The problem with Pecha Kucha by @KristiCasey

PresentationIn New York, things are in fashion for barely a season before they’re passé. In America’s other big cities, three to four years may pass before that fashion catches on. Ten years later, you’ll encounter people sincerely hanging on to that look because it’s still new to them.

The events world is similar. Tasting tripe may be big with hipsters right now, but no one is rushing to put it on a banquet menu. That’s not because event organizers don’t love innovation. It’s because there are still attendees out there who are amazed that mashed potatoes can be served in a martini glass (believe me, I met them just last year).

Which brings me to the presentation style called Pecha Kucha.

Chances are you’ve either heard of it but haven’t seen it, have seen it and are over it, are all about it and love it or have no idea what I’m talking about.

What the #%(*& is it?

To summarize: Pecha Kucha was developed in Tokyo by a couple of architects who thought other architects talked too much. They limited speakers to 20 slides that auto-advance every 20 seconds. Now it’s a “thing” people do in cities all over the world and sometimes at conferences. When done well, these 7-minute Pecha Kucha presentations can be stunning, hilarious, moving and/or thought-provoking.

Sound interesting? It is. And when you mix in drinks, it’s a lot of fun for the crowd, too. But mark my words, Pecha Kucha is in grave danger of becoming as stale and overexposed as a mashed potato martini. And, what’s worse, it can seriously backfire on you. So before you add one to your event, there’s a few things to consider.

Three things you need to know

The first is that no one knows how the hell it’s pronounced. Is it peh-CHA koo-CHA or PEH-cha KOO-cha? At a recent event, one attendee earnestly told me how excited she was to see that night’s “Hunky Monkey” presentations. For the record, I think that’s how we should all pronounce it.

The second thing is that it’s been around since 2003 (feel out of the loop yet?), so there are actually trademarks involved. Want to Hunky Monkey at your conference? Please contact the founders first.

The third thing you need to know is how to educate and prepare the people presenting. At a lot of conferences, attendees are encouraged to sign up and present Hunky Monkeys for each other. (And its founders encourage this “bottom-up” approach to curating content.) Because even professional speakers may be unfamiliar with the format, everyone who participates is taking a risk.

Be cool to your speakers

Unless you want to create an evening that will scar and horrify your presenters for life, please let them know:

  1. 20 seconds is a long time. Don’t believe me? Imagine you’re at a birthday party and someone is singing “Happy Birthday” to you, but they’re doing it really slow. They get to the end and, just before you blow out the candles, they start singing the song again. You just have to wait until they’re done. That’s 20 seconds. And that’s the feeling your presenters will have when they realize they said everything they wanted to say about this slide in 10 seconds but the slide that won’t go away because …
  2. The slides auto-advance, so you don’t control them. There are no do-overs. There’s no “Can we go to the next slide, please?” Make sure you remind speakers that they are at the mercy of the machine.
  3. The audience is on your side. Everyone knows the Hunky Monkey is difficult. That’s why only a fraction of the audience is presenting. Mentally prepare them to have a Plan B. Remind speakers that it’s OK to fall down, pick themselves up and keep going, because everyone is rooting for them. 
  4. Faster and louder is not better. When ballsy people get nervous, they get fast and loud. Thought 20 seconds was long? Try surviving 400 seconds of ear-splitting adrenaline-fueled hoo-hah as the presenter tries to beat the clock on each slide. Do your audience a favor and remind presenters that if they talk less, there’ll be less stress … and that it’s OK to breathe.
  5. Practice may not make perfect, but it will keep you from looking like an ass. It doesn’t matter how charming a presenter is, they can’t “wing” a Hunky Monkey. The minute someone takes the stage who is honest and present, knows what slide is coming next and has thought out the visuals accompanying their story, the “winger” will look like a jerk. Please let them know that in advance so the audience’s disgust doesn’t take them by surprise.
  6. Friends don’t let friends drink and stumble through a high-speed presentation. Caution the presenters about imbibing too much liquid courage, especially if there’s more than seven speakers and an open bar. Believe me, drunken Hunky Monkeys aren’t pretty.

Finally, a word about judgement. Recently, I was at a Hunky Monkey where the speakers were lined up on stage while drunken attendees texted in who they thought did the best job. The results were shown in real time, allowing the presenters – who had just risked everything to try something new – see just how many (or few) people thought they did a good job. That’s not cool. Audience choice awards are fine, but keep the results private.

So, what do you think about Hunky Monkeys? Are you over it, all about it or going to try it?

Photo by 05Com

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Kristi Casey Sanders

I'm the VP of Creative/Chief Storyteller of Plan Your Meetings (PlanYourMeetings.com), a free, award-winning educational and social resource for meeting and event planners. Everything I do at PYM is designed to educate, empower and inspire meeting and event professionals and connect them to the people and resources they need to work more efficiently. I'm one of MPI's 2012-2013 Proprietary Content speakers on the topic of meeting technology, but I also educate on the topics of proving ROI, meeting sustainably, industry challenges/solutions and cost-saving strategies. Engage with me on Twitter @PYMLive or @KristiCasey. Hang out with me on G+ in our PlanYourMeetings+ community or just read my personal musings at Things No One Tells You. Plan well and prosper, friends.

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  • http://twitter.com/tracibrowne traci browne

    Loved that Kristi! We did some Hunky Monkey presentation at Event Camp East Coast this year. Then discussed how they would work or how they might not. One of the common negative comments was that the audience found it difficult to concentrate because they were so nervous for the speakers. I thought that was interesting but it was probably due to the fact the audience could see the 20 second timer winding down for each slide. They felt if they could not see that they could have relaxed more.

    We also scheduled them for first thing in the morning in the agenda. Our conference was a peer conference and required a lot of active participation and creative thinking on the part of the attendees. I thought this would be a good way to start with something a bit more passive while the caffeine kicked in.

    I was one of the presenters and I did enjoy the experience. I found the hardest part was coming up with the 20 slides and images that would most appropriately represent that 20 second portion of the idea.

  • http://twitter.com/lizkingevents/status/159650722433081345/ Liz King (@lizkingevents) (@lizkingevents) (@lizkingevents) (@lizkingevents) (@lizkingevents)

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  • http://twitter.com/KristiCasey KristiCasey

    Traci- How interesting that many of your audience members felt nervous for the speakers! I know that seeing the real-time popularity poll results made the audience nervous where I was. It makes sense to me that if the audience could see the 20 seconds count down that they’d be more focused on that than the presentations.

    I have to admit that 20 slides does seem like an awful lot to me too. But the best presentations flow almost independent of the images. The presenter makes you feel as if the story would happen anyway, just in 20-second bursts, and they use the images as punctuation rather than as prompts.

  • Mitchell Beer

    Kristi, you make some really interesting points about PeCHA KuCHA (sorry, I can’t bring myself to call it Hunky Monkey). The two takeaways I draw from you post are that:

    * Like any other session format, Pecha Kucha has its place, and should not be used beyond the purposes for which it makes sense. It isn’t a silver bullet, but no other format is, either.

    * Like any other format, Pecha Kucha can go horribly wrong…or it can be a soaring success. As a one-time and, I hope, reasonably but not 100% effective PK presenter, my blood runs cold at the thought of participants (drunken or otherwise) texting in their critical comments in real time. But that’s not an essential or even an intended element of the format, and certainly points to a moment when presenters can and should be protected from immediate feedback. (Wait 15 minutes for the adrenaline to subside. Then talk to them.)

    I guess I’m fortunate that I’ve only ever seen Pecha Kuchas organized by one of the most thoughtful, sensitive, and effective meeting designers I’ve ever had the pleasure to meet or work with. That would be Adrian Segar of Conferences That Work in Brattleboro, VT. I’m hoping he’ll comment here, as well, because he’s had a lot of PK experience in a number of different settings.

    As far as 20 slides x 20 seconds…it’s intimidating as h@ll at first, but once you get used to it, it becomes a fixed frame inside of which anything is possible.

    So on the whole, I do think Pecha Kucha is here to stay, but no one is suggesting that it can or should be the format for all occasions. Used as directed, it’s a great way to share knowledge and deliver an energy boost onsite.

    (BTW, I caught Traci’s Pecha Kucha online after ECEC11. It rocked.)

    • http://twitter.com/tracibrowne traci browne

      Aw, Thanks Mitchell…it was a blast doing it!

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  • http://twitter.com/KristiCasey KristiCasey

    Hi Mitchell – Thanks for your thoughts. I agree that it’s not going away anytime soon. Because it is fun and a rush and an engaging way to communicate.

    But like anything good, it eventually goes mainstream. And before it started popping up everywhere, I thought it worth pointing out some things you could do to keep from ruining the experience for everyone else :)

    P.S.- You get extra sugar points for your Traci Browne love & props

  • http://twitter.com/executiveoasis Executive Oasis Intl

    Definitely with clients requesting presentations in shorter and shorter timeframes, formats like Pecha Kucha are going to become more common.

    • KristiCasey

      Even more reason why we need to educate the presenters and really put some thought into why we are adding it into our educational mix!

  • http://twitter.com/DonnaKastner Donna Kastner

    Great post, Kristi. You made me think AND smile. I agree with Anne that short form is more popular, PLUS it drives better learning and networking.

    Pecha Kucha is a solid format for shorter presentations, but I’ve seen too many people (including myself) speed talk their way through slides OR cover a talking point soundly, only to discover there’s 8 more seconds to fill.

    Auto-advance on slides is another concern. You find dazzling photos to support talking points. Having it advance just a couple of seconds early blows the impact.

    • http://twitter.com/KristiCasey KristiCasey

      I think one of the big pitfalls is no matter how often you practice it, the adrenaline of the moment will mess with your timing. Especially if you’re an excitable or nervous person. The big winner at the event I described above was very calm, very likable and very conversational. You never got the feeling that she was talking too fast or two loud. She had a point to make with every image and if she had time to kill, she made that part of the journey for us.