Handouts and other papers
The ESA Student Section tweeted:
It’s a common tip, but I got thinking about it. What’s the purpose of duplicating your poster in miniature?
I’ve always thought the point of having a poster handout was to remind people about your academic work. But I was cleaning off my desk recently, and found quite a few handouts of posters I’d collected from conferences. I’d hauled them back from the meeting, but I hadn’t looked at them for their scientific content or contact information since. The handout had failed in their purpose.
I’m particularly wondering about the trouble of making, carrying, and tacking up poster handouts in the days where these are ubiquitous:
If anyone wants to look at a poster later, why not just take a picture of it? If someone wants my email, why not take a picture of my contact info on my poster?
Granted, there are a few meetings where the conference organizers try to prohibit photographs of posters. It’s dumb and ineffectual, in my estimation, but a handout makes sense at such meetings.
There is value of creating handouts, but not to give them out when people are standing in front of your poster.
First, by making handouts, you force yourself to do the “arm’s length” test. If you can’t read the poster when it’s shrunk down to letter sized paper, your audience will struggle to read the full sized version on the poster board.
Second, you should have handouts so that you can give them to people who are not at your poster session. Most poster sessions are shorter than meetings, but you will be meeting people all through the conference. If you have small handouts of your poster, you can show someone your work at a coffee break, even if your poster session is already over and done with.
Making a poster handout is usually simple. I export my poster as a PDF, and PDFs can be readily printed to fit the size of your printer paper. As I noted above, if you have a good poster that passes the “arm’s length” test, you won’t have to redo or adjust anything.
There are maybe two other kinds of paper that are worth having ready to give.
Related posts
Don’t get mad, get playful
Invitation cards
Link roundup for December 2012
Conference tip: Presenting a poster? Consider giving some sort of handout: a print out of the poster, or additional info. #ESA2017
It’s a common tip, but I got thinking about it. What’s the purpose of duplicating your poster in miniature?
I’ve always thought the point of having a poster handout was to remind people about your academic work. But I was cleaning off my desk recently, and found quite a few handouts of posters I’d collected from conferences. I’d hauled them back from the meeting, but I hadn’t looked at them for their scientific content or contact information since. The handout had failed in their purpose.
I’m particularly wondering about the trouble of making, carrying, and tacking up poster handouts in the days where these are ubiquitous:
If anyone wants to look at a poster later, why not just take a picture of it? If someone wants my email, why not take a picture of my contact info on my poster?
Granted, there are a few meetings where the conference organizers try to prohibit photographs of posters. It’s dumb and ineffectual, in my estimation, but a handout makes sense at such meetings.
There is value of creating handouts, but not to give them out when people are standing in front of your poster.
First, by making handouts, you force yourself to do the “arm’s length” test. If you can’t read the poster when it’s shrunk down to letter sized paper, your audience will struggle to read the full sized version on the poster board.
Second, you should have handouts so that you can give them to people who are not at your poster session. Most poster sessions are shorter than meetings, but you will be meeting people all through the conference. If you have small handouts of your poster, you can show someone your work at a coffee break, even if your poster session is already over and done with.
Making a poster handout is usually simple. I export my poster as a PDF, and PDFs can be readily printed to fit the size of your printer paper. As I noted above, if you have a good poster that passes the “arm’s length” test, you won’t have to redo or adjust anything.
There are maybe two other kinds of paper that are worth having ready to give.
- Business cards are compact, socially expected, and can be very beautiful. Even better if they act as invitations.
- Reprints can be useful if you have already published material that your poster builds upon. People might read those on the plane home.
Related posts
Don’t get mad, get playful
Invitation cards
Link roundup for December 2012
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