Learn-skills.dev presentation-outline

Generate structured presentation outlines with bold statement slides, section dividers, and clear narrative arcs. Use when starting a new presentation, planning a deck structure, or asking "outline a presentation about...", "structure a deck for...", or "create a presentation flow for...". Outputs markdown outlines ready to translate into slides.

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/NeverSight/learn-skills.dev
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/NeverSight/learn-skills.dev "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/data/skills-md/aaronvanston/skills-presentations/presentation-outline" ~/.claude/skills/neversight-learn-skills-dev-presentation-outline && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: data/skills-md/aaronvanston/skills-presentations/presentation-outline/SKILL.md
source content

Presentation Outline

Generate presentation structures following a proven flow pattern with bold, minimal slides designed for live presenting.

Core Principles

  • Slides are conversation starters, not scripts — each slide prompts discussion
  • Bold statements over explanations — headlines that land, not sentences that explain
  • Breathing room — fewer slides with more impact beats many dense slides
  • Clear sections — the audience should always know where they are
  • Section colors — each major section gets its own accent color to reinforce structure

Standard Flow

The base arc adapts to the content. A typical presentation follows 5-7 sections:

1. OPENING (color: teal)
   - Title slide (topic + subtitle)
   - Goals/agenda (3 key takeaways max)

2. CONTEXT / THE PROBLEM (color: red)
   - Current state / where we are today
   - The tension or question to resolve

3-5. CORE SECTIONS (colors: purple, amber, green, blue)
   - Section dividers between major topics
   - 3-5 content slides per section
   - Mix of statement, data, code, framework, and quote slides

6. CLOSING (color: teal)
   - Recap (one-liner per section)
   - Resources
   - Q&A

Sections can expand or contract — a complex topic might have 4 core sections, a focused talk might have 2.

Slide Types

TypeWhen to useExample
StatementLand a key point"Speed is a feature"
Big statementMaximum impact, one idea"AI has no memory"
QuestionCreate tension"What would we do differently?"
Section dividerSignal topic shift"Where we play"
GoalsSet expectations"Goals for today"
DataProve with numbers"3x growth in 6 months"
CodeShow implementationSyntax-highlighted code block
FrameworkShow a model or listDo's and don'ts, comparison
QuoteBorrow authority"What got you here won't get you there"
RecapSummarize before close"Recap"
ResourcesLink referencesGrouped by section
Next stepsDrive action"Where to from here?"

Output Format

# [Presentation Title]
[One-line purpose]

---

## 1. Opening
**Section color:** teal

### Slide 1: Title
- **Headline:** [Title]
- **Subtitle:** [Context or date]

### Slide 2: Goals for today
- **Headline:** Goals for today
- **Points:**
  - [Takeaway 1] — [Brief explanation]
  - [Takeaway 2] — [Brief explanation]
  - [Takeaway 3] — [Brief explanation]

---

## 2. [Section Name]
**Section color:** [color]

### Slide 3: Section divider
- **Type:** Section divider
- **Headline:** [Section title]

### Slide 4: [Slide purpose]
- **Type:** [Statement/Big statement/Data/Code/etc.]
- **Headline:** [Bold headline]
- **Supporting:** [1-2 sentences or bullets]

---

## X. Closing
**Section color:** teal

### Slide N: Recap
- **Headline:** Recap
- **Points:** [One-liner per section]

### Slide N+1: Resources
- **Type:** Resources
- **References:** [Grouped by section]

### Slide N+2: Q&A

Workflow

  1. Ask about context — audience, purpose, setting (live vs. async)
  2. Identify key messages — what 3 things must land?
  3. Map the arc — Opening → Problem/Context → Core sections → Close
  4. Assign section colors — one color per major section
  5. Draft outline — use the format above
  6. Review density — cut slides that don't earn their place