Delivering Draft 053-1
This document is the first to draft, deliver and perfect the presentation file 2021 Video 053 by Hilary Cluett.
Presentation Purpose
To identify ten subtopics of the Law of Proximity using the bubble method, round one, to reveal connections to user experience design.
Presentation Type
This type of presentation is informational and to set up round two around the bubble when we take a deeper dive into the list of ten subtopics of the Law of Proximity.
Presentation Overview
Delivering the draft sets the baseline for the presentation. The scoring table will update with each version of the presentation.
This is presentation version draft-one with one hundred and sixty-six words spoken in a positive tone over one minute and six seconds, a grade letter A readability score for seventh grade reading level, fifteen total sentences, using nine hundred and sixty-two total characters, and read silently in zero minutes and forty seconds.
- Version of Presentation: Draft -1
- Total Word Count: 166
- Sentiment Analysis: Positive
- Speaking Time: 1 minute and 6 seconds
- Readability Score: A
- Grade Reading Level: Seventh
- Total Sentences: 15
- Total Characters: 962
- Reading Time in Minutes: 0 minutes and 40 seconds
Draft
First published in a video post on LinkedIn Monday, February 22nd, 2021; Bubble Method, Round One - This one is to gather a list of ten subtopics that relate to the law of proximity.
Click the Sway
It's easier to explore visual content on a Sway. Click the card below to see all the information in the article, but as a Sway with images, tables, score cards and word clouds and the video in a responsive format to the device you use - in theory :)
I'm practicing, this is a draft.
Image to Discuss
The rectangular frame is a third longer along its horizontal border, than its shorter vertical edge. As orientation, up and to the right is positive. The background is dark gray.
This image focuses on a central shape of a rectangle with a keyword phrase inside.
Keyword Phrase: Law of Proximity.
Ten lines radiate from the perimeter of the rectangle. the image begins in the centre and splays across the entire frame.
Moving around the rectangle, from the top-right down and around, subtopics appear at the tip end of each new line.
The list of ten subtopics is: When elements are close together, it helps us establish a pattern, because we like to organize by relationship status, fast efficient method information organization, the mind’s innate disposition, connectedness, closure, continuity, similarity, proximity.
Image as a Table
The image I discuss in the video is of a keyword phrase and ten subtopics.
It presents here as a table of Keyword Phrase by Subtopic.
This table has two columns and two major rows.
The first major row is titles for each column.
In sequence from left to right the two column titles are: Keyword Phrase, Subtopic.
The other major row represents the keyword phrase, while ten minor rows list ten subtopics to it.
The keyword phrase is Law of Proximity.
The list of ten minor rows in descending order is: When elements are close together, it helps us establish a pattern, because we like to organize by relationship status, fast efficient method information organization, the mind’s innate disposition, connectedness, closure, continuity, similarity, proximity.
Video Link
The video is now on YouTube to embed in files and play on any device.
Transcript Text
Hi, UX designers, this is Hilary, Hilary Cluett. And Today is Monday, the 22nd of February. And this is video 50, 51, 52, 53 I was counting my tallies. Okay. So today, we do the first round around the bubble of the law of UX. And we're going to go with the law of proximity today. So, as we said, on Saturday, when elements are close together, it helps us establish a pattern, because we like to organize by relationship status. Why? Because it's fast. It's an efficient method that we use to sort information and organize information. It's a fast and efficient method for information organization. Okay. Apparently, it's the minds innate disposition to organize information in this way and in patterns. And this goes again with Gestalt, right, which is connectedness, closure, continuity, similarity and proximity, just like this law of proximity. Okay, so that was the first round around the bubble and I'll see you tomorrow for around two ding ding Okay, bye.
Keyword Frequency Table and Context
The keywords I mention in the video present here as a table of use count, keyword, and context. This table has three columns and twenty major rows.
The first major row is titles for each column. In sequence, from the left-to-right, the three column titles are: Use Count, Keyword, Context.
The other nineteen major rows represent the keywords used, each keyword has a corresponding count to its left and context to its right.
If the same keyword occurs during the presentation with different context, then the semi-colon punctuates this distinction, to delineate multiple contexts within one line of the table.
If a glaring error occurs in the transcript, then text between the square brackets explains the error.
The nineteen keywords on the list are: Fast, February, UX, Organize, Minds, Closure, Continuity, Pattern, Today, Bubble, Law, Hilary, Disposition, Innate, Proximity, Similarity, Connectedness, Information, Gestalt.
Tables, images, and alt text are all available on the Sway. It can open on any device. To view a table to list the keywords from the audio file, frequency of use, and context please open the Sway.
Word Cloud Image
Otter.ai generates this word cloud automatically when transcribing audio files to tangible text. Then I snap a screenshot of it on my iPad.
The rectangular frame is a third longer along its horizontal border, than its shorter vertical edge. For orientation, up and to the right is positive. The background is dark blue.
Nineteen words appear in various orientations and sizes across a rectangular frame. From the top left-side to the bottom the following nineteen words appear: Fast, February, UX, Organize, Minds, Closure, Continuity, Pattern, Today, Bubble, Law, Hilary, Disposition, Innate, Proximity, Similarity, Connectedness, Information, Gestalt.
This is the same image from the title card of the YouTube Video except this image is branded by otter.ai with a dark navy-blue background with lighter blue, pink, green, purple, and grey writing to form the word cloud, where each word is written in varied sizes and orientation.
Would you like to improve your UX Vocabulary in English so you can deliver presentations to advance your career?
YES!
If you would like to book a FREE strategy session with me, Hilary Cluett, then visit my Google Calendar appointment page.
- Select a FREE appointment time that works for you and
- save it to your preferred calendar :)
- You can also message me on LinkedIn.
Link to Google Calendar appointment page to book free 15 minute strategy session with Hilary
If you’re a dedicated UX Designer and you want to advance your career, then I can help you by improving your presentation skills in English, with a focus on asking questions and using appropriate UX vocabulary.
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-Hilary