skills/shared/presentation-builder/SKILL.md
Transform ideas, outlines, or documents into structured slide content with clear titles, bullet points, and speaker notes. Adapts to presentation type (pitch decks, business reviews, technical workshops, educational talks). Use when user says "create slides", "build a deck", "pitch deck", "presentation structure", "talk structure", "keynote", "slide deck", "conference talk", or needs slide content for any format. Also trigger when user has content they want to present to an audience - even if they don't explicitly say "presentation" or "slides".
npx skillsauth add qa-aman/claude-skills presentation-builderInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Ask the user:
Pitch Deck (investors, sponsors): Problem > Solution > Market Size > How It Works > Traction/Proof > Team > Ask
Business Review (leadership, stakeholders): Context > Performance vs. Goal > Key Findings > Risks/Blockers > Decisions Needed > Next Steps
Technical Workshop (practitioners): Problem Definition > Concepts > Demo/Walkthrough > Common Pitfalls > Hands-On Exercise > Key Takeaways
Educational Talk (community, general audience): Hook/Story > Core Idea > Evidence/Examples > Implications > What To Do Next
For each slide:
[IMAGE: description of what visual would go here]Deliver as numbered slides in markdown:
## Slide 1: [Title]
- Bullet 1
- Bullet 2
- Bullet 3
[IMAGE: description]
Speaker note: ...
After the slides, add:
1. Wall-of-text slide Bad: A slide with 8 bullets and a paragraph of context underneath Good: Split into two slides, each with 3-4 bullets that the speaker elaborates on verbally
2. Label title Bad: "Market Overview" Good: "TAM is $4B and growing 30% YoY"
3. Reading the slides Bad: Speaker notes that repeat the bullet text word for word Good: Speaker notes that add context, stories, or data the bullets don't show
4. Everything-in-the-deck Bad: 30 slides for a 15-minute talk because "the content is important" Good: 12 slides for the talk, appendix slides for the Q&A backup
5. Decoration over clarity Bad: Complex charts with 6 data series and no callout Good: One chart, one trend line highlighted, one takeaway in the title
development
Plan a webinar end-to-end using April Dunford's Obviously Awesome positioning framework to find the topic angle that makes the webinar obviously valuable to the right audience. Produces topic positioning, abstract, speaker brief, registration page, promotion sequence, day-of run-of-show, and post-webinar follow-up. Use when the user asks to plan a webinar, virtual event, online workshop, "we need a webinar on X", host a webinar, online masterclass, or any live virtual event with promotion and follow-up. Reads ICP, services, and brand voice from knowledge/.
development
Write long-form thought leadership articles, opinion pieces, industry POV essays, and CEO/founder bylines using the Made to Stick SUCCESs framework (Chip and Dan Heath). Use when the user asks for a long-form article, executive byline, opinion piece, industry POV, manifesto, "explain our point of view on X", or wants to publish an authority-building piece (1200-2500 words). Reads brand voice and positioning from knowledge/.
development
Plan a monthly content calendar across channels using the Content Marketing Matrix (Dave Chaffey, Smart Insights) - Entertain/Inspire/Educate/Convince. Every post gets a quadrant label. The monthly calendar must hit 40% Educate, 40% Inspire+Convince, 20% Entertain. Produces a week-by-week posting schedule with topics, formats, channels, and asset links. Use when the user says "content calendar", "social calendar", "plan next month's content", "what should we post", "content plan", "editorial calendar", "schedule posts for the month", or wants a structured posting plan for LinkedIn, Twitter, email, or blog. Reads brand voice, ICP, and past learnings from knowledge/.
development
Write SEO-optimized long-form articles targeting specific keywords using the They Ask You Answer Big 5 framework (Marcus Sheridan). Articles are categorized by Big 5 type (Cost, Problems, Versus, Best/Reviews, How-To) and structured accordingly. The "answer first" rule applies to every article. Use when the user asks for an SEO article, blog post for ranking, "rank for keyword X", organic content, search-optimized post, pillar page, or content for organic traffic. Includes keyword targeting, search intent matching, internal linking suggestions, and meta tags.