The Approval Packet Method: A 6-Slide Executive Deck That Gets a Clear Yes


The Approval Packet Method: A 6-Slide Executive Deck That Gets a Clear Yes

If your decks get “polite nods” but slow decisions, the problem is rarely your content. It’s the structure. Executives don’t want more slides—they want a fast, low-risk path to approve (or reject) with confidence.

Below is a plug-and-play 6-slide format you can copy for steering committees, budget asks, project approvals, and stakeholder decisions.


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Best for: proposals, investment requests, change initiatives, strategy updates, governance meetings.

A decision meeting is not a presentation. It’s an approval process.

What executives need to approve in under 60 seconds

In the first minute, most senior leaders are trying to answer three questions:

  • What are you asking me to approve? (the exact decision)
  • Why now? (the stakes of doing nothing)
  • How contained is the risk? (what could go wrong and how you’ll control it)

If your deck makes them hunt for any of those, you’ll hear the familiar: “This is interesting… send it around… let’s revisit.”

The shift that changes outcomes: stop “presenting,” start briefing

I learned this the hard way in financial services: senior decision-makers don’t read decks like stories. They scan like triage. If the decision isn’t obvious, they assume the work isn’t done.

The fix is simple: build the deck as an Approval Packet—a brief designed to make the decision easy.

The 6-Slide Approval Packet (copy this structure)

Use these six slides in this order. Keep each slide to one idea. Use sentence-style titles so the deck reads like a brief.

  1. The Decision — The exact “yes” you need (one sentence).
  2. The Stakes — What changes if we do nothing (consequence, not drama).
  3. The Options — 2–3 viable paths (including “do nothing”).
  4. The Recommendation — Your choice + the trade-off it wins.
  5. The Risk Box — Top risks + mitigations + kill switch trigger.
  6. The 30-Day Plan — What happens next if approved (who/when/what).

The Approval Packet is a repeatable decision format—use it for nearly any leadership meeting.


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If you’re building a deck today, start with this structure first. Design comes last.

The “Risk Box” slide: why it prevents the “come back with more analysis” stall

Most decks fail because risk is either hidden or hand-waved. When risk is vague, executives assume it’s larger than you’re admitting—so they delay.

Instead, give risk its own slide. Keep it tight and controlled:

  • Risk: plain-language statement (no jargon)
  • Likelihood / Impact: low / medium / high
  • Mitigation: what you will do proactively
  • Kill switch: the trigger that stops the initiative before it becomes expensive

This single slide signals competence and maturity. You’re not “selling.” You’re leading.

The 20-minute build workflow (when you’re under pressure)

  1. Write the Decision sentence first. If you can’t write it, you’re not ready to build slides.
  2. List the options. Leaders trust people who show trade-offs.
  3. Draft the Risk Box. This is what stops last-minute pushback.
  4. Add the 30-day plan. Make “what happens next” obvious.
  5. Only then add visuals and supporting numbers.

Rule: if a slide title can’t be read aloud as a complete sentence, rewrite it.

If you want this as plug-and-play templates (so you’re not rebuilding from scratch)

The Executive Slide System gives you a ready-made set of executive-grade slide structures plus prompts that help you write clean, decision-ready content—fast.

Use it when: you need a board-ready deck quickly and you don’t want to start from a blank slide.

Templates don’t replace thinking. They remove friction so your thinking lands faster.


Get the Executive Slide System →

Tip: if you’re using AI to draft slides, templates + prompts prevent generic “wordy slide” output.

Need a broader set of executive decision resources?

If you want to browse the full set of Executive Decision Deck resources (including related toolkits and swipe files), you can start here:


Browse Executive Decision Decks →

Quick self-check before you send your next deck

  • 10-second test: Can someone restate the decision after a skim of slide 1?
  • Trade-off test: Are options and consequences visible (not implied)?
  • Risk test: Is downside bounded with mitigations and a kill switch?
  • Momentum test: Is the 30-day next step obvious if approved?

If you pass all four, you’re no longer “presenting.” You’re making a decision easy.


About the author
Mary Beth Hazeldine helps professionals build decision-ready executive presentations—based on real boardroom experience (ex-JPMorgan Chase, PwC, Commerzbank) and 30+ years of presentation training at Winning Presentations.


Executive Slide System (Templates + Prompts) →