Presentation Analysis Framework
Deep content analysis for effective slide deck creation.
1. Message Hierarchy
Identify the core message structure before designing slides.
Core Message (One Sentence)
- What is the single most important takeaway?
- If the audience remembers only one thing, what should it be?
- Can you state it in ≤15 words?
Supporting Points (3-5 Maximum)
- What evidence supports the core message?
- What sub-topics must be covered?
- Prioritize by audience relevance, not source order
Call-to-Action
- What should the audience DO after viewing?
- Is it clear, specific, and achievable?
- Where does it appear (slide position)?
2. Audience Decision Matrix
| Question | Analysis |
|---|---|
| Who is the primary audience? | [Role, expertise level, relationship to topic] |
| What do they currently believe? | [Existing knowledge, assumptions, biases] |
| What decision do we want them to make? | [Specific action or conclusion] |
| What barriers exist? | [Objections, concerns, missing information] |
| What evidence will convince them? | [Data types, credibility sources, emotional hooks] |
Audience Adaptation
| Audience Type | Content Focus | Visual Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Executives | Outcomes, ROI, strategic impact | High-level, clean, data highlights |
| Technical | Architecture, implementation, specs | Detailed diagrams, code, schematics |
| General | Benefits, stories, relatability | Visual metaphors, simple charts |
| Investors | Market size, traction, team | Growth charts, milestones, comparisons |
| Learners | Step-by-step, examples, practice | Progressive reveals, exercises |
3. Visual Opportunity Map
Identify which content benefits from visualization.
Content-to-Visual Mapping
| Content Type | Visual Treatment | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Comparisons | Side-by-side, before/after | Feature comparison table |
| Processes | Flow diagrams, numbered steps | Workflow illustration |
| Hierarchies | Org charts, pyramids, trees | Organizational structure |
| Timelines | Horizontal/vertical timelines | Project milestones |
| Statistics | Charts, highlighted numbers | Key metrics with context |
| Concepts | Icons, metaphors, illustrations | Abstract idea visualization |
| Relationships | Venn diagrams, networks | Ecosystem or dependencies |
| Lists | Structured grids, icon rows | Feature bullets with icons |
Visual Priority
Rate each piece of content:
- Must Visualize: Complex data, key differentiators, memorable moments
- Should Visualize: Supporting evidence, secondary points
- Text Only: Simple statements, transitions, minor details
4. Presentation Flow
Structure for impact and retention.
Opening (First 2-3 Slides)
| Element | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Hook | Capture attention (surprising stat, question, story) |
| Context | Why this matters now |
| Preview | What audience will learn/gain |
Middle (Content Slides)
| Pattern | When to Use |
|---|---|
| Problem → Solution | Introducing new products/ideas |
| Situation → Complication → Resolution | Complex business cases |
| What → Why → How | Educational content |
| Past → Present → Future | Transformation stories |
| Claim → Evidence → Implication | Data-driven arguments |
Closing (Final 2-3 Slides)
| Element | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Synthesis | Tie back to core message |
| Call-to-Action | Clear next steps |
| Memorable Close | Resonant quote, image, or statement |
Transitions
- Each slide should answer: "What comes next?"
- Use narrative connectors between sections
- Build logical progression, not topic jumps
5. Content Adaptation
Decide what to keep, transform, or omit.
Keep (High Value)
- Core arguments and evidence
- Unique insights or data
- Audience-relevant examples
- Memorable quotes or statistics
Simplify (Medium Value)
- Technical details → Visual summaries
- Long explanations → Bullet hierarchies
- Multiple examples → Best 1-2 examples
- Background context → Brief framing
Visualize (Transform)
- Data tables → Charts or highlighted numbers
- Process descriptions → Flow diagrams
- Comparisons in text → Side-by-side visuals
- Abstract concepts → Concrete metaphors
Omit (Low Value)
- Tangential information
- Redundant examples
- Excessive caveats
- Background the audience already knows
6. Analysis Checklist
Before outline creation, confirm:
Message Clarity
- [ ] Core message stated in one sentence
- [ ] 3-5 supporting points identified
- [ ] Call-to-action defined
Audience Fit
- [ ] Primary audience identified
- [ ] Existing beliefs mapped
- [ ] Desired decision clear
- [ ] Evidence matches audience needs
Visual Planning
- [ ] Key visualizations identified
- [ ] Chart/diagram types selected
- [ ] Visual priority assigned
Flow Design
- [ ] Opening hook defined
- [ ] Middle pattern selected
- [ ] Closing approach planned
- [ ] Transitions considered
Content Decisions
- [ ] Keep/simplify/visualize/omit applied
- [ ] Source material fully processed
- [ ] No important content overlooked