Mapa-múndi com modelo de apresentação de diferentes locais da empresa
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Esteja a par do melhor com nosso Modelo de Apresentação de Mapa Mundial com Diferentes Locais da Empresa. Você estará entre os pioneiros.
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Mapa mundial com diferentes locais da empresa modelo de apresentação
Estágios neste processo: negócios, marketing, ícones, globo, geográfico, ponteiros, setas.
People who downloaded this PowerPoint presentation also viewed the following :
Mapa-múndi com diferentes locais da empresa modelo de apresentação com todas as 5 slides: Slide 1: Mapa-múndi com marcadores de localização das empresas Slide 2: Informações sobre a empresa A Localização: São Paulo, Brasil Slide 3: Informações sobre a empresa B Localização: Londres, Reino Unido Slide 4: Informações sobre a empresa C Localização: Tóquio, Japão Slide 5: Informações sobre a empresa D Localização: Sydney, Austrália
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FAQs for World map with different company
Definitely put your office addresses on there with good contact info and hours for each spot. Photos of the actual buildings are clutch - saves people from that awkward wandering around thing. I'd throw in nearby landmarks or transit stops too, plus parking details if you've got dedicated spots. Oh, and accessibility info is pretty important these days. Maybe add what services each location does? The real test though - have someone actually try to find your office using just the map you made. If they get lost, you know what needs fixing.
Dude, custom map templates are a game changer for presentations. Instead of boring bullet points listing your locations, people can actually *see* where you operate. The visual impact is huge - your audience gets your geographic reach immediately. You can color-code different markets, throw in your branding, even show revenue data by region. Way more polished than screenshotting Google Maps (which honestly looks pretty amateur). I tried this in our last quarterly review and people were actually paying attention for once. Complex location stuff suddenly makes sense when it's visual. Trust me, it keeps everyone way more engaged.
Google My Maps is honestly your best bet - it's free and pretty easy to figure out. Canva's got some nice map templates too if you want something that looks more polished for presentations. Mapbox and ArcGIS Online are options if you're going for something really advanced, but they're kind of a pain to learn. I'd probably just stick with Google My Maps unless you've got super specific design needs. Oh, and you can always export whatever you make and dress it up later if you change your mind.
Okay so basically you want your map to tell a story, not just show random dots everywhere. Color coding is your best friend here - use it for sales, employee numbers, whatever matters most. Make your biggest offices larger so they actually stand out. Heat maps are honestly my favorite for showing where all the action's happening (though maybe I'm weird like that). Just don't go crazy with too many visual elements - stick to 2-3 max or people's eyes will glaze over. I'd start with simple color coding by region first. You can get fancier later once you see what works.
Retail chains with multiple locations get the most out of these maps - like when Starbucks shows all their stores in your area. Service companies that cover different regions really benefit too since people need to know if you'll actually come to them. Real estate agencies, restaurant chains, healthcare networks - basically if customers are constantly asking "do you have somewhere near me?" then you need one. I mean, it's pretty obvious when you think about it. Any business where location matters more than what you're selling should have this on their website.
Honestly, maps are a game changer for this stuff. You'll see gaps in coverage that you'd totally miss just looking at spreadsheet data. Like, suddenly it's obvious which areas you're ignoring or where your competitors are crushing it. Way better than trying to picture addresses in your head - I'm terrible at that. Short sentences work. You can layer on sales numbers or demographic info too, which gets pretty interesting. I'd start simple though - just plot where you are now, then add competitor locations. The clustering patterns alone will probably surprise you and help with planning new territories.
Make it dead simple - people need to instantly spot your locations and grab basic info. Clean icons, readable fonts, good contrast. Trust me, skip the fancy animations (I learned this the hard way). Mobile is huge since everyone's gonna check this while they're out and about. Set zoom levels that actually make sense. Pop-ups should have the essentials: address, hours, phone number. Oh, and definitely test on real phones first - what looks perfect on your laptop screen can be a total mess on mobile.
Bright colored pins are your friend here - they need to pop against whatever map background you're using. Don't overthink the labels, just stick to the basics like address and phone number. Too much text looks awful and nobody reads it anyway. Different marker styles work great for showing your main office vs smaller locations, or you could make the pins bigger/smaller based on how important each spot is. Oh and custom icons that match your brand colors are a nice touch if you have time for that. Bottom line: keep it simple so people can actually find their nearest location without getting a headache.
Honestly, color coding is a game changer for maps - makes everything so much clearer. Your brain just gets it instantly instead of trying to read a million tiny labels. Try green for profitable spots, red for struggling ones, maybe blue shades for team sizes? The key is keeping your legend super simple though. I'd stick with 3-4 categories tops or people get overwhelmed. Actually had a boss once who used like 12 different colors and nobody could figure out what they meant! But yeah, when done right it totally transforms boring spreadsheet data into something that actually makes sense visually.
Interactive maps are a game-changer for showing company locations and regional data - way better than those awful bullet point slides everyone hates. People can actually click around to see different offices or sales territories, which keeps them awake during presentations (trust me on this one). I've seen these work really well with investors too. Colors and data layers are totally customizable depending on what story you're telling. Could be growth plans, could be operational stuff. First step is figuring out what geographic angle you want to hit, then just build your data around that.
Dude, accessibility on company maps is so important but tons of places mess this up. You've gotta add alt text for map images and make sure your color contrast is solid for people with vision issues. Don't just use color coding either - like red pins meaning headquarters without labeling them properly. Screen reader compatibility is a must, plus keyboard navigation for folks who can't use mice. I'd definitely run it through accessibility tools first because honestly, you don't want to accidentally lock out customers or employees from finding your locations. Test early, save yourself the headache later.
So you'll want to edit the data source - like whatever spreadsheet or database feeds your map. Add, delete, or change stuff like addresses and hours there. Pro tip: double-check that changes actually sync because I've definitely seen "closed" shops still popping up on maps forever later. Most templates refresh automatically once you update the source data, but sometimes you need to hit sync manually. After that, just make sure new spots show up right and old ones vanish. It's pretty straightforward once you get the hang of it.
So two main things to watch out for. First, double-check all your location data is actually current - nothing worse than sending customers to a closed store or wrong address. Could bite you legally too. Second thing is accessibility stuff. Screen readers need to work with your maps, and don't forget alt text for images. Honestly, most people skip this part but it's pretty crucial. Oh and if you're grabbing any location data from users, definitely run that by legal first - privacy laws are getting stricter everywhere. Just have your dev team test the accessibility features before you launch and you should be good.
Dude, these location maps are seriously helpful for seeing where all your stuff actually is. Plot your warehouses and offices first - you'll spot weird gaps in coverage super fast. Like, why do you have three locations crammed together while the entire west coast has nothing? Makes no sense. The visual thing really clicks better than staring at boring spreadsheets all day. You can actually see the best routes between places and figure out if you're wasting money on redundant spots. Once you've got the basics mapped, throw in your shipping data and customer info. Trust me, it'll make route planning so much easier.
Don't cram a million pins on there - it's just chaos. Also, check how it looks on mobile since that's probably where most people will see it anyway. Generic markers are boring and honestly pretty useless when everything looks identical. Test your pin locations too! I can't tell you how many times I've followed a map only to end up at some random parking lot. Pop-ups should have the basics - hours, phone, directions. Oh and start with your main locations first, you can always add more later.
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Presentation Design is very nice, good work with the content as well.
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Nice and innovative design.
