WHAT MAKES A GOOD PRESENTATION DESIGN?
Why the answer is rarely where most people look
When someone says “our presentation doesn’t look good” — they usually mean the colors. Or the font. Maybe the images.
Those are the visible elements. But they are rarely the actual problem.
Good presentation design doesn’t start with the slide. It starts with asking: What does this presentation need to achieve with this audience at this moment? Anyone who doesn’t answer this question before opening PowerPoint won’t create a good presentation – no matter how beautiful the slides look in the end.
The Three Levels of a Presentation
Every presentation has three levels that must work together. If one of them is missing, the whole thing won’t work — even if the other two are strong.
Content: What is being said?
The core message must be clear within a few seconds. Not on slide 12. Not in the conclusion. Right from the start. If you can’t express your core message in one sentence, you haven’t found it yet.
Common mistakes: Too many messages at once. Content that matters to the presenter but not the audience. A call to action that comes too late or is missing entirely.
Structure: How is it organized?
A presentation is not a list of facts. It is a narrative. The structure determines whether the audience can follow along — or gets lost and never finds their way back.
A common thread doesn’t mean everything has to be linear. It means each step sets the stage for the next. That tension is built and resolved. That the opening sparks curiosity and the conclusion sticks in the memory.
Design: How is it visually implemented?
This is where colors, fonts and images come into play. Design is not decoration — it’s the visual representation of your message. Good design directs the eye to the right place. It creates hierarchy, clarity and consistency.
The most common design mistakes aren’t due to bad taste — they come from too much text per slide, a lack of visual hierarchy and inconsistencies that subconsciously confuse the audience.
Why Most Presentations Fail in the Wrong Place
In practice, we at MCPREZI see the same pattern over and over: Someone comes in with a finished presentation and says “make this look nicer.” We take a look — and the design isn’t the problem at all. The problem is the structure. Or the message is unclear. Or both.
Design can’t save a weak structure. And a strong message loses its impact if it isn’t conveyed visually.
The three levels aren’t independent screws you can turn one at a time. They’re a system. And this system must function as a whole.
How Can You Tell If Your Presentation Is Really Good?
Not because you like it. Not because your team says “it looks great.” But because it triggers the response it’s supposed to trigger in the audience. Does the core message land? Is the next step clear? Does the presentation stick in people’s minds — for the right reasons?
That’s hard to judge when you’re too close to it yourself. That’s exactly why an independent outside perspective is sometimes worth it.
Want to Know Where Your Presentation Really Stands?
A good article explains the theory. The Presentation Check shows you the practice — concrete, structured and tailored to your presentation.
In just a few business days you’ll receive a written analysis across all three levels — content, structure and design — plus a slide-by-slide video walkthrough and prioritized recommendations you can implement right away.
FAQ
What is the most important factor for good presentation design?
The clarity of the core message. All other design decisions — layout, color and typography — serve to convey this message. Without a clear message even the best visual design won’t help.
How much text should be on a slide?
As little as possible. A slide should convey one idea — not explain an entire paragraph. If you read aloud the text that’s on the slide there’s too much text on it.
What distinguishes professional presentation design from homemade slides?
Above all three things: visual hierarchy that guides the eye, consistency across all slides and deliberate decisions about what to leave off a slide. Professionals don’t just design — they design with purpose.
When is a professional Presentation Check worthwhile?
Whenever a presentation needs to make an impact on an important audience and you’re not sure it will. A structured check gives you a clear outside perspective on content, structure and design within a few business days — with concrete recommendations for improvement.