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Guidelines for Presenting at a NANOG Meeting

Thank you for your interest in NANOG! If you are proposing a talk for an upcoming meeting, please keep the following in mind as you prepare your presentation. 

What Makes a Good Talk?

To increase the chance that your talk will be accepted, we recommend that you:

  • Highlight operational experience, i.e., present a case study.
  • Identify anomolies or counter-intuitive (interesting) aspects of your experience
  • Educate in your area of expertise (so the audience can learn something)
  • Motivate action (so the audience goes out and does something as a result of the talk)
  • Entertain (so the audience stays in the room) 

Lighting Talks are strictly limited to 10 minutes and submitting draft slides is appreciated, but not at all required. Final slides must be submitted to nanog-support prior to the last program break before the talks in PPT, PPTX, DOC, or DOCX.  

Slide Format

Company logos must only appear on the first and last slides of your talk. Full-page logos on cover slides are discouraged. 

Presenters/authors may retain copyright of their material, granting NANOG, Inc., a perpetual license at no cost to archive and redistribute the material. Unobtrusive copyright notices may be on any or all slides of the presentation. 

A plain white background is recommended, a yellow background is discouraged. You'll find a sample PPT file and a sample MagicPoint file below:

Download a sample PowerPoint (PPT) file.

Download a sample MagicPoint file. 

A PDF is recommended rather than the source file for the slides, e.g., a PowerPoint file. NANOG attendees frequently point out that some slides are hard to read from the back of the hotel ballroom, where the General Session is held. To be legible, slides must use as least 28-point fonts (larger for titles). 

Using Configuration Examples

We recognize that configuration examples are a useful, and sometimes necessary, means of conveying information. In order to provide the maximum benefit to the largest number of NANOG attendees, we encourage speakers to give examples using the configuration language of more than one vendor. Talks or tutorials that only use a single vendor for configuration examples will not be excluded on that basis, but will receive lower priority than talks that use multi-vendor configuration examples. 

Note that this does not necessarily mean that each example should be replicated in multiple vendors' configuration language. NANOG recognizes and values the contribution that specific configuration examples bring to talks and tutorials, and understands that multi-vendor configuration examples are not always possible for every speaker to use. We ask that every effort be made to use them, though, to increase the value to the NANOG community. 

Schedule for Presentations

The following schedule applies to slide submissions for NANOG meetings. 

Action
Date Completed Before the Meeting
Abstract/draft slides due

10-12 weeks

Acceptances issued

6 weeks

Revised draft slides due

1.5 weeks

Final slides due for Web site

.5 weeks (If your slides are presented the day of, they WILL NOT be available via the web and/or archive.)

Lightning Talks

1 week before meeting, acceptance in the afternoon prior to the presentation slot

 

More Presentation Tips

You might find these sites useful as you prepare your talk:

Tips on Giving a Talk, by D. Messerschmitt (adapted.)

"The Short Talk," Charles Van Loan

"Tips for Preparing Scientific Presentations," Office of Naval Research

Questions?

If you have questions about these guidelines, please send email to speaker-support@nanog.org.