Principles of Deck Presentation 2026
- Description
- Curriculum
- FAQ
- Reviews
Mastering PowerPoint Design
For CEOs, directors, and senior leaders in development banks and policy organizations who approve and deliver high-stakes presentations. This course builds decisive, credible slide decks that guide boards and international audiences to action.
Expect a practical toolkit: concise structures, clear visuals, disciplined formatting, and repeatable review habits that cut noise and elevate judgment.
Learning Outcomes
- Structure executive slides around one decisive message.
- Establish visual hierarchy that directs attention.
- Simplify data into decision-ready visuals.
- Enforce consistency in type, color, and layout.
- Spot and remove credibility-killing design habits.
Lesson 1: Structure Slides for Decisions
Executives need the message, not a tour of the analysis. Lead with the decision and its consequence.
- Write a verb-led headline that states the decision or point.
- Use a three-part spine: context, insight, implication.
- Limit each slide to one message; move extras to the appendix.
Lesson 2: Create Strong Visual Hierarchy
Direct the eye to what matters first, then guide to supporting proof.
- Set a clear focal point using size, weight, and placement.
- Apply a simple grid; align edges, captions, and numbers.
- Reserve bold and color for the primary message only.
Lesson 3: Write Precise, Executive-Ready Text
Short, active text increases clarity and speeds decisions.
- Convert paragraphs to 5–8-word bullets; drop fillers and qualifiers.
- Replace nouns with verbs: “Approve $250M facility,” not “Approval of.”
- Place evidence in tight labels or footers (source and date only).
Lesson 4: Simplify Data for Boardrooms
Leaders need patterns, direction, and scale—fast. Remove noise and mark the takeaway.
- Choose the smallest chart that answers the question (bar over pie; line for trends).
- Round and group numbers; show order and deltas, not clutter.
- Delete chart junk; annotate the key insight directly on the data.
Lesson 5: Enforce Consistency and Brand Discipline
Consistency signals control and credibility across teams and countries.
- Lock a master template: type scale, colors, grid, and footers.
- Limit fonts to two styles; standardize units, dates, and number formats.
- Use a fixed icon set and label system aligned to institutional brand.
Lesson 6: Redesign Cluttered Slides
When a slide overwhelms, rebuild it around the single message and generous space.
- Strip nonessential elements; keep message, evidence, and action.
- Rebuild with white space; set margins and equal spacing between elements.
- Test at 3-meter distance or 70% zoom; enlarge until instantly readable.
Lesson 7: Approve with Confidence for International Audiences
Ensure decisions survive translation, distance, and time pressure.
- Run a decision test: Can a director approve in 30 seconds?
- Check cultural clarity: avoid idioms, sensitive colors, and region-specific cues.
- Ensure accessibility: 24pt+ text, 4.5:1 contrast, and clear alt text for exports.
Executive Review Checklist
- Headline states the decision or takeaway.
- One message per slide; clear focal point.
- Data simplified, annotated, and sourced.
- Template, type, and alignment consistent.
- No chart junk, filler text, or weak visuals.
-
1Lead with the decision: craft a governing thought for board-ready decks
-
2Define the question: frame issues the way directors decide
-
3Cut to one message per slide for sovereign risk, policy, or portfolio topics
-
4Build a 10–12 slide executive storyline that survives a time cut
-
5Write headline titles that state the conclusion, not the topic
-
11Importance of Grid and Margins
The Power of Structure: Grids and Margins
Welcome! Today, we are moving beyond "just placing things on a page." We are going to explore how Grids and Margins transform a cluttered layout into a professional, readable masterpiece. Whether you are building a presentation in PowerPoint, a flyer in Canva, or a data dashboard in Google Sheets, these rules apply to you.
-
12Use size, contrast, and whitespace to direct the eye to the decision
-
13Group related content and separate noise to increase comprehension
-
14Place numbers with intent: proximity, labels, and units done right
-
15Design executive summary and appendix navigation that reduces friction
-
19Choose the right chart for the question: trend, compare, part-to-whole, relationship
-
20Strip chartjunk: remove frames, tick overload, 3D, and redundant legends
-
21Replace dense tables with comparisons, heat, and highlights for faster scans
-
22Annotate the takeaway on charts with callouts, arrows, and minimal labels
-
23Build one-page visuals for loan approvals, capital adequacy, and policy options
-
24Standardize typography, sizes, and line spacing for authority
-
25Set a restrained color system with meaning and accessibility
-
26Lock masters, layouts, and component libraries for team-wide control
-
27Normalize icons, shapes, and image treatment to avoid mixed styles
-
28Run a consistency audit before sending to senior offices
-
29Rewrite wordy slides into precise, scannable headlines and subpoints
-
30Convert bullet lists into clean visuals: flows, stacks, and 2x2s
-
31Redesign a cluttered country brief slide step by step
-
32Apply an executive review checklist for boardroom confidence
-
33Adapt slides for international audiences: language, numbers, and cultural cues