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Sales Deck Frameworks

Detailed slide-by-slide guidance for building sales decks that tell a story and close deals.

The Storytelling Arc

Every great deck follows a narrative structure: Situation → Complication → Resolution.

  • Situation (Slides 1-3): The world your buyer lives in. Establish shared understanding.
  • Complication (Slides 2-3): Why the status quo is no longer sustainable. Create urgency.
  • Resolution (Slides 4-11): Your approach, proof, and path forward.

The goal is not to present features. The goal is to make the buyer feel understood, then show them a better way.


Slide-by-Slide Template

Slide 1: Current World Problem

What to include:

  • The challenge your buyer faces daily
  • A stat or data point that quantifies the problem
  • Visual: simple graphic or striking number

What to avoid:

  • Starting with your company or product
  • Generic industry trends that don't connect to pain
  • More than one core problem

Copy prompt: "What is the one problem that, if you could describe it perfectly, would make your buyer say 'that's exactly my situation'?"


Slide 2: Cost of the Problem

What to include:

  • Financial impact (revenue lost, costs incurred)
  • Time impact (hours wasted, delays)
  • Risk impact (what happens if they do nothing)
  • Specific numbers wherever possible

What to avoid:

  • Vague claims without data
  • Fear-mongering without substance
  • Too many metrics (pick 2-3 that hit hardest)

Copy prompt: "If your buyer does nothing for the next 12 months, what does it cost them?"


Slide 3: The Shift Happening

What to include:

  • Market trend or technology change creating a new opportunity
  • Why "the old way" no longer works
  • Why now is the right time to act

What to avoid:

  • Hype-driven trends without substance
  • Making it about your product yet
  • Overly technical explanations

Copy prompt: "What has changed in the market that makes the old approach unsustainable?"


Slide 4: Your Approach

What to include:

  • Your philosophy or unique point of view
  • How your approach differs from conventional solutions
  • The "aha" insight that led to your product

What to avoid:

  • Feature lists (too early)
  • Jargon or acronyms
  • Claiming to be "the only" or "the first" unless provably true

Copy prompt: "What do you believe about solving this problem that most people get wrong?"


Slide 5: Product Walkthrough

What to include:

  • 3-4 key workflows that map to the pain from Slide 1
  • Screenshots or product visuals
  • Brief description of what each workflow accomplishes

What to avoid:

  • Showing every feature
  • Dense UI screenshots without callouts
  • Talking about technology instead of outcomes

Copy prompt: "Walk through 3 things the buyer would do in your product in their first week."


Slide 6: Proof Points

What to include:

  • Customer logos (aim for recognizable names in their industry)
  • Key metrics: "X% improvement," "Y hours saved," "Z% increase"
  • Analyst recognition, awards, or certifications if relevant

What to avoid:

  • Unsubstantiated claims
  • Too many logos without context
  • Vanity metrics that don't relate to the buyer's pain

Copy prompt: "What are 3 numbers that prove your product works?"


Slide 7: Case Study

What to include:

  • One customer story told well: challenge, solution, results
  • Specific metrics (before and after)
  • Customer quote if available
  • Choose a customer similar to the prospect

What to avoid:

  • Multiple case studies crammed into one slide
  • Generic outcomes without specifics
  • Customers from irrelevant industries

Copy prompt: "Tell the story of one customer who went from struggling to succeeding with your product."


Slide 8: Implementation / Timeline

What to include:

  • Clear phases with timeline (e.g., Week 1: Setup, Week 2-3: Integration, Week 4: Live)
  • What's required from their side vs. yours
  • Support resources available

What to avoid:

  • Overcomplicating the process
  • Hiding time requirements
  • Skipping the "what do I need to do?" question

Copy prompt: "How does a customer get from signing to live? What does each week look like?"


Slide 9: ROI / Value

What to include:

  • Expected return based on their inputs or industry benchmarks
  • Payback period
  • Total value over 1-3 years
  • Comparison to cost of inaction

What to avoid:

  • Unrealistic projections
  • ROI without showing your math
  • Generic numbers not tied to their situation

Copy prompt: "If they buy today, what does the next 12 months look like in dollars and hours?"


Slide 10: Pricing Overview

What to include:

  • Pricing tiers or structure
  • What's included at each level
  • Recommended plan for their situation

What to avoid:

  • Burying the price or being cagey
  • Too many options (3 tiers max)
  • Surprising them with hidden costs

Copy prompt: "What does it cost, what do they get, and which plan is right for them?"


Slide 11: Next Steps / CTA

What to include:

  • Specific next action with timeline ("Start a pilot next week")
  • What happens after they say yes
  • Your contact information

What to avoid:

  • Vague CTAs ("Let's stay in touch")
  • Multiple competing next steps
  • Ending without energy

Copy prompt: "What is the one thing you want them to do after this meeting?"


Persona Customization Guide

Technical Buyer Deck

Add:

  • Architecture diagram slide after Product Walkthrough
  • Security and compliance details
  • Integration ecosystem and API capabilities
  • Technical implementation requirements

Remove or minimize:

  • ROI calculations (they care about capability, not cost)
  • High-level market trends (they want specifics)

Adjust tone: Precise, no fluff, respect their expertise. Avoid marketing superlatives.

Economic Buyer Deck

Add:

  • Detailed ROI slide with calculations shown
  • Total cost of ownership comparison
  • Risk mitigation and compliance
  • Executive summary slide up front

Remove or minimize:

  • Technical details and architecture
  • Feature-level walkthroughs
  • Implementation specifics (they'll delegate)

Adjust tone: Business-focused, outcome-driven. Speak in dollars and percentages.

Champion Deck

Add:

  • "Internal selling" slide — key points for them to present to their team
  • Quick-win slide — what success looks like in 30 days
  • Peer proof — companies like theirs who succeeded
  • Objection pre-handling — common pushback they'll face internally

Remove or minimize:

  • Deep technical or financial detail
  • Anything that requires context they can't relay

Adjust tone: Empowering, equipping. Make them look smart to their boss.


Anti-Patterns

The Feature Dump

Every slide is a feature with a screenshot. No story, no "so what," no connection to the buyer's world. Reps click through it; prospects tune out.

The Wall of Text

Slides with 200+ words. Nobody reads them during a presentation. If the slide requires reading, it belongs in a leave-behind.

The Missing Story Arc

Slides exist in isolation — no narrative flow from problem to solution to proof. The deck feels like a brochure, not a conversation.

The Generic Screenshot

Product screenshots without callouts, annotations, or context. The prospect can't tell what they're looking at or why it matters.

The Premature Demo

Jumping to product features before establishing the problem. The buyer has no frame of reference for why your features matter.

The Kitchen Sink

Trying to address every persona, every use case, every feature in one deck. The result is a 40-slide monster that nobody wants to sit through.

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