
AI can code for you, generate realistic photos and videos, automate repetitive tasks and even whip up fresh ideas for your next campaign.
It can wear a lot of hats (possibly every hat in the world), and all it needs is a prompt.
I’ve personally tested dozens of AI tools by now, and I use AI daily as part of my research and creative process. Two of the biggest lessons I’ve learned so far? AI isn’t perfect, and if you want great results, your prompts need to be specific and intentional.
If you’ve ever felt frustrated with the bland decks AI spits out, this article is for you. I’ll share 105+ practical AI presentation prompts you can copy and customize, along with real examples of what works (and what doesn’t).
AI prompting didn’t start with presentations. It began with natural language processing (or, in other words, teaching machines to understand and respond to plain human language).
Tools like ChatGPT and Claude take your “instruction” (the prompt) and generate the best possible response. And the same applies to AI presentation makers. They’re not “thinking” like a designer, but instead guessing the next best thing.
When you type in a prompt, most AI presentation tools break it down into three things:
From there, it generates layouts, text, icons and images based on patterns it’s learned from massive datasets.
And this isn’t just me saying it. OpenAI’s GPT-5 Prompting Guide highlights a few habits that make a huge difference for presentations:
The guide also says to expect AI to follow literal instructions more closely than older models, so the more focused your prompt is, the more closely the results will match it.
Applied to presentations, that means you should:
AI tools have come a long way. Early versions barely managed bullet points. Now, tools like Visme can generate full pitch decks with branded templates, visuals, animations and data visualizations you can actually use.
That said, AI isn’t perfect. Layouts can be clunky, and copy can feel basic. But with sharper prompts and your human touch, you can turn those raw outputs into slides that actually connect.
I didn’t want this article to be another “list of prompts” you could find anywhere online.
To make sure everything here actually works, I wrote and tested using OpenAI’s GPT-5 Prompting Guide as a baseline. If a prompt didn’t hold up across tools or ended up too generic, it didn’t make the cut.
Here’s how I approached it:
By testing this way, I landed on prompts that are both practical and repeatable, so you can plug them into the AI tool of your choice and actually produce quality.
Most presentation tools out there give you plenty of pre-made templates you can pick, edit and customize. That’s useful, but it still leaves you doing the heavy lifting: deciding structure, filling in content and reshaping slides to fit your story.
So why bother with AI for presentations? Here’s what it actually helps you do:
At the end of the day, AI doesn’t replace your input; it just takes care of the heavy lifting so you can focus on the ideas, the story and the delivery that make your presentation stand out.
If you want great slides, you need great prompts. A random “make me a pitch deck” won’t cut it. A strong AI presentation prompt has four layers:
Tell the AI who the audience is, what the presentation is for and any background it should know.
Example: “I’m pitching to early-stage investors for a healthtech startup.”
Spell out the details that matter. Do you want a formal deck or a casual one? Story-driven or data-heavy?
Example: “Keep the tone professional but engaging. Limit slides to short bullets, no more than 6 words each.”
Ideally, you shouldn’t leave the outline to chance. Guide the AI with the sections you want included.
Example: “12 slides total: title, intro, agenda, problem, solution, market size, business model, team, financials, roadmap, conclusion, thank you.”
But sometimes you may not know the best flow, or you don’t want to lock yourself into an exact number of slides. In that case, you can ask AI to suggest the structure.
Example: “Suggest a logical 8-10 slide flow for an internal marketing strategy presentation, then generate content for each slide.”
Be clear about what you want back. Do you need draft slide copy, visual layout ideas, or data charts?
Example: “Generate short slide headlines with 2-3 supporting bullets, plus one recommended visual or chart idea per slide.”
When you stack these four layers together, your prompt becomes much more powerful.
Here’s how an AI presentation prompt looks when it all comes together:
“Create an investor pitch deck for a health tech startup called MediSync, which is building an AI-powered platform for remote patient monitoring. Audience: early-stage VCs. Tone: professional and engaging, avoid jargon. Each slide should have a short headline with 2-3 supporting bullets and a recommended visual (chart, graphic, or photo). You can choose the presentation structure on your own.”
And just to show you that these types of AI presentation prompts 100% work, I plugged this prompt into Visme’s AI presentation maker, and here’s what it generated:
This is absolutely terrific. Design, copy, colors, data widgets and images are all on point, and it even gave me recommendations for visuals just like I asked it to.
Not every presentation is built the same way, so your prompts shouldn’t be either. To make AI work for you, it helps to think in categories. Broadly, there are five types of prompts you’ll find most useful:
TL;DR: I pulled the five main prompt types into a quick table so you can see when to use each one (and what you’ll get out of it).
Prompt Type | When to Use It | What It Helps You Do | Example Output |
Presentation Ideas | In the very beginning | Brainstorm topics, formats or hooks | List of 5-10 ideas tailored to your audience |
Full Presentation Creation | When you need an entire deck | Build a structured flow | 10-slide pitch deck with headlines + bullets |
Individual Slide Creation | When you only need one or two slides | Create focused slides (visuals, comparisons etc.) | A data visualization or summary slide |
Engagement Prompts | To keep the audience tuned in | Add interactive ideas or speaker prompts | Q&A list, poll suggestions or talking points |
Repurposing Prompts | After the presentation is made/published | Transform slides into other formats | Blog post outline or LinkedIn carousel |
You don’t need to guess what to type into AI. Below, I’ve broken down 105+ practical prompts for every stage of presentation creation. Each one is copy-and-paste ready with space for you to tweak (swap in your audience, industry or topic)
Sometimes the hardest part isn’t building slides; it’s deciding what kind of presentation to make in the first place. Here are 20 prompts to help you generate fresh ideas, angles or formats:
1. “Suggest 10 presentation ideas for an [internal marketing team meeting]. I am the [senior marketing manager], and I want my team to [learn new strategies they can apply immediately]. The presentation should be [engaging, educational and practical for a 30-minute slot.]”
2. “We’re doing [a big company rebrand] and I have to present it [internally]. Can you suggest 8 ways to present [the new brand (beyond just showing the logo/colors)?] Audience is [employees + stakeholders]. Goal = [get people excited + explain the WHY behind it].”
3. “Generate 8 creative presentation ideas for a [sales kickoff event]. The audience is [50 sales reps], and I want them to [feel motivated and aligned around our new quarterly targets].”
4. “List 7 possible presentation themes for a [startup demo day]. I’m pitching to [early-stage investors], so focus on ideas that highlight [innovation, market size and growth potential].”
5. “I am going to conduct a webinar on [cybersecurity best practices]. Give me 10 presentation topics/ideas I can cover. Target audience: [company employees]. Goal: [raise awareness and provide actionable steps].”
6. “Hosting a [tech industry webinar]. I need 10 presentation ideas that are not boring. Keep it on trends + practical use cases only. Target audience: [product managers and developers]. Goal: [share insights on trends and practical use cases]. Show in table form.”
7. “Suggest 10 presentation topics for a [university guest lecture on sustainability]. The audience is [college students], so keep it [inspiring, accessible and full of real-world examples].”
8. “Brainstorm 6 presentation ideas for a [nonprofit fundraising gala]. The audience will be [donors and community leaders], so ideas should be [impact-driven and emotionally compelling].”
9. “Give me 5 creative presentation angles for a [healthcare conference keynote]. Audience is [medical professionals], and I want the ideas to balance [research insights with practical applications].”
10. “Suggest 10 engaging ways to present [customer research findings] to [executives]. The presentation should highlight [insights, key takeaways and business impact] in under [20 minutes].”
11. “I’m prepping for [a school science fair] and I need 5 fun ideas for what to present. Audience = [students + parents]. Please don’t make it too complex, I want it simple + hands-on.”
12. “List 8 presentation ideas for a [leadership workshop]. Audience: [mid-level managers]. Goal: [help them improve decision-making, communication and team alignment].”
13. “Generate 6 presentation topics for a [high school assembly on digital safety]. Audience is [students aged 13-17], so keep it [fun, interactive and practical].”
14. “Brainstorm 7 presentation ideas for an [employee onboarding session]. I’m the [HR manager], and I want new hires to [feel welcome and understand our culture].”
15. “Suggest 10 presentation topics for a [quarterly business review]. Audience: [executive stakeholders]. Goal: [highlight wins, challenges and upcoming opportunities].”
16. “Generate 8 presentation formats for a [partnership pitch to a Fortune 500 company]. Focus on [trust-building, joint growth opportunities and, most importantly, ROI].”
17. “List 7 presentation ideas for a [book launch event]. Audience: [literary enthusiasts and media]. Goal: [create excitement and showcase the book’s themes].”
18. “Speaking at [a career fair] soon. Audience = [university students]. Give me 10 good talk ideas that actually help them [like resumes, interviews, career path tips and networking]. No vague or generic ideas please.”
19. Quarterly marketing strategy session with [managers + directors]. I don’t want another boring [campaign recap]. Can you suggest 7 things I could present that focus more on [learnings + next steps]?”
20. “Brainstorm 8 interactive presentation formats for a [remote team all-hands meeting]. Audience: [distributed employees]. Goal: [boost engagement and build team connection].”
This is a big one. What if you don’t want to lift a finger and just let AI do the heavy lifting: structuring, writing and even suggesting visuals for your entire deck? Here are 27 prompts designed to give AI everything it needs to build full presentations from scratch.
21. “Create an investor pitch deck for [a healthtech startup] called [MediSync]. We provide [an AI-powered remote patient monitoring platform that helps doctors track high-risk patients in real time]. Our biggest edge over competitors is [our FDA-cleared predictive analytics model]. We’re currently pitching to [seed-stage venture capital firms], so keep the tone [professional but inspiring]. No slide limit. Also suggest visuals (charts, product screenshots, icons) I can add to the presentation.”
22. “We, at [BrightWave Marketing], are about to present our [Q3 business review] to our [executive leadership team]. Build me a full deck with slides on [metrics overview, key wins, campaign performance, challenges, roadmap and budget]. Don’t write generic copy; make it [tailored and business-focused]. Keep slides concise with one chart or graphic idea each.”
23. “I manage [a SaaS company] called [CloudFlow], which sells [a workflow automation tool] to [small and mid-sized businesses]. We’re pitching to [enterprise prospects]. Create a sales presentation that highlights [cost savings, ease of use and our USP: seamless integration with 500+ apps]. Use persuasive but non-technical copy so it’s easy to follow. Suggest visuals where possible, like [ROI charts, time-saved graphics and product screenshots].”
24. Create a [10-slide quarterly business review deck] for [NorthPeak Software], a [SaaS company specializing in project management tools]. Audience: [board of directors]. Must include slides for [revenue and ARR, churn rate, product roadmap and budget forecast]. Keep the tone [transparent but optimistic]. Add suggested visuals like [trend charts, bar graphs and customer testimonial slides].”
25. “Build a full [training presentation] on [cybersecurity best practices for remote teams]. Audience: [all company employees at Horizon Finance]. Keep it [12 slides max]. Each slide should have a [headline, 2-3 short bullets and one visual]. Include [real-life phishing email examples, password tips and a “what to do if hacked” slide]. Tone: [educational but approachable].”
26. “Generate a [marketing strategy deck] for [EcoWave Apparel], a [DTC fashion brand]. Audience: [internal marketing team]. Include sections on [Q2 campaign performance, customer insights, influencer results, paid ad ROI, new creative themes for Q3]. Use a tone that’s [data-driven but creative]. Suggest visuals like [social ad screenshots and engagement charts].”
27. “Create a [partnership pitch presentation] for [FoodSync Delivery], a [logistics startup looking to collaborate with Uber Eats]. Audience: [brand executives at Uber]. I want you to include slides like [delivery coverage, cost-saving model, customer demographics and potential co-branding opportunities]. Keep the tone [professional but persuasive].”
Entered this prompt into Visme’s GPT inside ChatGPT, and here’s what it created for me:
28. “Draft a [conference keynote presentation] on [The Future of AI in Healthcare] for [Dr. Ayesha Khan]. The audience will be [medical professionals and policy makers], so keep it thought-leadership style.”
29. “Build a [sponsorship proposal deck] for [Summit Sports Expo 2025]. It should convince [corporate sponsors] to [come on board by showing value and ROI].”
30. “I need a [product launch presentation] for [FitAI Coach], an [AI-powered fitness app]. Audience: [press + fitness influencers]. Make it exciting and consumer-friendly.”
31. “Create a [sales training deck] on [how to handle objections] for [ScaleUp CRM]. The goal is to help [junior sales reps practice real scenarios and improve close rates].”
32. “Put together a [webinar presentation] on [Top 10 SEO Trends for 2025]. Audience is [marketers at agencies + in-house teams]. Keep it tight, visual and future-focused.”
Entered this prompt in Beautiful.ai and here are the results:
33. “Draft a [fundraising pitch deck] for [GreenFuture Nonprofit] focused on [reforestation projects]. Audience: [impact investors]. Include slides like [problem, solution, achievements, donor ROI, call to action]. Keep tone [emotional but evidence-backed]. Suggest visuals wherever they’re needed.
34. “Generate a [team offsite presentation] for [BlueSky Analytics]. Audience: [20 employees]. Theme: [reflect on past year + align for next year]. Keep it [casual, fun and a little inspirational].”
35. “Build a [company rebrand rollout deck] for [Lumiere Tech]. The audience is [internal employees]. Show the [“why” behind the rebrand, the new identity and how to use it going forward].”
36. “Generate a [conference workshop deck] on [Data Visualization Best Practices]. Audience is [analysts + business managers]. Focus on [principles, good vs bad examples and a few exercises].”
Plugged this prompt in Canva AI and here’s what it generated:
37. “Build a [new client onboarding deck] for [NextPhase Consulting]. Audience = [enterprise client]. Goal = [reassure them, explain our onboarding process and show what happens next].”
38. “Create a [performance review cycle presentation] for [BrightPath Media]. Audience: [all company employees]. Goal: [educate team on new/updated review process]. Proposed presentation structure: [timeline, criteria, tools, FAQs]. Tone: [informative and clear]. Suggest relevant visuals.
39. “Create a [nonprofit impact report presentation] for [WaterHope Foundation]. Audience: [donors + community partners]. It should [highlight mission, key wins and future goals].”
40. “I need a [training deck] on [Emotional Intelligence at Work] for [mid-level managers at GlobalTech]. Make it practical, with examples and short exercises they can use immediately.”
41. “Generate a [strategic planning deck] for [NovaTech Retail as they expand into European markets]. Audience: [executive board]. Focus on [market research, SWOT and financial forecasts].”
Plugged this prompt in Visme’s AI presentation maker, and here’s what it generated:
42. “Build a [closing presentation] for [Summit Leadership Retreat]. Audience: [executives]. It should [wrap up the event and summarize key learnings].”
43. “Create a [crisis communication presentation] for [Pulse Electronics]. Scenario = [product recall]. Audience is [employees + media]. Make the deck easy to follow.”
44. “Draft a [training deck on DEI best practices] for [all staff at Horizon Enterprises]. Keep it [inclusive, practical and focused on real scenarios people can learn from].”
45. “Generate a [social media strategy deck] for [LuxeWear Fashion]. Audience: [CMO + marketing team]. Should cover [performance, content pillars, influencer playbook, paid ads and KPIs].”
Added this prompt in Gamma and here’s what it generated:
46. “Draft a [sports sponsorship pitch] for [IronMan Triathlon Series]. Audience: [potential global sponsors]. Goal: [show audience reach, branding opportunities and ROI projections].”
47. “I want to create a [season performance review deck] for [Manchester Falcons Football Team]. Audience: [team owners + sponsors]. It should cover [player stats, ticket sales, fan engagement and plans for next season].”
Realistically, this is where AI excels. It’s great at pulling together individual slides (both visuals and copy). Whether you need to convert a spreadsheet into a chart, draft a killer closing slide or create a comparison slide, AI can give you a solid first draft in seconds.
Here are 23 prompts for creating individual slides:
48. “Turn this [spreadsheet of Q2 revenue data] into a [clean data visualization slide] that uses [bar charts and callout insights] for [executive stakeholders].”
49. “Write a [recommendation slide] for [Acme Consulting]. Mention three strategic recommendations for [improving customer retention]. Keep it clear, with short bullets.”
50. “Add a slide that breaks down the [4 Ps of Marketing] with short examples for each.”
51“Build a [comparison slide] showing [our product vs 3 competitors]. Include categories for [pricing, features, support, scalability]. Audience: [prospective enterprise clients].”
52. “Create a slide comparing [traditional classrooms] to [online learning environments].”
53. “Turn this [internal meeting document] into a [summary slide] with [5 key takeaways + 1 visual chart]. Audience: [senior leadership team].”
54. “Design an [agenda slide] for a [30-minute workshop]. Keep it clean, with time stamps and a minimal layout.”
55. “Build a [KPI slide] for a [SaaS company] tracking [MRR, churn and customer acquisition cost].”
56. “Design a slide with a simple [org chart] for a [startup of 15 employees].”
57. “Add a [risk vs reward slide] for [expanding into international markets].”
58. “Generate a [vision + mission slide] for [GreenFuture Nonprofit]. Use strong headlines and supporting imagery that conveys sustainability.”
59. “Make a [closing slide] for a [fundraising pitch]. Audience: [potential investors]. Include [a powerful tagline, logo and a CTA (schedule a follow-up meeting)].”
60. “Create an [executive summary slide] for [a quarterly business review]. Summarize [financial performance, wins and challenges] in 3-4 bullets with visuals.”
61. “Build a [timeline slide] showing [product development milestones from Jan-Dec]. Use a clean horizontal layout with icons for each milestone.”
62. “Generate a [customer testimonial slide] for [CloudFlow SaaS]. Include [2 short quotes, client logos and star ratings].”
63. “Create a [problem vs solution slide] for a [startup investor pitch]. Use side-by-side columns with icons and bold headings.”
64“Add a [closing slide] with [one key takeaway] and a [call-to-action to book a demo].”
65. “Design a [pricing options slide] for [ScaleUp CRM]. Show [3 pricing tiers with features & highlight the most popular option].”
66. “Build a two-column slide comparing [TikTok] vs [Instagram] marketing effectiveness. It should be a visual.”
67. “I want to add [a quote slide] for a [conference keynote]. Make sure the design uses a [bold background, large typography for the quote and the speaker’s name underneath].”
68. “Create a slide summarizing the main arguments from this [article].” (paste the article copy or link)
69. “Need your help to turn these [customer survey results] into a [data insights slide]. Show [top 3 insights with matching charts].”
70. “Create a [thank-you slide] for a [sales pitch deck]. Include [company logo, contact info and a simple CTA (book a demo)].”
Great slides don’t guarantee a great presentation. The way you deliver them matters just as much. And AI can help you prep for that too. Here are 20 prompts for improving engagement in your presentations:
71. “Suggest [10 audience questions] that might come up after my [AI in marketing presentation], along with clear, confident answers. Attaching the presentation for reference.”
72. “I’m delivering a [keynote on leadership] to an audience of [mid-level managers at a corporate event]. Write me a [2-minute opening story] that feels [inspiring, sets the tone, and connects to the importance of leading through change].”
73. “I’m hosting a [30-minute webinar on remote collaboration]. Give me [3 live poll questions or quick interactive activities] I can run during the session to keep attendees engaged.”
74. “Generate [5 rhetorical questions] I can use in a [sales pitch to enterprise clients]. They should highlight pain points and set up our solution.”
75. “I need a [transition script] for moving smoothly between slides in my [15-minute investor pitch]. Tone should feel confident and conversational.”
76. “I’m presenting a [sponsorship pitch] to [potential corporate partners]. Draft a [Q&A prep sheet] with 10 likely questions they’ll ask and concise answers.”
77. “Suggest [5 strategies] to keep audience energy high during a [conference workshop with 100+ attendees]. Include ideas for movement, breaks or mini-interactions.”
78. “Draft [closing remarks] for a [nonprofit fundraising presentation]. They should be emotional, memorable and end with a strong call-to-action.”
79. “I’m speaking at a [university lecture on entrepreneurship]. Give me [3 quick audience participation ideas] that make the talk more interactive.”
80. “Give me [3 icebreaker ideas] for starting a [virtual presentation to a distributed team]. These should be quick and fun.”
81. “Generate [5 short audience poll questions] I can use in a [customer feedback presentation] to make it interactive.”
82. “I’m wrapping up a [3-day offsite with my leadership team]. Draft a [closing activity or reflection exercise] that will keep the energy high and make it memorable.”
83. “I’m presenting to [international colleagues in a global sales meeting]. Suggest [5 cultural sensitivity tips] that will help me keep the presentation engaging and respectful across regions.”
84. “Give me 5 tough questions I might face in a [climate change presentation] and provide smart answers.”
85. “Suggest 3 exercises I can practice at home to improve my pacing when I present.”
86. “Write a script for a funny but professional way to thank the audience after a [product demo presentation].”
87. “Give me 5 quick warm-up exercises I can do backstage to relax before presenting.”
88. “Help me come up with a ‘what if’ scenario to end my [presentation on future workplace trends] in a thought-provoking way.”
89. “Suggest [3 creative audience challenges] I can use at the end of a [marketing workshop] to make sure participants apply what they learned.”
90. “Give me [5 cultural reference jokes or anecdotes] I can sprinkle into a [global conference talk] without offending anyone, just to keep it light.”
So you’ve already built a presentation—great. But now what? Instead of letting it collect dust, you can squeeze way more value out of it by turning it into new content. Here are 17 prompts to help you repurpose your presentation content:
91. “Turn this [sales presentation deck] into a [blog post draft] that highlights the same key insights.”
92. “Summarize my [conference keynote slides] into a [LinkedIn carousel outline] with 8 short slides.”
93. “I delivered a [webinar presentation] on [AI trends in marketing], and I want you to turn the deck into a [detailed blog article of at least 1,500 words]. Write it in an [authoritative but conversational tone]. Avoid jargon, avoid robotic phrasing and don’t fall into common AI writing patterns. Add [clear subheadings, real-world examples with proper sources], and make sure it reads like something an expert would publish for industry professionals.”
94. “Take this [market expansion strategy presentation] and create a [step-by-step how-to guide] I can share internally.”
95. “Rewrite my [quarterly business review slides] as a [CEO email update] to employees.”
96. “Convert this [investor pitch deck] into a [one-page executive summary PDF].”
97. “Create a [social media thread] (10 posts) based on the highlights from this [presentation on AI in marketing].”
98. “Draft a [YouTube video script] from these [product demo slides]. And make it conversational.”
99. “I am attaching this [nonprofit presentation]. I want you to turn it into a [200-word press release] for donors and media.”
100. “Transform this [sales deck] into a [cold email sequence] (3 emails) with short, punchy copy.”
101. “Turn this [research presentation] into a [whitepaper outline] with sections and suggested visuals.”
102. “Extract [10 quotable one-liners] from this [keynote presentation] to use on social media. Don’t paraphrase anything and tell me where each quote was used in the original presentation.”
103. “Rewrite my [customer education presentation] into an [FAQ page] with 10 clear Q&As.”
104. “Take this [startup pitch deck] and generate a [landing page copy draft] with headline, subheadings and CTAs.”
105. “Convert this [project update deck] into a concise [Slack update message].”
106. “Take this [case study presentation] and turn it into a [customer success story article] with narrative flow.”
107. “I have a [conference presentation] on [sustainable fashion trends] (attaching it to the prompt for reference). I want you to give me [10 strategies] for repurposing it into [social media content]. Focus on [TikTok and Instagram Reels]. Suggest different formats like short-form videos, carousels, etc., and explain how each one can drive engagement.”
AI isn’t perfect. There, I said it. I’ve created over 100 presentations, and even though I feel like I’ve got my prompts down pretty well, the results are sometimes still unpredictable.
That’s because AI isn’t actually “thinking”; it’s predicting the next best word or layout based on patterns.
In most cases, AI will usually get you 60-70% of the way there. The rest comes down to your personal judgment and creative touch.
Here are some of the most common AI presentation fails, and how to fix them:
There are tons of AI presentation makers out there. But like most things, not all of them will fit your use case or have the features you actually need.
We’ve tested and compared 15 of the best AI presentation makers (similar to how we reviewed the best AI writing tools). Here’s a quick side-by-side comparison of the top five tools that consistently stood out:
Tool Name | Key Features | AI Features | Core Uses | G2 Rating |
Visme | Advanced data visualization, drag-and-drop editing, 10,000+ customizable templates, infinite canvas, photo/video editing, animation, forms, 3D character creator, collaboration, analytics | AI presentation maker, AI writer, AI design generator, AI image editing, AI text to speech, AI brand wizard, AI resize, Edit with AI | Branded presentations, infographics, social media graphics with animations, marketing materials, interactive content, short-form video | 4.5/5 (450 reviews) |
Gamma | Modular card-style layouts, easy embedding, collaboration, analytics | AI presentation generator, AI writer, AI image generator, AI chat assistant | Presentations, websites, social media content, documents | 4.2/5 (13 reviews) |
Beautiful.ai | Smart templates, auto layout formatting, DesignerBot AI for decks, collaboration, analytics | AI presentation design, AI Writer, AI image generator | Sleek client pitches, internal presentations | 4.7/5 (177 reviews) |
Canva | Built-in templates, brand kit, third-party apps & integrations, collaboration, analytics, drag-and-drop editing | AI presentation maker, AI image generator, AI writer, AI code assistant, AI photo editor, AI voice tools, AI resize, AI video generator, AI graphic generator | Branded presentations, marketing visuals, social media graphics, short videos | 4.7/5 (5766 reviews) |
Designs.ai | Creative suite (logo, video, audio, copy, graphic tools), color matching, 20,000+ templates, brand kit, collaboration | AI design, AI chat, AI writer, AI image generator, AI videos, AI audio, AI draw, AI logomaker, AI face swap | Presentations, social-first graphics, brand assets | 4.3/5 (106 reviews) |
AI presentation prompts are specific instructions you give to AI tools to generate slides, outlines or full presentations.
The length doesn’t matter as much as clarity. Be specific, provide context (audience, purpose, tone) and guide the structure so the AI knows exactly what you want.
Yes. AI tools like Visme, Canva and Gamma are fully capable of turning your prompts into complete visual presentations.
There aren’t many differences between ChatGPT and Claude for presentations. Both are capable of producing strong slide content.
Once you get your prompts right, ChatGPT and Claude can deliver equally good results, although ChatGPT tends to pair more smoothly with visual tools like Visme and Canva.
Be specific about tone in your prompt (conversational, persuasive, professional), mention your target audience and set style constraints. AI isn’t perfect, so always review and edit the output to add your personality.
ChatGPT itself can’t generate a finished PowerPoint file with designs and visuals, but it can create the full text outline, slide structure and talking points for your deck. To turn that into a presentation, you’ll need to import the content into a design tool or use an AI that creates PowerPoint slides like Visme, Canva or SlidesAI.
Use ChatGPT to brainstorm ideas, outline slides, refine copy, simplify complex points and even practice audience Q&A by asking it to generate potential questions.
AI can do a lot. And as we’ve seen throughout this article, it’s getting pretty good at designing full presentations too. But it still needs you to steer it in the right direction. The sharper your prompt, the better the results: context, structure and tone all matter.
If you’re ready to skip the frustration of bland, cookie-cutter decks and start building presentations that actually connect, try Visme’s AI presentation maker today.
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