PowerPoint presentation learning prompt
A safe and editable prompt for learning how to prepare PowerPoint presentations with topic planning, slide flow, title structure, visual layout, speaker notes, and checklists.
A safe and editable prompt for learning how to prepare PowerPoint presentations with topic planning, slide flow, title structure, visual layout, speaker notes, and checklists.
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You are a presentation skills instructor who teaches PowerPoint preparation in a simple, safe, and step-by-step way. Using the general details below, create an editable and educational presentation preparation draft suitable for the user’s level. Presentation skill level: Presentation topic: Target audience: Presentation goal: Estimated slide count: Presentation style: Rules: - Work with a general, anonymous, and safe presentation preparation context. - Create a sample structure without asking for private files, internal documents, personal information, or confidential presentation content. - Do not create fixed promises about success, persuasion, sales, approval, or outcomes. - Avoid overloading slides with text; suggest short titles, clear messages, and simple visual structure. - Separate unclear points as notes the user should review. - Prepare the output as a learning draft that can be adapted to PowerPoint, Google Slides, or similar tools. Output format: 1. Short presentation goal summary 2. Main message of the presentation 3. Audience-based explanation approach 4. Recommended slide flow 5. Title and main message for each slide 6. Short content suggestion for each slide 7. Visual layout and design notes 8. Speaker notes draft 9. Common presentation mistakes 10. Suggestions for simplifying the presentation 11. Practice exercises 12. Final pre-presentation checklist
This section helps you understand when and how to use this prompt more clearly.
This prompt can be used to learn how to prepare more organized presentations in PowerPoint or similar tools. Based on the user’s level, topic, audience, goal, and preferred style, it creates a slide flow, title suggestions, main message, speaker notes, and checklist.
It is useful for beginners learning presentation preparation, students or professionals creating slides, users preparing project introductions, anyone who wants a clearer presentation flow, and people who want more organized speaker notes.
It can be used when planning a presentation, organizing slide titles, simplifying a text-heavy deck, or creating a clearer presentation draft with speaker notes.
A user may want to prepare an 8-slide project introduction. By entering their level, audience, goal, and preferred style, they can receive a title, main message, short content suggestion, and speaker notes draft for each slide.
The output becomes more organized when the presentation topic is written clearly in one sentence. Instead of writing only 'project presentation', a clearer input such as 'an 8-slide project introduction for beginners' can create a more useful draft.
Can this prompt suggest visual design ideas?
Yes. It can create general design notes about colors, spacing, title structure, visual density, and slide simplification.
Can this prompt prepare speaker notes?
Yes. It can create short and editable speaker notes for each slide.
This example shows how the prompt can create a slide flow, titles, content suggestions, and speaker notes for learning how to prepare a PowerPoint presentation.
The goal of this presentation is to introduce the new mobile app idea to teammates in a simple way, explain the core problem, show the proposed solution, and clarify the points where feedback is needed.
The app idea is an early-stage draft that aims to solve a specific user need with a simpler and more organized experience. The main message is to make the idea clear and collect feedback before development.
1. Title and short introduction 2. Problem or need 3. Proposed solution 4. Core features 5. Sample user flow 6. Feedback points
Slide 1: App Idea Introduction — Opens the topic in a short and clear way. Slide 2: What Need Are We Solving? — Explains the main user situation. Slide 3: Proposed Solution — Describes how the app can respond to the need. Slide 4: Core Features — Lists the main sections planned for the first version. Slide 5: Sample User Flow — Shows how the user may move through the app. Slide 6: Feedback Points — Clarifies what kind of comments are expected from the team.
This is a general presentation learning draft. The user can adapt the titles, visuals, and speaker notes based on their own topic, audience, and presentation tool.
Writing the presentation goal clearly helps create a more organized and understandable slide flow.
Defining the target audience can prevent the explanation from becoming too technical or too shallow.
Providing an approximate slide count helps keep the output from becoming too long or too short.
Working with an anonymous topic summary instead of a real presentation file creates a safer and more editable draft.
No. It creates a presentation flow, slide titles, content draft, speaker notes, and checklist. The user can adapt it into PowerPoint or a similar tool.
No. It provides learning and drafting support for a more organized presentation. Results depend on the audience, topic, delivery, and preparation process.
Yes. If beginner level is selected, it can explain slide structure, title selection, visual layout, and speaker notes in a simple way.
Yes. If the user describes the context in a general and anonymous way, it can create adaptable drafts for class topics, team updates, project introductions, or idea presentations.
Prompts are for illustration only. Accuracy isn't guaranteed—please read and adapt them for your situation.
This prompt is for general purposes. For legal, medical or financial decisions please consult a qualified professional.
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Read moreEach slide can focus on one main message. Titles should be short, text should be written in simple bullets, and visual clutter should be avoided. A simple background, enough spacing, and readable font size can make the presentation easier to follow.
Example speaker note for Slide 2: In this section, I explain where the app idea comes from. My goal is not to exaggerate the problem, but to clarify which user need we are focusing on. At this stage, I especially want feedback on whether the problem is explained clearly enough.
Does each slide have one main message? Are the titles short and clear? Has text density been reduced? Are unfamiliar terms explained simply? Are the feedback points clear? Does the presentation length match the slide count?