A presentation format is the medium, form, and structure through which a final design solution is communicated to the client, audience, or user. Selecting the right presentation format is itself a design decision — it affects how the design is experienced, how credible and professional it appears, and whether it is appropriate for the communication need it addresses.
In VCD, each of the two distinct communication needs addressed in the brief must be resolved and presented in a format appropriate to that specific need.
KEY TAKEAWAY: The presentation format must be as carefully chosen as any other design decision. A presentation format that doesn’t match the communication need — or that doesn’t reflect professional standards — undermines even the strongest design solution.
The VCD study design requires that the two final design solutions are distinct from one another in purpose and presentation format. This means:
- They must serve different communication purposes (e.g., one persuades, one informs)
- They must exist in different formats or media (e.g., one is a print poster, the other is a digital interface or a physical object)
- They must demonstrate range in your design capabilities
Examples of distinct pairs:
- A printed event poster + a digital social media campaign
- A printed brand identity system (stationery, business cards) + an environmental wayfinding system
- A product packaging design + an instructional brochure
- A retail signage system + a digital menu interface
When selecting a presentation format, consider:
The format must be capable of delivering the communication purpose:
- Wayfinding requires physical, durable, in-context presentation
- Social media content requires digital screens
- A print editorial requires high-quality printed representation
The presentation itself should demonstrate design quality:
- Print work should be mounted or displayed at appropriate scale, on quality stock
- Digital work should be presented as an interactive prototype or high-quality screen mockup
- 3D/environmental work may use physical models, detailed renders, or in-context photography
| Format | Description | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|
| Mounted print | Final design printed and mounted for display | Posters, branding systems, editorial design |
| Printed booklet/document | Bound multi-page document | Magazines, brochures, annual reports |
| Packaged object | Physical, three-dimensional design | Packaging, product design |
| Digital prototype/mockup | Screen-based interactive or static simulation | App interfaces, websites |
| Environmental model | Scale model of a spatial design | Wayfinding, retail, exhibition design |
| Context rendering | Design shown in its real-world environment | Any design where context is important |
| Digital slideshow/PDF | Controlled sequential presentation | Pitches, design proposals |
The brief specifies the communication context, which directly determines the appropriate presentation format:
- “The design will be displayed as a 594 × 841mm (A1) street poster” → the final presentation must include a printed A1 poster
- “The design will be displayed on digital signage screens” → the final presentation must be a digital file at screen resolution
- “The design is for a retail product” → the final presentation must include the physical or mocked-up product
EXAM TIP: In exam questions about presentation formats, always justify your format choice by linking it to the brief’s communication need, audience, and context: “A printed, mounted A1 poster is an appropriate presentation format because the brief specifies the design will be displayed at street level in a public space, where it must be legible at a distance of 5 metres — a scale that can only be properly evaluated in large-format print.”
COMMON MISTAKE: Presenting all work as digital files or A3 printouts regardless of the communication need. If the brief calls for a large-format poster, presenting a small A4 printout does not constitute an appropriate presentation format.
APPLICATION: For each communication need in your brief, explicitly specify the presentation format in the brief document itself. Then ensure your final design solution is resolved and presented in exactly that format — it demonstrates that you understand the purpose of your design, not just its aesthetics.