Marketer Resources

Decks that deliver.
Designing presentations that connect, persuade, and stick in people’s minds.

We want to help you build decks that do more than look good…they land.

A great presentation deck doesn’t just deliver information—it tells a story, makes an impression, and motivates people to take action. Whether you’re pitching investors, presenting to a client, or launching something new internally, your deck should be as strategic as it is beautiful.

Start with the story. Every great deck follows a narrative arc.

  • What do I want them to know?

  • What do I want them to feel?

  • What do I want them to do?

Pro Tip

Outline your storyline first—then match each point to a slide. Your deck is a visual aid, not a script. Reading your presentation word-for-word is a great way to lose your audience. 

Structure for clarity. We typically follow this rhythm.

Title Slide

Name, tagline, or attention-grabber

The Proof

Case studies, testimonials, or data

Introduction

Who you are and why you’re here

The Process

How it works or what happens next

The Problem

Paint the picture—why this matters

The Ask

The call to action, pricing, proposal, etc.

The Solution

Your offer, product, idea, or concept

Closing Slide

Memorable statement, contact info, or thank you

Design with intention. Because design matters.

Here’s our checklist for a strong visual presence:


Consistency is Queen

Use your brand fonts, colors, and layouts throughout.


Whitespace isn’t Wasted Space.

It’s clarity.


One Idea Per Slide

Let your audience breathe.


Use High-Quality Images

No blurry logos or pixelated stock photos.


Visual Hierarchy

Make key points stand out.


No Essay Slides

If you need to explain it out loud, the slide should support—not compete.

Make it interactive. Where it makes sense.

Add subtle animation or transitions to guide attention. Embed short videos, interactive mockups, or clickable elements—but only if it elevates the experience.

Practice with empathy. Before you present, walk through the deck like you’re the audience.

What questions will they have? Where might they zone out? Refine from there.

Pro Tip

Your presentation is the next step in an ongoing conversation you’ve been having with your audience. If you can address questions or concerns they’ve already expressed, do it. Let them know you’ve been listening, and that you’re here to help, not just waiting for your turn to talk.

Got a project that’s a little more than you want to tackle on your own?

Schedule a Discovery Call