Media Guidelines

Presentations

The following list includes the colors, fonts, margins and effects used in our presentation templates. We have separated the Themes(templates) by Google Slide and PPT, they are similar but work slightly different.

Google Slides

Colors

The tints/shades will be auto generated google slides and may not match our color guideline shades 100%. There is no way around this so best practice is to stick to the primary colors.

Text & Background

1. Ōnin Black: #101820

2. White: #FFFFFF

3. Ōnin Blue: #004987

4. Light Gray 3 (Default): #eeeeee

Links

Ōnin Gray: #63666A

Accents

1. Ōnin Gold: #FFB600

2. Ōnin Blue: #004987

3. Ōnin Light Blue: #71C5E8

4. Ōnin Red: #AA182C

5. Ōnin Green: #47A23F

6. Ōnin Orange: #FFB900

Fonts

Roboto

  • Use if the presentation will only live online
  • Use Roboto Black for headers
  • Use Roboto Regular for everything else

Arial

  • Use if there is a chance this will be opened in  Power Point
  • Use Arial Black for headers
  • Use Arial Normal for everything else

Margins

  • 0.5” for content
  • 0.125” for logos – footer – page numbers

Transitions

Dissolve

  • Set to 0.3 seconds

Animations

Fade In/Out

  • Set to 0.3 seconds

Powerpoint

These can be created by our marketing team, and hosted on the doc server or somehow made available to the field.

  • Set up as a Powerpoint template file (.potx)

Colors

The tints/shades will be auto generated by PPT and may not match our color guideline shades 100%. There is no way around this so best practice is to stick to the primary colors.

Text & Background

1. Ōnin Black: #101820

2. White: #FFFFFF

3. Ōnin Blue: #004987

4. Light Gray 3 (Default): #eeeeee

Links

Ōnin Gray: #63666A

Accents

1. Ōnin Gold: #FFB600

2. Ōnin Blue: #004987

3. Ōnin Light Blue: #71C5E8

4. Ōnin Red: #AA182C

5. Ōnin Green: #47A23F

6. Ōnin Orange: #FFB900

Fonts

Arial

  • Use if there is a chance this will be opened in  Power Point
  • Use Arial Black for headers
  • Use Arial Normal for everything else

Margins

  • 0.5” for content
  • 0.125” for logos – footer – page numbers

Transitions

Fade

  • Set to 0.25 seconds

Animations

Dissolve

  • Set to 0.25 seconds

Wipe

  • Set to 0.25 seconds

Fly In/Out

  • Set to 0.25 seconds

Best Practices

Images

Image Size/Compression

Proper DPI for output
  • 150ppi for screens
  • 96ppi for email
Deleting cropped areas

Powerpoint

  • This will help reduce the file size by getting rid of the unused/cropped parts of the images
  • PPT has a built in feature under “image compression” that lets you do this

Google Slides

  • Google has a built in image size limit
  • No need to worry about deleting sections of images

    Image Types

    PNGs

    Ideal for logos due to the transparency channel

    • PNGs can bloat the file due to the larger file size, only use when transparency is necessary
    • When compressing images within PPT, PNGs sometimes can have errors. Take this into consideration as it may have to be re-compressed to work correctly and/or size the file appropriately before importing into PPT.
    JPGs

    Ideal for photos when transparency is not needed.

    SVGs

    Only available in PowerPoint

    • Should only be used when recoloring inside of PowerPoint is needed.

    Videos

    Volume Normalization

    • Normally we shouldn’t need to touch this if the videos come from our team.
    • May need to adjust level if videos come from outside our company.
    • This can be done inside of PowerPoint but not Google slides

    Play Styles

    PowerPoint
    • Set to autoplay
    • Fade to black
    • Play at fullscreen
    Google Slides
    • Click to play
    • Fullscreen

    Video Types

    Vimeo

    PowerPoint

    Has to be downloaded and embedded

    • We don’t want any external links in PowerPoint, this goes against the offline strength of PowerPoint
    Google Slides

    Needs to be re-uploaded into a google drive folder and can then be attached to the presentation.

    • We usually upload the video to the Assets folder for the project.
    • This will convert it to YouTube file type, but will only be hosted on our drive.

    YouTube

    PowerPoint

    This will have to be ripped and embedded.

    • We don’t want any external links in PPT, this goes against the offline strength of PPT.
    Google Slides

    Google slides will link to YouTube and automatically set up the video player

    MP4 and Others

    PowerPoint

    Videos inside of Powerpoint always bloats the file, and should be avoided unless specifically requested.

    • Keep videos at 720p max the smaller the better
      • We don’t want any external links in PPT, this goes against the offline strength of PPT.
    Google Slides

    The videos are hosted online so really the issue comes down to internet provider speeds

    • Keep videos at 1080p for best quality
      • We should never need a 4k video in a presentation

    Video Quality

    PowerPoint

    Videos inside of Powerpoint always bloats the file, and should be avoided unless specifically requested.

    • Keep videos at 720p max the smaller the better
      • Use discretion for the smallest video size, if it looks bad to you, it looks worse to them.
    Google Slides

    The videos are hosted online so really the issue comes down to internet provider speeds

    • Keep videos at 1080p for best quality
      • We should never need a 4k video in a presentation

    File Size

    It is important to consider file size limit for PPTs. These are meant to be used while offline and the larger the file the more lag is introduced while presenting.

    Best practice is to keep the file size below 25mb

    • Gmail has a file size limit of 25mb
      • Anything larger and it will be uploaded to Google Drive and send a download link inside of the email.

    Ways to reduce the PowerPoint file size

    • Compressing pictures
      • This is gone over in detail in the images section
    • Limiting videos/images
      • The fewer embedded images/videos in the PowerPoint the smaller the file size will be
    • Create shapes/graphics inside of PowerPoint
      • This means using PowerPoint’s set shapes instead of creating something in Illustrator and importing and image of it.