<p>I like making powerpoint presentations as well as small bang (video) presentations. What major does this go under?</p>
<p>something along the lines of “management information systems” in an undergrad business school</p>
<p>thanks! do you know of another major outside of business?</p>
<p>Multimedia Design
Information Technology
Computer Graphics</p>
<p>Example
[Digital</a> Media Art & Technology at Michigan State University](<a href=“http://dmat.msu.edu/index.php]Digital”>http://dmat.msu.edu/index.php)</p>
<p>The hell does making powerpoint presentations have to do with anything anyone here has posted besides Varsev? Computer Graphics? Computer graphics is a highly technical and advanced subspeciality of computer science that has almost nothing to do with video presentations and a lot to do with geometry and hard mathematics. IT is network management, MIS is network management + business, multimedia design is a degree you can get at ITT Tech and should be something you take courses in but never waste money majoring in. It, also, has little to nothing to do with presentations–unless you’re presenting to a client, or part of a job for a client involves web development and flash.</p>
<p>Powerpoint is a tool. For things. You want to convey information, you put it in powerpoint, you make pretty graphs. This is not a profession. You can be working in a field that makes use of presentation software, “presentation software” is not a job. It’s like saying “I like AOL Instant Messenger, what major does this go under?”</p>
<p>It’s conceivable you could work in some niche profession where you help people and companies prepare presentations, but generally that kind of work is done internally by companies or by the person or group actually doing the presentation.</p>
<p>The MSU recommended major in the post above is good, as anything with A/V is probably something you’d like. But that degree, and pretty much anything else like it, will lead you one of three ways: (a) into television, (b) into photography, (c) into marketing or print and web development. It’s conceivable you could be interested in these things, but what you posted is so vague that I have no idea. I’d recommend you take courses and try and find something you like instead of trying to apply something that is pretty much completely irrelevant to any major in the attempt to find a major. Alternatively, just go here for two years–[Portfolio</a> Center](<a href=“http://www.portfoliocenter.com%5DPortfolio”>http://www.portfoliocenter.com).</p>