no one minds or sleeps. Think about it.

Wed Oct 20 20:31:24 2010

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