[Period] · [Audience] · [Deck Type]

[Presentation]
Title

A short description of the deck, its purpose, and the decision it supports.

[Author Name] · [Role] [Version] · [Status] · [Period]
01 · [Section]

Section headline with one emphasized idea

A brief setup sentence that explains what this section covers and why it matters.

[Slide Label] 03
[Kicker Label]

A concise statement that frames the main argument in one memorable sentence.

03 / 18
[Category] · [Topic] 04
[Kicker Label]

Main headline for a split-layout slide

Use this paragraph for the core explanation. Keep it short, specific, and easy to scan.

  • First supporting point with concise context
  • Second supporting point with concise context
  • Third supporting point with concise context
Image Placeholder

[Caption for image]

04 / 18
[Category] · [Metrics] 05

Three metrics that summarize the current state

[X]%
Short description of the first metric and its meaning
[Source] · [Date]
[Y]×
Short description of the second metric and its meaning
[Method or source]
[Z]
Short description of the third metric and its meaning
[Benchmark]
05 / 18
"

A short pull quote or highlighted observation can sit here.

[Source Name] [Source Role] · [Context]
[Framework] 07
[Kicker Label]

Five principles that shape the recommended approach

Use this sentence to introduce the list and clarify how the points should be read.

  • First principle written as a complete sentence
  • Second principle written as a complete sentence
  • Third principle written as a complete sentence
  • Fourth principle written as a complete sentence
  • Fifth principle written as a complete sentence
07 / 18
[Before] · [After] 08
[Current State]

Headline describing the current state

Describe the current approach, the friction it creates, and why it needs to change.

  • Current limitation or source of friction
  • Current limitation or source of friction
  • Current limitation or source of friction
[Proposed State]

Headline describing the proposed approach

Describe the improved approach, the behavior it enables, and the outcome it supports.

  • Expected improvement or capability
  • Expected improvement or capability
  • Expected improvement or capability
08 / 18
— § [Section] [Deck Name] · [Period] · [Year]
[Issue] [N] · [Review Label]

Editorial headline with one accented word for emphasis.

[Sequence]
[Date] First event or observation appears. Short implication.
[Date] Second event or observation appears. Short implication.
[Date] Third event or observation appears. Short implication.
[Date] Fourth event adds context. A key pattern holds across the data.
[Date] Fifth event confirms part of the hypothesis and challenges another assumption.
[Date] Final event closes the sequence and clarifies the next question.
[Key Readings]
[A]%
Metric label · [Segment] · [Period]
[B]x
Metric label vs. comparison period
[C]pt
Metric label · [Segment]
+[D]
Net change across selected group
Use this analysis line to synthesize the sequence above. Explain what changed, why it matters, and what decision should follow.
Sources: [Source A] · [Source B] · [Source C] · [Source D] 09 / 18
[Deep Dive] 10

Long-form headline that frames the central tradeoff

[Argument A]

Use this paragraph to explain the first side of the argument. Include one emphasized phrase when a key idea needs extra weight.

Add a second paragraph with supporting evidence, operational detail, or a short example that strengthens the case.

Close the column with the implication. Make the logic clear enough that the reader understands the recommended action.

[Argument B]

Use this paragraph to explain the second side of the argument. Highlight the contrasting principle with an emphasized phrase.

Add a second paragraph with supporting detail. This column should feel like a deliberate counterweight to the first column.

Close with the practical takeaway, linking the argument back to the decision the deck is meant to support.

[Analysis Label] · [Period] 10 / 18
[Perspective] 11
[Kicker Label]

A second statement slide can reinforce the argument with a sharper closing line.

11 / 18
[Organization]

Closing headline with one emphasized phrase.

[Author Name] · [email@example.com] · [website.example]

§ [Metrics] 13

Chart headline with emphasis

[Unit] · [Scope] · [Period]
[A]
[T1]
[B]
[T2]
[C]
[T3]
[D]
[T4]
[E]
[T5]

Source: [Source] · [Period]

[Organization] · [Period] 13 / 18
Process 14

Four-step process with emphasis

01
Step One
Briefly describe the first step in the workflow.
02
Step Two
Briefly describe the second step in the workflow.
03
Step Three
Briefly describe the third step in the workflow.
04
Step Four
Briefly describe the fourth step in the workflow.
[Organization] · [Period] 14 / 18
[Breakdown] 15

Breakdown by category

Category A 35%
Category B 30%
Category C 22%
Category D 13%
Total: [N] · As of [Period]

Source: [Source] · [Period]

[Organization] · [Period] 15 / 18
[Hierarchy] 16

The priority hierarchy

Level One Highest-order principle or decision criterion
Level Two Second-order principle or decision criterion
Level Three Third-order principle or decision criterion
Level Four Supporting layer or operating standard
Level Five Foundation layer or ongoing practice
[Organization] · [Period] 16 / 18
[Timeline] 17

From starting point to current state

[Year 1]
Milestone One

Describe the first milestone and the outcome it produced.

[Year 2]
Milestone Two

Describe the second milestone. Use emphasis for the key implication.

[Year 3]
Milestone Three

Describe the third milestone and how the scope changed.

[Year 4]
Milestone Four

Describe the current milestone and the focus area it represents.

[Organization] · [Period] 17 / 18
[Process] 18

The operating cycle

01
Step One
Describe how the cycle begins and what input starts the work.
02
Step Two
Describe how the input is examined, refined, or validated.
04
Step Four
Describe how the result is implemented, supported, or improved.
03
Step Three
Describe the decision point and the criteria used to move forward.
[Organization] · [Period] 18 / 18