Category: PowerPoint Copilot

26 Nov 2025
Hero image showing clean PowerPoint-style layout explaining why “be creative” is the wrong Copilot prompt.

Stop Telling Copilot to ‘Be Creative’ – Here’s What to Say Instead

Last updated November 26, 2025

Last Thursday, a frustrated SaaS VP sent me her latest sales deck with a note: “I told Copilot to be creative. This is what I got.” The slides looked like a design student’s fever dream. Random gradients. Mismatched fonts. Stock images that had nothing to do with enterprise software. One slide had a sunset photo with the heading “Revenue Optimization Strategy.”

This wasn’t her fault. She did what everyone does with creative Copilot prompts for PowerPoint.She asked the AI to “be creative.”

Here’s what I’ve learned testing PowerPoint Copilot creative prompts on over 50 client decks in banking, biotech, and consulting: “Be creative” is the worst thing you can tell Copilot.

It doesn’t make your slides better. It makes them unpredictable, off-brand, and often unusable.

After 16 years creating presentations and 18 months testing every PowerPoint Copilot update on real client work — including £100M+ pitches — I can tell you exactly what to say instead.

Looking for ready-to-use AI prompts for executive presentations?

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 71 structured prompts for ChatGPT and Copilot — covering board decks, investor pitches, quarterly reviews, and strategy presentations.

Explore the Prompt Pack →

Why “Be Creative” PowerPoint Copilot Prompts Fail

When you tell Copilot to “be creative,” you’re asking an AI to interpret a completely subjective term without any constraints or direction.

Think about it from Copilot’s perspective. “Creative” could mean:

  • Bold unusual colour combinations
  • Unconventional layouts that break design rules
  • Abstract imagery with symbolic meaning
  • Experimental typography approaches
  • Unexpected visual metaphors

Without context, PowerPoint Copilot defaults to what looks “creative” in its training data — which is usually design-forward consumer presentations, not professional business decks.

The result? Slides that might win design awards but lose you the deal.

A major European bank learned this the hard way. Their team asked Copilot for “creative slides” for a client pitch. The output used vibrant purple and orange — striking, certainly. Also completely wrong for conservative banking clients expecting navy and grey.

They spent 90 minutes undoing Copilot’s “creativity.”

Side-by-side comparison of vague versus specific PowerPoint Copilot prompts.

What Actually Works: Specific PowerPoint Copilot Creative Prompts

The secret to better PowerPoint Copilot creative output isn’t asking for creativity. It’s defining exactly what kind of creativity you need.

Replace vague creative requests with specific design instructions that give Copilot clear parameters.

Instead of “Make This Creative” Say This:

For visual variety without chaos:
“Create visually distinct slides using data visualizations, process diagrams, and comparison layouts. Maintain consistent colour palette throughout.”

For engaging executive presentations:
“Design slides with minimal text (maximum 3 bullet points per slide), large impactful numbers, and clean professional layouts. Use icons to represent concepts.”

For memorable sales decks:
“Create slides with strong visual hierarchy using customer logos, before/after comparisons, and ROI calculations prominently displayed. Professional corporate style.”

For technical content that doesn’t bore:
“Transform technical details into simple diagrams, step-by-step process flows, and annotated visuals. Minimize dense text blocks.”

Real Example: From Disaster to Deal-Winner

A biotech client needed an investor deck. First attempt with PowerPoint Copilot creative prompts:

“Make creative slides about our gene therapy platform.”

Result: Slides with abstract DNA imagery, gradient backgrounds, and artistic interpretations of science. Beautiful — and completely wrong for conservative institutional investors expecting rigorous data.

Revised prompt using specific PowerPoint Copilot creative prompts:

“Create professional scientific slides with clear data visualizations showing efficacy results, safety profiles in table format, and competitive landscape comparison charts. Use clean layouts with prominent statistics. Conservative professional design suitable for institutional investors.”

Result: Crisp, data-focused slides that looked credible and authoritative. They raised £3.8 million.

Stop Guessing What to Type. Start Building in 25 Minutes.

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 71 tested prompts for ChatGPT and Copilot — structured by scenario so you know exactly what to type:

Updated 27 March 2026 — Revised for the latest Microsoft Copilot and ChatGPT capabilities.

  • Build from scratch — scenario prompts for board reviews, budget requests, and investor decks
  • Rescue and rewrite — audit an existing deck, condense it, or fix one slide at a time
  • Industry-specific prompts for financial services, banking, consulting, and executive audiences
  • Power modifiers that transform any prompt into board-ready output
  • The 25-minute deck workflow that replaces 3–4 hours of manual building

Works with ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot, and Edit with Copilot (formerly Agent Mode). Updated March 2026.

Executive Resource

Stop Writing AI Prompts From Scratch

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 50 battle-tested prompts for executive-level presentations — board updates, budget requests, investor briefs, and Q&A prep. Built for PowerPoint Copilot and ChatGPT.

Get the Executive Prompt Pack →

Used by executives preparing for board briefings, budget requests, and investor meetings.

Get the Executive Prompt Pack → £19.99

Framework image showing five proven PowerPoint Copilot prompt types.The Five PowerPoint Copilot Creative Prompts That Actually Work

After testing hundreds of variations on client decks, these five approaches consistently produce better results than “be creative.”

1. The Data-Forward Prompt

“Create slides emphasizing key metrics and statistics using large numbers, comparison charts, and visual data representations. Minimal decorative elements.”

When to use: Financial presentations, performance reviews, data-heavy pitches

2. The Visual Metaphor Prompt

“Illustrate concepts using relevant business icons and professional imagery. Each slide should have one clear visual element supporting the main point.”

When to use: Strategic presentations, vision documents, transformation initiatives

3. The Customer-Focused Prompt

“Design slides featuring customer logos prominently, testimonial quotes in callout boxes, and case study results with specific ROI numbers.”

When to use: Sales presentations, customer success stories, proof-of-value decks

4. The Process-Driven Prompt

“Create slides using step-by-step diagrams, numbered sequences, and timeline visualizations. Show clear progression and logic flow.”

When to use: Training materials, methodology explanations, implementation plans

5. The Comparison Prompt

“Design slides with side-by-side comparisons using tables, before/after layouts, and competitor analysis grids. Highlight differentiators clearly.”

When to use: Competitive positioning, solution comparisons, ROI justification

What Banking Taught Me About PowerPoint Copilot Creative Prompts

After 25 years in corporate banking at institutions like JPMorgan Chase and Royal Bank of Scotland, I learned something crucial: creativity in business presentations isn’t about being artistic. It’s about being memorable and persuasive within professional constraints.

The investment bankers who closed the biggest deals didn’t use sunset photos and gradient backgrounds. They used:

  • Clear data visualizations that made complex financials instantly understandable
  • Strategic use of white space to emphasize critical points
  • Consistent professional design that built credibility
  • Visual hierarchy that guided attention to key insights

That’s what “creative” means in high-stakes business presentations. And that’s what your PowerPoint Copilot creative prompts should reflect.

For 71 tested prompts covering every scenario — build from scratch, rescue an existing deck, or fix individual slides — the Executive Prompt Pack gives you exactly what to type, updated for the latest Copilot and ChatGPT capabilities.

The Three Mistakes Everyone Makes With Creative PowerPoint Copilot Prompts

Mistake #1: Asking for Creativity Without Context

Wrong: “Make this more creative”

Right: “Make this more visually engaging using data charts, customer logos, and clear section breaks while maintaining professional corporate design standards”

Mistake #2: Confusing Creative with Complicated

A consulting client asked for “creative and sophisticated slides.” Copilot delivered ornate layouts with multiple fonts, decorative borders, and complex color schemes.

They wanted sophisticated, which actually means simple, clean, and confident — not elaborate.

Better PowerPoint Copilot creative prompts: “Create sophisticated slides using minimal design, generous white space, and one strong visual element per slide. Professional and understated.”

Mistake #3: Not Specifying Your Industry Standards

What looks creative in tech might look unprofessional in finance. What works for startups might fail for pharma.

Always include industry context in your PowerPoint Copilot creative prompts:

  • Banking: “conservative professional design,” “institutional investor appropriate”
  • Tech/SaaS: “modern clean aesthetic,” “tech-forward visual style”
  • Healthcare: “clinical professional appearance,” “regulatory submission appropriate”
  • Consulting: “strategic executive presentation style,” “boardroom appropriate”

Quick Reference: Better PowerPoint Copilot Creative Prompts

Instead of: “Be creative”
Try: “Use data visualizations, icons, and clear layouts with consistent professional design”

Instead of: “Make it interesting”
Try: “Emphasize key statistics with large numbers, use comparison charts, and include customer proof points”

Instead of: “Make it pop”
Try: “Create visual contrast using strategic white space, bold headlines, and one strong visual per slide”

Instead of: “Add some flair”
Try: “Include relevant business icons, process diagrams, and visual hierarchy that guides attention”

71 Prompts. Every Scenario Covered.

Build from scratch, rescue an existing deck, or perfect individual slides — the Executive Prompt Pack covers every scenario. Works with ChatGPT, Copilot, and Edit with Copilot. Updated March 2026.

Get the Prompts → £19.99

How I Actually Use PowerPoint Copilot Creative Prompts

When I’m creating a client deck, I never start with “be creative.” I start with strategic decisions about what the audience needs to see, feel, and remember.

Then I translate those decisions into specific PowerPoint Copilot creative prompts:

Strategic goal: Make executives see the ROI immediately
Copilot prompt: “Create slides with ROI calculations prominently displayed, cost-benefit comparisons in table format, and payback period highlighted. Use large numbers for key metrics.”

Strategic goal: Differentiate from competitors
Copilot prompt: “Design comparison slides showing our solution versus competitors, highlighting unique capabilities in callout boxes. Use side-by-side layout.”

Strategic goal: Build credibility quickly
Copilot prompt: “Create slides featuring customer logos from Fortune 500 companies, specific results achieved (with numbers), and testimonial quotes in professional design.”

The difference isn’t the tool. It’s knowing what you’re trying to achieve and giving Copilot the specific instructions to deliver it.

Call-to-action image promoting a PowerPoint Copilot prompt template pack.

Ready to Master PowerPoint Copilot Prompts That Actually Work?

These five creative prompts will get you started. But here’s what I’ve learned training over 200 professionals on PowerPoint Copilot:

The difference between average users and power users isn’t experimentation — it’s having field-tested prompts libraries for every situation.

Average users waste 20-30 minutes testing prompts that don’t work.

Power users have tested prompt collections organized by use case, industry, and objective.

For Quick Wins:

Get the 25 most effective PowerPoint Copilot prompts that work immediately — no guessing, no experimentation.

→ £9.99 Prompt Starter Pack

For Comprehensive Mastery:

Master every aspect of PowerPoint Copilot with 100+ tested prompts, 8 industry-specific playbooks, and complete troubleshooting guides.

→ £29 Executive Prompt Pack (201 pages, tested on real client work worth £100M+)

Want the Complete Tutorial?

This spoke article tackles one specific problem. For the comprehensive guide to PowerPoint Copilot — including all features, workflows, and monthly updates:

→ Read the Complete PowerPoint Copilot Tutorial

The Bottom Line on PowerPoint Copilot Creative Prompts

Stop telling Copilot to “be creative.”

Start telling it exactly what kind of creativity you need:

  • Data-focused visualizations for financial presentations
  • Clean professional layouts for executive audiences
  • Customer-centric designs for sales decks
  • Process diagrams for methodology explanations
  • Comparison layouts for competitive positioning

The PowerPoint Copilot creative prompts that work aren’t about being artistic. They’re about being specific, strategic, and audience-appropriate.

That SaaS VP I mentioned at the start? After I showed her these specific prompt techniques, she recreated her deck in 18 minutes. Professional. On-brand. Persuasive.

She closed a £450,000 deal the following week.

The presentation didn’t win because it was “creative.” It won because it was strategically designed to address her buyer’s specific concerns using clear, credible visuals.

That’s what the right PowerPoint Copilot creative prompts deliver.

Want weekly insights on AI-enhanced presentations, PowerPoint Copilot updates, and high-stakes communication? Subscribe to The Winning Edge newsletter (free).


About Mary Beth Hazeldine

Mary Beth Hazeldine is Owner and Managing Director of Winning Presentations, with 16 years of experience in presentation training and 25 years in corporate banking. Her clients have methodologies. She tests every PowerPoint Copilot update on real client work across investment banking, biotech, SaaS, and consulting.

→ Explore Presentation Training Services | Book a Discovery Call

26 Nov 2025
Hero image showing structured Microsoft Copilot prompt framework for PowerPoint decks

The One Copilot Prompt That Saved My 60-Slide Pitch Deck

Looking for ready-to-use AI prompts for executive presentations?

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 71 structured prompts for ChatGPT and Copilot — covering board decks, investor pitches, quarterly reviews, and strategy presentations.

Explore the Prompt Pack →

Quick Answer: What Are the Best Copilot PowerPoint Prompts?

The best Copilot PowerPoint prompts are specific, structured, and context-rich. Instead of “create a slide about revenue,” use: “Create a revenue slide showing Q3 2025 results: £12.4M actual vs £11.2M target, +10.7% growth. Format: left side shows waterfall chart of revenue drivers (New business +£2.1M, Expansion +£800K, Churn -£500K). Right side: 3 bullet points on what drove outperformance. Professional blue color scheme for executive audience.”

Updated 27 March 2026 — Revised for the latest Microsoft Copilot and ChatGPT capabilities.

Key principle: The more context you give Copilot, the less cleanup you do later. Vague prompts = generic slides. Specific prompts = presentation-ready output.

The 60-Slide Disaster That Changed Everything

It was 11:47 PM on a Tuesday. A major European bank needed their M&A pitch deck rebuilt from scratch. The target company had released earnings that afternoon. Numbers changed. Strategy shifted. The entire narrative needed reworking.

Sixty slides. Due at 7 AM for a board presentation.

I’d been using PowerPoint Copilot for six months, but I was still prompting it like an amateur. “Make this better.” “Add more detail.” Generic rubbish every time.

At midnight, staring at 47 slides still needing work, I stopped. I thought about how I’d brief a junior analyst. I wouldn’t say “make it better.” I’d give them the message, the data points, the format, the audience.

I wrote one detailed prompt for the valuation comparison slide — their most complex slide with three different methodologies, peer benchmarking, and premium justification.

Copilot generated it in 11 seconds. It needed 90 seconds of tweaking. Not 15 minutes of rebuilding.

By 6:23 AM, the deck was done. The pitch closed £340 million three weeks later.

Executive Resource

Stop Writing AI Prompts From Scratch

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 50 battle-tested prompts for executive-level presentations — board updates, budget requests, investor briefs, and Q&A prep. Built for PowerPoint Copilot and ChatGPT.

Get the Executive Prompt Pack →

Used by executives preparing for board briefings, budget requests, and investor meetings.

What People Get Wrong About the Best Copilot PowerPoint Prompts

Most professionals use PowerPoint Copilot like they’re texting: “Make a slide about market analysis.” “Add some charts.” “Make this look professional.”

Then they’re shocked when Copilot produces generic, unusable slides.

Copilot isn’t magic — it’s a multiplier of clarity. Vague prompts get vague output. Specific prompts get specific output.

I tested this with 40 banking clients over eight months. Those who saved 3-4 hours per deck wrote prompts that were 3-5 sentences with specific instructions. Those who struggled wrote 3-5 word prompts.

The Fatal Mistake: Treating Copilot Like It Reads Your Mind

A SaaS sales director showed me his Copilot prompt: “Create competitive analysis slide.”

Copilot gave him a generic 2×2 matrix with vague labels. His response: “See? Copilot is useless.”

But watch what happened when we rewrote it:

“Create a competitive analysis slide comparing our enterprise CRM against Salesforce and HubSpot for mid-market companies (100-500 employees). Left column: feature categories (AI-powered lead scoring, native email integration, custom reporting, mobile app, pricing flexibility). Middle column: our strengths (mark with green checkmarks where we’re superior). Right column: competitor weaknesses (mark with red X where they fall short). Include brief 1-sentence note under each category explaining our advantage. Target audience: VP of Sales expecting ROI justification. Professional blue color scheme.”

Copilot generated exactly what he needed in 14 seconds. He closed a £180K annual contract with that deck.

The difference? Context. Specificity. Structure.

Side-by-side comparison of vague versus specific Microsoft Copilot PowerPoint prompts

Stop Guessing What to Type. Start Building in 25 Minutes.

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 71 tested prompts for ChatGPT and Copilot — structured by scenario so you know exactly what to type:

  • Build from scratch — scenario prompts for board reviews, budget requests, and investor decks
  • Rescue and rewrite — audit an existing deck, condense it, or fix one slide at a time
  • Industry-specific prompts for financial services, banking, consulting, and executive audiences
  • Power modifiers that transform any prompt into board-ready output
  • The 25-minute deck workflow that replaces 3–4 hours of manual building

Works with ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot, and Edit with Copilot (formerly Agent Mode). Updated March 2026.

Get the Executive Prompt Pack → £19.99

The 5 Elements of the Best Copilot PowerPoint Prompts

After testing hundreds of Microsoft Copilot prompts across banking, biotech, consulting, and SaaS presentations, I’ve identified five elements that consistently produce the best results:

1. The Objective (What This Slide Must Accomplish)

Weak: “Create a financial overview slide.”

Strong: “Create a financial overview slide that demonstrates 3-year revenue growth trajectory and proves our path to profitability for Series B investors.”

The second version tells Copilot why the slide exists, which shapes everything it generates.

2. The Data and Content (Exactly What to Include)

The best Copilot PowerPoint prompts specify the actual content, not just the category.

Weak: “Add our Q3 results.”

Strong: “Show Q3 results: Revenue £4.2M (+18% YoY), Gross margin 67% (up from 64%), Customer acquisition cost £1,200 (down from £1,450), Net revenue retention 118%. Compare each metric to Q3 2024 and highlight improvements in green.”

3. The Format (How to Structure and Visualize)

Weak: “Make a timeline slide.”

Strong: “Create a horizontal timeline with 5 milestones: Q1 2025 product launch, Q2 2025 first enterprise customer, Q3 2025 Series A funding, Q4 2025 team expansion to 25 people, Q1 2026 international expansion. Use arrow format progressing left to right. Include date and 1-sentence description under each milestone.”

4. The Audience (Who Will See This and What They Care About)

Weak: “Create strategy slide.”

Strong: “Create go-to-market strategy slide for CEO and CFO focused on capital efficiency. Show: target market (mid-market SaaS companies), acquisition channels (partner referrals 40%, content marketing 35%, outbound 25%), customer economics (£50K ACV, 6-month payback, 3-year LTV £180K). Emphasize low CAC and fast payback period since CFO priorities cash efficiency.”

5. The Visual Style (Colors, Layout Preferences, Branding)

Weak: “Make it look professional.”

Strong: “Use our corporate blue (#1F4788) for headers, dark grey for body text. Clean layout with generous white space. No clipart or generic icons — data visualization only. Professional tone suitable for Fortune 500 executive audience.”

Framework graphic showing the five elements of an effective PowerPoint Copilot prompt6 Best Copilot PowerPoint Prompts You Can Copy Today

Here are the Microsoft Copilot prompts I use most often. I’ve tested each on real client work — banking pitches, biotech investor decks, SaaS sales presentations, and consulting deliverables.

Opening Slides

Value Proposition Opening:
“Create an opening slide that establishes our value proposition for [specific audience]. Include: company name and tagline, one-sentence problem statement that resonates with [audience pain point], our solution in 15 words or less, and one compelling metric that proves impact (e.g., ‘Saves enterprise teams 40% on infrastructure costs’). Clean layout, professional blue color scheme, no stock photos.”

Data and Results Slides

Performance Dashboard:
“Create a Q[X] performance slide showing 4 key metrics in 2×2 grid layout: [Metric 1 name] = [current value] ([+/-% vs prior period]) with green/red indicator, [Metric 2], [Metric 3], [Metric 4]. Each metric gets icon, large number, comparison to target, and trend arrow. Bottom section: 2 sentences explaining what drove performance. CFO audience expects numbers-first approach.”

Strategy Slides

Roadmap Timeline:
“Create 12-month roadmap showing 4 phases: [Phase 1: Month 1-3, key deliverables], [Phase 2: Month 4-6, key deliverables], [Phase 3: Month 7-9, key deliverables], [Phase 4: Month 10-12, key deliverables]. Format as horizontal timeline with milestone markers. Include 2-3 specific deliverables per phase. Project stakeholder audience needs realistic expectations.”

Problem and Solution Slides

Problem Statement:
“Create a problem statement slide for [industry] audience. Top section: Bold headline stating the core problem in 10 words or less. Middle section: 3 symptoms of this problem with real-world impact (include costs, time waste, or missed opportunity in specific numbers). Bottom section: One sentence on why traditional solutions fail. Use red accent color for problem areas, maintain serious professional tone.”

Competitive Slides

Competitive Matrix:
“Create competitive positioning matrix comparing us versus [Competitor A] and [Competitor B] across [5-6 specific criteria important to this buyer]. Use table format with our row highlighted in brand blue. Mark superior capabilities with green checkmarks, comparable with yellow dash, inferior with red X. Add footnote citing source of comparison (e.g., ‘Based on G2 reviews October 2025’). Purchasing committee expects objective justification.”

Closing Slides

Executive Summary Closing:
“Create executive summary slide recapping key points. Format: 3 sections in vertical layout. Section 1: ‘The Opportunity’ – restate core value proposition in one sentence with key metric. Section 2: ‘Our Approach’ – 3 bullets on how we deliver value. Section 3: ‘Expected Outcomes’ – specific results with timeline (e.g., ‘£2M cost reduction by Q3 2026’). Use green accent for positive outcomes. Senior executive audience appreciates concise recap before discussion.”

For 71 tested prompts covering every scenario — build from scratch, rescue an existing deck, or fix individual slides — the Executive Prompt Pack gives you exactly what to type, updated for the latest Copilot and ChatGPT capabilities.

Want 25 More Battle-Tested Copilot Prompts?

I’ve compiled my most-used Microsoft Copilot prompts into a starter pack that includes prompts for financial slides, competitive analysis, roadmaps, problem/solution frameworks, and closing slides.

These aren’t theoretical prompts. They’re the exact prompts I use on banking pitches, biotech investor decks, and SaaS sales presentations.

Get the £9.99 Prompt Starter Pack [YES]

The Two Biggest Mistakes With Copilot PowerPoint Prompts

Mistake #1: Starting With Copilot Instead of Structure

A consulting firm once showed me their process: Open PowerPoint. Open Copilot. Start prompting. No outline. No message hierarchy.

They’d generate 15 slides, realize the story didn’t work, delete 10 slides, generate 10 more. Ninety minutes wasted.

The fix? Spend 10 minutes outlining first. I use this structure: What’s the opening hook? What’s the problem? What’s our solution? What’s the proof? What’s the call to action?

Once that’s clear, the best PowerPoint Copilot prompts flow naturally.

Mistake #2: Using the Same Prompts Across Different Audiences

The best Copilot PowerPoint prompts change based on who’s in the room.

A startup used the same deck (built with identical Copilot prompts) for both their technical advisory board and their investor pitch meeting. The technical advisors loved it. The investors were lost in detail and passed on the round.

Now, when I’m building decks with Microsoft Copilot prompts, I explicitly state the audience in every single prompt. “Board-level audience expecting strategic overview” versus “Technical team expecting implementation detail.”

That one addition changes everything Copilot generates.

The Ultimate Copilot Prompt Framework

Here’s the most valuable prompt I use. I call it the “Context-Rich Universal Prompt” because it works for almost any complex slide:

“Create a slide on [TOPIC] for [SPECIFIC AUDIENCE]. Core message: [ONE SENTENCE STATING WHAT THIS SLIDE MUST COMMUNICATE]. Include: [DATA POINT 1 with context], [DATA POINT 2 with context], [DATA POINT 3 with context]. Format: [SPECIFIC LAYOUT DESCRIPTION]. Visual style: [COLOR SCHEME and DESIGN PREFERENCES]. Audience expectations: [WHAT MATTERS TO THIS AUDIENCE]. Tone: [PROFESSIONAL/PERSUASIVE/EDUCATIONAL/etc.].”

This framework forces you to think through every element before prompting. It’s longer to write, but you’ll spend 80% less time fixing the output.

I used this exact framework on that midnight banking pitch. Sixty slides. Done by 6:23 AM. £340 million deal closed three weeks later.

71 Prompts. Every Scenario Covered.

Build from scratch, rescue an existing deck, or perfect individual slides — the Executive Prompt Pack covers every scenario. Works with ChatGPT, Copilot, and Edit with Copilot. Updated March 2026.

Get the Prompts → £19.99

FAQ: Best Copilot PowerPoint Prompts

How long should the best Copilot PowerPoint prompts be?

The best Microsoft Copilot prompts are typically 3-5 sentences (50-100 words). Shorter prompts (5-10 words) produce generic output that requires extensive cleanup. The sweet spot is detailed enough to provide context but focused enough to maintain clarity.

What if Copilot ignores my prompt instructions?

This usually happens for three reasons: (1) Your prompt contradicts earlier prompts in the session — Copilot maintains context across slides. (2) You’re asking for capabilities Copilot doesn’t have. (3) Your prompt is too vague — “professional looking” means nothing to AI, but “clean layout with generous white space and corporate blue color scheme” gives specific direction.

Should I use the same prompts for ChatGPT and PowerPoint Copilot?

No. ChatGPT prompts for PowerPoint focus on content generation (outlines, speaker notes, talking points) while the best Copilot PowerPoint prompts focus on slide creation (layouts, visualizations, formatting). They’re complementary tools serving different purposes in your workflow.

Why This Matters

Last month, I tracked prompt quality versus time savings across 15 different client projects. Professionals using vague prompts saved 45 minutes per deck. Those using the best Copilot PowerPoint prompts saved 3 hours and 20 minutes per deck.

If you create 3 presentations per week, better PowerPoint AI prompts save you 10 hours weekly — 520 hours annually worth £39,000 at a £75/hour rate.

Call-to-action image promoting Copilot PowerPoint prompt starter pack
Ready to Master PowerPoint Copilot?

For Investment Bankers: I’ve created a specialized guide covering pitch decks, board presentations, and transaction materials. Get the Investment Banking Copilot Playbook [YES]

For Everyone Else: Start with the fundamentals. Read the Complete PowerPoint Copilot Tutorial — it’s updated monthly with the latest features and includes 100+ prompts.

Want the Complete Prompt Library? My Master Guide includes 100+ tested prompts across all presentation types, plus troubleshooting guides and my complete workflow for building decks in 30 minutes. Get the £29 Master Guide [YES]

About Mary Beth Hazeldine: I’ve spent 25 years in corporate banking (JPMorgan Chase, PwC, Royal Bank of Scotland, Commerzbank) and now run Winning Presentations, a 16-year-old presentation training company. I test every Copilot feature on real client work across banking, biotech, SaaS, and consulting before recommending it. My clients have n deals using the methods I teach. Subscribe to The Winning Edge for monthly updates on what actually works in AI-enhanced presentations.

25 Nov 2025
PowerPoint Copilot using corporate brand colors consistently across slides

How to Make Copilot Match Your Corporate Brand Colors in PowerPoint

Looking for ready-to-use AI prompts for executive presentations?

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 71 structured prompts for ChatGPT and Copilot — covering board decks, investor pitches, quarterly reviews, and strategy presentations.

Explore the Prompt Pack →

Quick Answer: How Do You Make Copilot Use Your Brand Colors?

To make Copilot brand colors match your corporate brand colors: (1) Set up your brand color palette in PowerPoint’s Design tab BEFORE generating slides, (2) Include exact hex codes in your prompts, (3) Enable the November 2025 Enhanced Brand Consistency Engine, and (4) Apply your custom theme template first. This reduces brand cleanup from 45 minutes to under 10 minutes per deck.

Time savings: 35-40 minutes per deck
Works best for: Banking, consulting, pharma, corporate teams with strict guidelines
Success rate: 85-90% color accuracy (up from 60% before November 2025)

Last month, a major European investment bank called me in a panic.

Their pitch team had spent 6 hours creating a £200 million infrastructure acquisition deck using PowerPoint Copilot. The content was brilliant. The narrative was tight. The financial analysis was flawless.

But Copilot had used the wrong shade of blue on 47 slides.

Not navy. Not corporate blue. A cheerful, optimistic, thoroughly inappropriate shade that their brand guidelines explicitly forbid. The presentation was due in 14 hours for a board meeting in Frankfurt.

Their solution? Two analysts spent 4 hours manually fixing every single color reference. Total cost of Copilot’s color rebellion: £600 in wasted analyst time.

This wasn’t a Copilot failure. This was a setup failure.

I’m Mary Beth Hazeldine, and I’ve tested every Copilot brand color technique on real client decks across banking, consulting, biotech, and professional services. Here’s how to make PowerPoint Copilot brand colors work perfectly — the first time.

What People Get Wrong About Copilot Brand Colors in PowerPoint

Most people think: “Copilot should automatically detect and use my company’s brand colors.”

Reality: Copilot uses your brand colors IF you set them up properly BEFORE generating slides.

I see this mistake constantly. Someone opens a blank presentation, types a Copilot prompt, and gets frustrated when the output uses Microsoft’s default blue-and-grey palette instead of their corporate burgundy and gold.

But here’s the brutal truth: Copilot doesn’t read your mind. It doesn’t scan your company intranet for brand guidelines. It doesn’t remember the colors you used in last week’s deck.

Microsoft Copilot for PowerPoint looks at two things when choosing colors:

  1. The theme template applied to your current presentation
  2. Any color specifications included in your prompt

If neither contains your brand colors, Copilot will absolutely use whatever generic palette it defaults to. The November 2025 update makes enforcing PowerPoint Copilot brand consistency dramatically easier — 45 minutes of manual cleanup becomes under 10 minutes if you set it up correctly.

Stop Guessing What to Type. Start Building in 25 Minutes.

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 71 tested prompts for ChatGPT and Copilot — structured by scenario so you know exactly what to type:

  • Build from scratch — scenario prompts for board reviews, budget requests, and investor decks
  • Rescue and rewrite — audit an existing deck, condense it, or fix one slide at a time
  • Industry-specific prompts for financial services, banking, consulting, and executive audiences
  • Power modifiers that transform any prompt into board-ready output
  • The 25-minute deck workflow that replaces 3–4 hours of manual building

Works with ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot, and Edit with Copilot (formerly Agent Mode). Updated March 2026.

Executive Resource

Stop Writing AI Prompts From Scratch

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 50 battle-tested prompts for executive-level presentations — board updates, budget requests, investor briefs, and Q&A prep. Built for PowerPoint Copilot and ChatGPT.

Get the Executive Prompt Pack →

Used by executives preparing for board briefings, budget requests, and investor meetings.

Get the Executive Prompt Pack → £19.99

The 5-Step System: Make PowerPoint Copilot Use Your Brand Colors

This is the exact workflow that works on decks for banks, consulting firms, pharmaceutical companies, and professional services teams with strict brand guidelines.

Step 1: Set Up Your Copilot Brand Colors PowerPoint Palette First

This is the foundation. Skip this step and everything else fails.

How to do it:

  1. Open PowerPoint → View tab → Slide Master
  2. Click Colors → Customize Colors
  3. Input your exact corporate hex codes for Text/Background and Accent colors 1-6
  4. Save as “[Your Company] Brand Colors”
  5. Apply this theme to EVERY presentation before generating slides

Pro technique from banking clients: Create a template file with your brand colors pre-loaded, save it as your default PowerPoint template, and Copilot will use those colors automatically.

Time investment: 15 minutes once, saves 45 minutes per deck forever.

Step 2: Include Hex Codes in Your Copilot Prompts

The November 2025 Enhanced Brand Consistency Engine recognizes hex codes in prompts.

Weak prompt:
“Create a 10-slide sales presentation about our Q4 performance.”

Strong Copilot brand colors prompt:
“Create a 10-slide Q4 sales performance presentation using our corporate brand colors: primary blue #1F4788, secondary blue #2E5090, success green #2E7D32, alert red #C62828. Use primary blue for all headers, secondary blue for subheaders, and maintain strict brand consistency throughout.”

A consulting client’s brand uses a specific shade of teal (#008B8B) that Copilot kept replacing with cyan (#00FFFF). By including the hex code in every prompt, color accuracy jumped from 60% to 92%.

Step 3: Enable Enhanced Brand Consistency (November 2025)

This update changed everything for corporate users.

What it does: Locks your brand color palette during generation, prevents mid-generation color overrides, and applies brand colors to charts and SmartArt automatically.

How to activate it:

  1. In PowerPoint: File → Options → Copilot Settings
  2. Enable “Enhanced Brand Consistency”
  3. Select your saved brand color palette
  4. Check “Lock brand colors during generation”

I tested this on a Commerzbank pitch deck with notoriously strict brand guidelines. Before November: 42 minutes of color cleanup. After activating Enhanced Brand Consistency: 8 minutes. That’s 34 minutes saved per deck.

Step 4: Apply Your Custom Theme Template First

Here’s a mistake that costs people 30 minutes per deck: They generate slides with Copilot, THEN try to apply their brand theme. This creates formatting chaos.

The correct workflow:

  1. Open PowerPoint
  2. Apply your corporate template with brand colors loaded
  3. THEN use Copilot to generate content

Microsoft Copilot for PowerPoint respects the existing theme architecture. If your brand theme is already applied, Copilot builds within that framework rather than fighting against it.

Step 5: Create Reusable Prompt Templates

Don’t reinvent the wheel every time.

Banking pitch deck prompt template:
“Create a [number]-slide [type] presentation for [audience] about [topic]. Use our corporate brand colors: primary blue #1F4788 for headers, secondary blue #2E5090 for subheaders, success green #2E7D32 for positive metrics, alert red #C62828 for risks. Professional tone, executive audience, data-driven approach.”

Just fill in the bracketed sections and your PowerPoint Copilot brand colors are automatically specified. I’ve documented 25 of these brand-specific prompt templates in my Executive Prompt Pack.

5-step workflow to set Copilot brand colors in PowerPoint correctly
3 Common PowerPoint Copilot Brand Color Mistakes

Mistake #1: Assuming Copilot Remembers Your Last Deck’s Colors

It doesn’t. Every presentation is a fresh start.

The fix: Save your brand-colored template, use it as your default, or include hex codes in every prompt.

Mistake #2: Using Generic Color Names in Prompts

Prompt: “Use blue for headers.”
Result: Copilot picks its own blue, not yours.

The fix: Always specify hex codes. “Use primary blue #1F4788 for headers” leaves no room for interpretation.

Mistake #3: Not Enabling Enhanced Brand Consistency

The November 2025 update made PowerPoint Copilot brand colors 85% more accurate — but only if you turn it on.

The fix: File → Options → Copilot Settings → Enable Enhanced Brand Consistency.

I worked with a consulting firm that was manually fixing Copilot colors for 6 weeks before discovering this setting existed. Six weeks of wasted time.

For 71 tested prompts covering every scenario — build from scratch, rescue an existing deck, or fix individual slides — the Executive Prompt Pack gives you exactly what to type, updated for the latest Copilot and ChatGPT capabilities.

What Copilot Brand Color Accuracy Actually Saves

Before proper Copilot brand color setup:
Manual color cleanup (45 min) + Revision rounds (30 min) + Brand compliance checks (15 min) = 90 minutes per deck

After implementing these techniques:
Manual color cleanup (8 min) + Revision rounds (10 min) + Brand compliance (passes first time) = 18 minutes per deck

Time saved: 72 minutes per deck

If you create 3 presentations weekly: 3.6 hours weekly = 187 hours annually = £14,025 saved at £75/hour.

Getting PowerPoint Copilot brand colors right isn’t perfectionism. It’s profitable time management.

Chart showing time saved per presentation using Copilot brand color automation

71 Prompts. Every Scenario Covered.

Build from scratch, rescue an existing deck, or perfect individual slides — the Executive Prompt Pack covers every scenario. Works with ChatGPT, Copilot, and Edit with Copilot. Updated March 2026.

Get the Prompts → £19.99

FAQ: Copilot Brand Colors PowerPoint

Can Copilot automatically detect my company’s brand colors?

No. Microsoft Copilot for PowerPoint uses the theme colors currently applied to your presentation or the colors specified in your prompt. You must manually set up your brand color palette in PowerPoint’s theme settings before generating slides.

Why does Copilot keep using the wrong shade of my brand color?

Copilot interprets color names generically. “Blue” might be any of 50 different blues. The fix is to always specify exact hex codes in your prompts: “Use primary blue #1F4788” instead of “use blue.”

Does the November 2025 Enhanced Brand Consistency actually work?

Yes. I tested it on five different corporate client decks and saw brand cleanup time drop from 40-45 minutes to 8-12 minutes per deck. However, you must enable it in settings (File → Options → Copilot Settings) and have your brand colors saved as a custom theme.

How do I make Copilot use brand colors in charts and SmartArt?

Include specific color instructions for data visualizations in your prompt: “Use brand colors for all charts: data series 1 in #1F4788, data series 2 in #2E5090, positive trends in #2E7D32.” The Enhanced Brand Consistency Engine (November 2025) also automatically applies your brand palette to charts if enabled.

Setup First, Magic Second

Three months ago, I watched a consulting team waste 6 hours creating a client deliverable, then spend another 2 hours fixing brand colors they should have set up at the beginning.

The lead consultant said: “We treat Copilot like a magic wand. We wave it, hope for magic, then get frustrated when it doesn’t read our minds.”

That’s the fundamental mistake.

PowerPoint Copilot brand colors work brilliantly — when you set up your environment first. Load your theme. Include hex codes. Enable Enhanced Brand Consistency. Create prompt templates.

Last week, a banking client used these exact techniques to create a £300 million acquisition pitch. Brand colors were perfect across all 63 slides. Zero cleanup time. Zero revision rounds. They spent their saved time rehearsing instead of reformatting.

They closed the deal.

Chart showing time saved per presentation using Copilot brand color automation

Ready to Master PowerPoint Copilot Brand Techniques?

For comprehensive brand mastery:
The Executive Prompt Pack (£29) includes 25 brand-specific prompt templates with hex codes, step-by-step brand setup workflows for corporate environments, troubleshooting guide for 15 common brand color problems, and accessibility-compliant color strategies.

For beginners starting with basics:
The Copilot Quickstart Pack (£9.99) includes 25 tested prompts including 5 brand color prompts that work immediately.

For complete Copilot transformation:
AI-Enhanced Presentation Mastery — launching January 2026 — covers brand consistency, advanced Copilot techniques, and presentation strategy for high-stakes corporate environments.

Continue Learning

Get weekly updates: Subscribe to The Winning Edge newsletter

Need custom training? Book a discovery call to discuss corporate training for your team.


About Mary Beth Hazeldine: Owner and Managing Director of Winning Presentations with 25 years of corporate banking experience (JPMorgan Chase, PwC, Royal Bank of Scotland, Commerzbank). Clients have methodology. Every Copilot technique is tested on real investment banking pitches, biotech bid defenses, SaaS sales decks, and consulting deliverables — never theoretical advice.

Updated 27 March 2026 — Revised for the latest Microsoft Copilot and ChatGPT capabilities.

24 Nov 2025
copilot vs powerpoint designer comparison graphic showing content creation vs layout tools

Copilot vs. PowerPoint Designer: Which Tool for Which Task?

Looking for ready-to-use AI prompts for executive presentations?

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 71 structured prompts for ChatGPT and Copilot — covering board decks, investor pitches, quarterly reviews, and strategy presentations.

Explore the Prompt Pack →


Quick Answer: Should You Use Copilot or Designer in PowerPoint?

The choice between Copilot vs. Designer in PowerPoint depends on your task. Use Designer for quick visual upgrades to existing slides – layout suggestions, image placement, and formatting polish. Use Copilot for content creation – generating slides from prompts, restructuring presentations, and creating first drafts. Most professionals get the best results using both: Copilot for content, Designer for polish.

Best for: Professionals creating 2-5 presentations weekly
Time savings: 45-90 minutes per deck using the right tool for each task
Key insight: Designer fixes how slides look; Copilot changes what slides say

I watched a consulting client waste 40 minutes last Thursday trying to get Copilot to fix her slide layouts.

Forty. Minutes.

She kept prompting: “Make this look better.” “Redesign slide 3.” “Fix the formatting.”

Copilot kept creating new slides instead of fixing the existing ones. She was getting frustrated. Her deadline was in two hours.

Here’s what I told her: “You’re using the wrong tool for the job.”

She switched to Designer. Three clicks later, her slides looked professional. Total time: 90 seconds.

The confusion between Copilot vs. Designer in PowerPoint costs professionals hours every week. Both are AI tools built into PowerPoint. Both promise to make your presentations better. But they do completely different things – and using the wrong one for your task is like using a hammer to screw in a lightbulb.

After testing both tools on 50+ client decks across banking, biotech, and SaaS, I’ve mapped exactly when to use each. Here’s the breakdown that’ll save you the trial-and-error I went through.

What People Get Wrong About Copilot vs. Designer in PowerPoint

diagram showing copilot as content tool and designer as layout tool in powerpoint

[NO] Most people think: Copilot is just a more powerful version of Designer

[YES] Reality: They’re completely different tools for completely different jobs

The professionals crushing it with PowerPoint AI tools aren’t treating Copilot and Designer as interchangeable.

They’re strategically choosing which tool to use based on what they need to accomplish.

Here’s the core difference most people miss:

Designer is a visual layout engine. It looks at what’s already on your slide and suggests ways to arrange it better. It doesn’t create content – it arranges content.

Copilot is a content generation engine. It creates new slides, writes text, restructures presentations, and generates ideas. It can also access information from other documents, emails, and data sources.

Using Copilot to fix layouts is like asking ChatGPT to resize your photos. Using Designer to generate content is like asking Photoshop to write your emails. Wrong tool, wrong job.

I cover the full Copilot workflow in my complete PowerPoint Copilot tutorial, but understanding this Copilot vs. Designer distinction comes first.

Executive Resource

Stop Writing AI Prompts From Scratch

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 50 battle-tested prompts for executive-level presentations — board updates, budget requests, investor briefs, and Q&A preparation. Built for PowerPoint Copilot and ChatGPT.

Get the Executive Prompt Pack →

Used by executives preparing for board briefings, budget requests, and investor meetings.

When to Use PowerPoint Designer (The Layout Tool)

Designer has been in PowerPoint since 2016. It’s mature, fast, and surprisingly good at what it does – as long as you use it for the right tasks.

Here’s what surprised me after years of training corporate teams: most people either don’t know Designer exists or completely ignore it in favour of the shiny new Copilot. That’s a mistake.

Designer Works Best For Visual Upgrades

Use Designer when you have content that’s already correct, but looks boring or unprofessional:

  • Slide layout suggestions: Drop an image and text on a slide, and Designer offers 8-12 layout options instantly
  • Image placement: Designer automatically suggests cropping, positioning, and text wrapping
  • Icon recommendations: Type a keyword and Designer suggests relevant icons with professional placement
  • Chart formatting: Basic chart beautification and colour scheme suggestions
  • Template-consistent formatting: Designer respects your template’s fonts and colours

Real Example: Banking Pitch Deck Formatting

Last month, an investment banking analyst sent me 15 slides with solid content but inconsistent layouts. Every slide looked different. Charts were different sizes. Text alignment was random.

I ran Designer on each slide. Total time: 8 minutes.

The result? Consistent, professional layouts that matched their brand template. No content changes – just visual polish.

If she’d tried using Copilot for this, she’d have spent an hour fighting with prompts and likely ended up with new content she didn’t want.

A senior associate at a Big Four firm told me recently: “I used to spend 30 minutes per deck just making slides look consistent. Designer does it in under 5.” That’s the kind of time savings that compound.

Designer Limitations (Be Honest About These)

Let me be blunt. Designer can’t:

  • Create new content from scratch
  • Restructure your presentation flow
  • Pull information from other documents
  • Write speaker notes
  • Generate slides from prompts

If you need any of those, you need Copilot.

Stop Guessing What to Type. Start Building in 25 Minutes.

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 71 tested prompts for ChatGPT and Copilot — structured by scenario so you know exactly what to type:

  • Build from scratch — scenario prompts for board reviews, budget requests, and investor decks
  • Rescue and rewrite — audit an existing deck, condense it, or fix one slide at a time
  • Industry-specific prompts for financial services, banking, consulting, and executive audiences
  • Power modifiers that transform any prompt into board-ready output
  • The 25-minute deck workflow that replaces 3–4 hours of manual building

Works with ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot, and Edit with Copilot (formerly Agent Mode). Updated March 2026.

Get the Executive Prompt Pack → £19.99

When to Use PowerPoint Copilot (The Content Engine)

Copilot is the newer, more powerful tool – but power means nothing if you don’t know when to use it.

I’ll admit something: when Copilot first launched, I tried using it for everything. Layouts, formatting, content – you name it. Most of that was wasted effort. It took me three months and probably 40 failed experiments to figure out where Copilot actually shines.

Copilot Excels at Content Generation

Use Copilot when you’re starting from scratch or need to create, restructure, or transform content:

  • Creating presentations from prompts: “Create a 10-slide investor pitch for a fintech startup”
  • Generating slides from documents: Turn a Word doc or PDF into slides
  • Restructuring existing decks: “Add an executive summary” or “Reorganise for a technical audience”
  • Creating speaker notes: Generate notes based on slide content
  • Content summarisation: Condense long presentations or create overview slides

For the complete prompt library I use with clients, check out my best PowerPoint Copilot prompts guide.

Real Example: SaaS Product Launch Deck

A SaaS client needed 12 slides for a product launch. They had a 15-page product brief in Word.

I uploaded the brief to Copilot with this prompt: “Create a 12-slide product launch presentation for enterprise buyers. Focus on ROI, implementation timeline, and integration capabilities. Professional tone, data-driven.”

First draft in 4 minutes. We spent 25 minutes refining.

Total time: 29 minutes for a deck that would’ve taken 3+ hours from scratch.

Then I ran Designer on each slide for visual polish. Another 5 minutes.

That’s the Copilot vs. Designer workflow that actually works: Copilot for content, Designer for looks.

What People Get Wrong About Copilot’s Capabilities

[NO] Most people think: Copilot can do everything Designer does, plus more

[YES] Reality: Copilot is terrible at precise visual control – that’s Designer’s job

I learned this the hard way. Copilot struggles with:

  • Precise layout control: You can’t prompt “put the image in the top-right corner”
  • Brand consistency: It often ignores template colours and fonts (see my fix generic Copilot slides guide)
  • Complex data visualisation: Charts often need manual fixing
  • Editing existing slides: It prefers creating new slides over modifying current ones

Everyone tells you Copilot is the future and Designer is legacy. Here’s what I’ve found: the professionals saving the most time use both, strategically. Designer isn’t obsolete – it’s essential.

Copilot vs. Designer PowerPoint: Side-by-Side Comparison

Task Use Designer Use Copilot
Fix ugly slide layouts [YES] – 1-click suggestions [NO] – Creates new slides instead
Create slides from scratch [NO] – No content generation [YES] – Full content creation
Turn Word doc into slides [NO] – Can’t read documents [YES] – Imports and converts
Improve image placement [YES] – Multiple layout options [NO] – Limited visual control
Write speaker notes [NO] – Visual only [YES] – Generates from content
Add consistent icons [YES] – Smart icon suggestions [NO] – Hit or miss
Restructure presentation flow [NO] – Slide-by-slide only [YES] – Full deck restructuring
Speed of results Instant (1-2 seconds) 30-90 seconds per generation
Cost Free with Microsoft 365 Requires Copilot licence ($30/month)

For 71 tested prompts covering every scenario — build from scratch, rescue an existing deck, or fix individual slides — the Executive Prompt Pack gives you exactly what to type, updated for the latest Copilot and ChatGPT capabilities.

My Biotech Copilot Disaster (Learn From This)

[WARNING] Don’t make my mistake:

I tried using Copilot vs. Designer interchangeably on a biotech investor deck last year. This is embarrassing to admit, but you’ll learn from it.

The client had 20 slides ready for a Series B pitch. Good content, ugly layouts. Classic formatting inconsistency.

Instead of using Designer for the visual fixes, I prompted Copilot: “Make these slides look more professional and investor-ready.”

Copilot interpreted “make these slides” as “create new slides.” It generated 12 new slides that duplicated content, changed the narrative flow, and removed three slides of clinical trial data that were critical to the pitch.

The founder called me at 9pm: “Where’s our Phase 2 data?”

I spent 90 minutes untangling the mess. Designer would have taken 10 minutes.

Here’s what I learned: Copilot in PowerPoint creates content. Designer arranges content. Never confuse the two.

The Professional Workflow: Copilot Then Designer

workflow diagram showing copilot creating content and designer polishing slides

After testing Copilot vs. Designer on dozens of real client decks, here’s the workflow that consistently delivers the best results:

Step 1: Start With Copilot (If Creating Content)

If you’re building a presentation from scratch or from source material:

  1. Use Copilot to generate your first draft
  2. Review and edit the content for accuracy
  3. Have Copilot add speaker notes
  4. Use Copilot to restructure if needed

For detailed prompts that work, see my PowerPoint Copilot tutorial.

Step 2: Polish With Designer (Always)

Once content is finalised:

  1. Go slide by slide with Designer
  2. Select layouts that match your template
  3. Let Designer optimise image placement
  4. Use Designer’s icon suggestions for visual interest

This Copilot vs. Designer PowerPoint workflow typically saves 45-90 minutes per deck compared to using either tool alone.

[TIP] Pro tip: Run Designer AFTER all content edits are complete. If you change content after applying Designer layouts, you’ll need to re-run Designer. Save the visual polish for last.

The Contrarian Take: Sometimes You Don’t Need Copilot at All

This is going to sound counterintuitive coming from someone who sells Copilot training.

But here’s the truth: for probably 40% of presentation tasks, Designer alone is faster, cheaper, and better.

I had a client last month who was paying $30/month for Copilot and barely using it. She was formatting existing decks, not creating new content. Designer – which she already had for free – did everything she needed.

Don’t buy Copilot because it’s new and exciting. Buy it because you create presentations from scratch regularly. If you’re mostly reformatting and polishing? Designer is your tool. It’s free. It’s fast. It works.

The professionals who save the most time aren’t the ones with the fanciest tools. They’re the ones who use the right tool for each task.

When Designer Beats Copilot (Even If You Have Both)

Here’s something that surprised me after months of testing: even with full Copilot access, Designer is often the better choice.

Quick Formatting Under Deadline

Copilot takes 30-90 seconds per request. Designer shows options in 1-2 seconds.

When an investment banker needs slides ready in 10 minutes, Designer wins every time. No prompting, no waiting, no reviewing AI-generated content for accuracy.

Client Edits and Revisions

Client says “make slide 7 look better”? Don’t overthink it.

Click on slide 7. Open Designer. Pick a layout. Done in 15 seconds.

Using Copilot for this would take longer, might change content you don’t want changed, and adds unnecessary complexity.

Preserving Exact Content

Sometimes the words matter more than the look. Legal disclosures. Regulatory statements. Approved messaging.

Designer will never change your words. Copilot might “improve” them without asking. I’ve seen it happen on compliance-sensitive slides. Not worth the risk.

71 Prompts. Every Scenario Covered.

Build from scratch, rescue an existing deck, or perfect individual slides — the Executive Prompt Pack covers every scenario. Works with ChatGPT, Copilot, and Edit with Copilot. Updated March 2026.

Get the Prompts → £19.99

Frequently Asked Questions: Copilot vs. Designer PowerPoint

Q: Do I need both Copilot and Designer in PowerPoint?

A: Designer is free with Microsoft 365 – you already have it. Copilot requires a separate licence ($30/month). If you create 3+ presentations weekly from scratch, Copilot pays for itself in time savings. For occasional presenters or those mostly reformatting, Designer alone handles most needs. For comprehensive guidance, see my PowerPoint Copilot tutorial.

Q: Can Copilot replace PowerPoint Designer entirely?

A: No. Despite being more powerful for content creation, Copilot cannot match Designer’s speed and precision for layout optimisation. Copilot often creates generic-looking slides that still need Designer polish. The tools complement each other – they don’t compete.

Q: Why does Copilot ignore my PowerPoint template formatting?

A: This is Copilot’s biggest weakness. It frequently generates slides that don’t match your brand colours, fonts, or template style. The fix: always run Designer after Copilot to apply template-consistent layouts. For detailed solutions, check my guide to fixing generic Copilot slides.

Q: Which is faster – Copilot or Designer in PowerPoint?

A: Designer is significantly faster for visual tasks (1-2 seconds vs. 30-90 seconds for Copilot). However, Copilot is faster for content creation – generating a 10-slide deck in 4 minutes beats manual creation by hours. Use each where it’s fastest.

Q: Should I use Copilot or Designer for executive presentations?

A: Both. Use Copilot to generate and structure content, then Designer to apply polished, professional layouts. For high-stakes executive presentations, I recommend spending 70% of your time on content with Copilot, then 30% on polish with Designer.

A management consultant told me last week: “I finally get the difference between Copilot vs. Designer. I was fighting with Copilot for layout fixes when Designer does it in one click. I’m saving 45 minutes per deck now.”

That clarity – knowing which PowerPoint AI tool to use for which task – is what separates frustrating AI experiences from genuine productivity gains.

powerpoint copilot prompt pack digital product graphic

If you want the complete prompt library I use with banking, consulting, and SaaS clients – including 50+ tested prompts that work with Copilot and pair perfectly with Designer polish:

Get the complete PowerPoint Copilot workflow

Get the Starter Pack – just £9.99

50+ tested prompts | Banking and consulting examples | Instant download

Updated 27 March 2026 — Revised for the latest Microsoft Copilot and ChatGPT capabilities.

Or for the comprehensive 201-page resource with industry playbooks:

100+ tested prompts | 8 industry playbooks | Tested on £100M+ deals


About the Author: Mary Beth Hazeldine is the founder of Winning Presentations, with 25 years of corporate banking experience at JPMorgan Chase, PwC, Royal Bank of Scotland, and Commerzbank. She tests every AI recommendation on real client decks before sharing it. Her clients have n methodology.

24 Nov 2025
Why vague Microsoft PowerPoint Copilot prompts fail to improve slides

Why “Make This Better” Copilot Prompts Fail (And What Works)

Looking for ready-to-use AI prompts for executive presentations?

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 71 structured prompts for ChatGPT and Copilot — covering board decks, investor pitches, quarterly reviews, and strategy presentations.

Explore the Prompt Pack →

Quick Answer: Why Are My Copilot Prompts Not Working?

Your Copilot prompts fail because they’re too vague. “Make this better” gives Copilot no direction. Instead, use specific prompts that include: (1) the exact outcome you want, (2) your audience, and (3) concrete constraints. Example: “Reduce this slide to 3 bullet points focused on ROI metrics for CFO audience.” Specific prompts get 10x better results than generic commands. For a complete library of tested prompts, see my PowerPoint Copilot tutorial.

Updated 27 March 2026 — Revised for the latest Microsoft Copilot and ChatGPT capabilities.

Last month, a biotech CEO sent me a screenshot with a single frustrated message: “Is this thing broken?”

The screenshot showed PowerPoint Copilot’s response to her prompt “make this slide better.” Copilot had helpfully… changed the font size. That’s it. The cluttered slide with seven bullet points and a chart nobody could read remained cluttered, unreadable, and now in 18-point Calibri instead of 16.

Example of vague Copilot prompt failing to improve a PowerPoint slide

She’d paid for Microsoft 365 Copilot. She’d watched the slick demos. And now her Copilot prompts weren’t working the way she’d expected.

Here’s what I told her: Copilot isn’t broken. Your prompts are.

After testing hundreds of prompts across real client presentations—investment banking pitches, biotech bid defenses, SaaS sales decks—I’ve identified exactly why most Copilot prompts fail and what separates prompts that work from prompts that return garbage.

Why Your Copilot Prompts Fail: The Vagueness Trap

When your Copilot prompts are not working, the problem is almost never the technology. It’s the input.

Think about it this way: If you hired a new designer and said “make this presentation better,” what would they do? They’d guess. Maybe change colours. Maybe move things around. Maybe ask you seventeen clarifying questions.

Copilot can’t ask clarifying questions. So when you give vague commands, it guesses. And its guesses are almost always wrong.

I tested this systematically. I took the same cluttered slide—a typical corporate mess with too much text, unclear hierarchy, and no visual focus—and tried different prompt approaches:

  • “Make this better” — Changed font formatting. Useless.
  • “Improve this slide” — Added a stock image. Wrong direction.
  • “Make this more professional” — Changed to a blue colour scheme. Still cluttered.

None of these prompts worked because none of them told Copilot what “better” actually meant.

Stop Guessing What to Type. Start Building in 25 Minutes.

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 71 tested prompts for ChatGPT and Copilot — structured by scenario so you know exactly what to type:

  • Build from scratch — scenario prompts for board reviews, budget requests, and investor decks
  • Rescue and rewrite — audit an existing deck, condense it, or fix one slide at a time
  • Industry-specific prompts for financial services, banking, consulting, and executive audiences
  • Power modifiers that transform any prompt into board-ready output
  • The 25-minute deck workflow that replaces 3–4 hours of manual building

Works with ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot, and Edit with Copilot (formerly Agent Mode). Updated March 2026.

Executive Resource

Stop Writing AI Prompts From Scratch

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 50 battle-tested prompts for executive-level presentations — board updates, budget requests, investor briefs, and Q&A preparation. Built for PowerPoint Copilot and ChatGPT.

Get the Executive Prompt Pack →

Used by executives preparing for board briefings, budget requests, and investor meetings.

Get the Executive Prompt Pack → £19.99

What People Get Wrong About Copilot Commands Not Working

Most advice about fixing Copilot prompts not working focuses on the wrong things. I see articles telling people to “be more descriptive” or “add more detail.” That’s partially true but fundamentally misses the point.

The real issue isn’t length—it’s specificity of outcome.

I learned this the hard way during a pitch preparation for a £40M Series B round. The founding team had a 47-slide deck that needed to become 12 slides in two hours. I tried using Copilot with prompts like “condense this content” and “make this more concise.”

Copilot removed random sentences. It kept the wrong details. The Copilot commands weren’t working because I was describing an action (condense) instead of an outcome (a 12-slide story focused on market opportunity and traction).

When I switched to outcome-focused prompts, everything changed.

The Prompt Formula That Actually Works

Formula for writing effective Microsoft Copilot prompts

After testing on over 100 client decks, I developed a formula for prompts that consistently deliver results when Copilot prompts seem to be failing:

Outcome + Audience + Constraint = Working Prompt

Let me break this down with real examples from my best Copilot prompts collection:

Element 1: Specific Outcome

Don’t say what you want Copilot to do. Say what you want to end up with.

Instead of… Try…
“Make this clearer” “Create a slide with one headline and three supporting points”
“Improve the design” “Create a visual hierarchy with the key metric prominent at top”
“Fix this chart” “Simplify this chart to show only the trend line and 2024-2025 data”

Element 2: Audience Context

Copilot doesn’t know who’s going to see your presentation. When you tell it, the suggestions become dramatically more relevant.

For a recent SaaS sales deck, I tested two versions of the same request:

  • Without audience: “Summarise our product benefits” — Generic, feature-focused result
  • With audience: “Summarise our product benefits for IT directors concerned about security and integration” — Specific, pain-point-focused result that actually resonated

The audience context transformed a Copilot prompt that wasn’t working into one that produced usable content.

Element 3: Concrete Constraints

Constraints seem limiting but they’re actually liberating—for you and for Copilot. When you specify boundaries, Copilot can’t wander into unhelpful territory.

Constraints that work:

  • Number limits: “maximum 4 bullet points”
  • Word counts: “headline under 8 words”
  • Format requirements: “use only company data from this slide”
  • Style boundaries: “maintain formal business tone”

For 71 tested prompts covering every scenario — build from scratch, rescue an existing deck, or fix individual slides — the Executive Prompt Pack gives you exactly what to type, updated for the latest Copilot and ChatGPT capabilities.

Real Prompt Examples: From Failing to Working

Here are actual prompts from my testing that show how small changes fix Copilot commands not working:

[X] Prompt that fails: “Make this executive summary better”

[YES] Prompt that works: “Rewrite this executive summary as 3 bullet points highlighting revenue growth, market expansion, and competitive advantage for board members reviewing quarterly performance”

[X] Prompt that fails: “Add some visuals to this slide”

[YES] Prompt that works: “Replace the bullet points on this slide with three icons representing speed, security, and scalability, keeping the headline text”

[X] Prompt that fails: “Clean this up”

[YES] Prompt that works: “Remove all text except the main headline and the three statistics. Increase white space by 50%.”

See the pattern? The working prompts are longer, yes—but they’re longer because they’re specific, not because they’re wordy.

For more tested prompts across different presentation scenarios, I’ve compiled a complete library in my 50 ChatGPT Prompts for PowerPoint guide.

Common Copilot Prompt Mistakes I See Weekly

Working with investment banks, consultants, and corporate teams, I see the same Copilot prompt failures repeatedly:

Mistake 1: Assuming Copilot Understands Context

A management consultant sent me a prompt: “Make this slide match our firm’s style.”

Copilot has no idea what “your firm’s style” means. It doesn’t know you use Helvetica, navy blue, and minimalist layouts. You need to specify: “Format this slide with left-aligned text, a single accent colour, and maximum 25 words per slide.”

Mistake 2: Chaining Vague Requests

When a prompt fails, people often try adding more vague instructions: “Make this better. Also more professional. And visually appealing.”

Three vague requests don’t add up to one specific request. They just confuse Copilot further. If your Copilot prompts aren’t working, don’t add more words—add more precision.

Mistake 3: Fighting the Tool Instead of Guiding It

I watched a senior banker spend twenty minutes arguing with Copilot through increasingly frustrated prompts: “No, not like that. Better. No, BETTER.”

Copilot doesn’t learn from rejection. Each prompt is fresh. If you didn’t get what you wanted, your next prompt needs to be a complete, specific instruction—not a correction of the previous attempt.

For a deeper understanding of what works and what doesn’t, my complete PowerPoint Copilot tutorial covers these scenarios in detail.

Quick Diagnostic: Is Your Prompt Specific Enough?

Before you hit enter on any Copilot prompt, ask yourself these three questions:

  1. Could a junior designer execute this without asking questions? If not, Copilot will struggle too.
  2. Have I specified what the result should look like, not just what action to take?
  3. Would I accept ANY interpretation of this prompt? If not, narrow it down.

This 10-second check has saved me countless wasted prompts—and it’ll do the same for you.

71 Prompts. Every Scenario Covered.

Build from scratch, rescue an existing deck, or perfect individual slides — the Executive Prompt Pack covers every scenario. Works with ChatGPT, Copilot, and Edit with Copilot. Updated March 2026.

Get the Prompts → £19.99

Frequently Asked Questions About Copilot Prompts Not Working

Why does Copilot keep giving me irrelevant suggestions?

Copilot responds to exactly what you ask. If your prompts are broad (“improve this”), you’ll get broad, often irrelevant suggestions. The fix is specificity: tell Copilot the exact outcome, your audience, and any constraints. For example, “Create three bullet points about cost savings for a finance audience, maximum 10 words each.”

Is there a maximum prompt length that works best?

Length matters less than specificity. A 50-word specific prompt outperforms a 10-word vague one every time. That said, I’ve found the sweet spot is 20-40 words: enough to be precise, not so much that you’re over-engineering. My Copilot Starter Pack includes prompt templates at optimal lengths.

Why do the same prompts work sometimes and fail other times?

Context matters. The same prompt behaves differently depending on the slide content, deck structure, and what you’ve done previously in the session. If prompts that worked before are now failing, check whether your slide content has changed significantly or try refreshing your session.

What should I do when Copilot just doesn’t understand what I want?

Break complex requests into smaller, single-action prompts. Instead of “redesign this slide with better visuals and clearer hierarchy and a punchier headline,” try three separate prompts: first fix the headline, then adjust the hierarchy, then add visuals. Sequential specific prompts beat compound vague ones.

Are there prompts that never work well in Copilot?

Yes. Prompts asking Copilot to match undefined styles, read your mind about preferences, or make subjective judgments (“make this more exciting”) consistently fail. Stick to prompts with measurable, concrete outcomes. For alternatives when Copilot isn’t the right tool, see my Copilot alternatives guide.

The Bottom Line

Remember the biotech CEO from the beginning? After one 15-minute call where I explained the Outcome + Audience + Constraint formula, she went from ready to cancel her Copilot subscription to calling it “genuinely useful.”

The tool hadn’t changed. Her prompts had.

If your Copilot prompts aren’t working, you don’t need a different tool. You need a different approach. Stop telling Copilot what to do and start telling it what you want to end up with.

Ready to stop fighting with Copilot?

I’ve compiled my 100+ tested prompts—the exact ones I use with investment banks and biotech clients—into two resources:

  • The PowerPoint Copilot Starter Pack (£9.99) — 25 essential prompts that work immediately, organised by task type
  • The Executive Prompt Pack (£29) — 100+ prompts, complete workflows, and the troubleshooting guide I use when prompts fail

Every prompt has been tested on real presentations—not demos. Because when you’re preparing a board deck at midnight, you need prompts that work the first time.

23 Nov 2025
Fix generic PowerPoint Copilot slides and make them look on brand in minutes

5-Minute Fix: Your Copilot Slides Look Generic (AI-Generated and Not Good)

Looking for ready-to-use AI prompts for executive presentations?

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 71 structured prompts for ChatGPT and Copilot — covering board decks, investor pitches, quarterly reviews, and strategy presentations.

Explore the Prompt Pack →

Quick Answer: Why Do My Copilot Slides Look Generic?

Copilot slides look generic because the tool defaults to Microsoft’s templates, standard fonts, and basic layouts when you don’t specify your brand requirements. The fix takes 5 minutes: add your brand template to Copilot’s context, specify exact fonts and colors in your prompt, and request your house style by name. This transforms generic AI-generated slides into client-ready presentations.

[YES] Best for:  Professionals creating 2-5 presentations weekly for clients
[TIME] Time savings:  2-3 hours of reformatting per deck
[TIP] Key insight:  Copilot can’t read your mind about brand—you must tell it explicitly

A managing director called me at 10pm last Tuesday.

“These slides look like a student made them.”

His team had used PowerPoint Copilot to create a £50M acquisition pitch. The content was solid. The analysis was there. The recommendations were spot-on.

But the slides screamed “AI-generated.”

Generic blue gradients. Default Calibri font. Cookie-cutter layouts that looked nothing like their house style.

They’d spent 4 hours building the deck with Copilot. Then spent another 5 hours fixing the formatting to match their brand.

Here’s what nobody told them: When your Copilot slides look generic, it’s not Copilot’s fault.

It’s your prompt.

Updated 27 March 2026 — Revised for the latest Microsoft Copilot and ChatGPT capabilities.

Executive Resource

Stop Writing AI Prompts From Scratch

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 50 battle-tested prompts for executive-level presentations — board updates, budget requests, investor briefs, and Q&A prep. Built for PowerPoint Copilot and ChatGPT.

Get the Executive Prompt Pack →

Used by executives preparing for board briefings, budget requests, and investor meetings.

Why Your Copilot Slides Look AI-Generated

Comparison of default Copilot slides versus branded professional slides

Let me be blunt.

Copilot doesn’t know your brand exists.

When you type “create slides about our acquisition strategy,” Copilot does exactly what you asked. It creates slides. Using Microsoft’s default templates. With Microsoft’s standard fonts. Following Microsoft’s generic design principles.

The result? Copilot slides that look generic because you never told Copilot what “not generic” means for your organization.

I’ve watched this play out with three asset management clients this month. All of them blamed Copilot for producing AI-generated slides that needed hours of reformatting.

None of them had included brand specifications in their prompts.

The professionals crushing it with PowerPoint Copilot aren’t getting lucky with better AI. They’re using 5 specific techniques that transform generic Copilot slides into brand-compliant presentations in minutes, not hours.

Here’s exactly what works.

What People Get Wrong About Copilot Slides Looking Generic

[NO] Most people think: Copilot just makes bad-looking slides
[YES] Reality: Copilot makes exactly what you tell it to make—and defaults to generic when you’re vague

The investment bankers and asset managers whose Copilot slides look professional aren’t using a different version of Copilot.

They’re using specific prompts that include: brand template names, exact font specifications, approved color palettes, house style requirements, and layout preferences.

That’s the difference between “create investor slides” (generic AI output) and “create investor slides using JPM Pitch Template with Gotham font and navy/gold color scheme following house style formatting” (client-ready output).

Here’s how to fix it.

Stop Guessing What to Type. Start Building in 25 Minutes.

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 71 tested prompts for ChatGPT and Copilot — structured by scenario so you know exactly what to type:

  • Build from scratch — scenario prompts for board reviews, budget requests, and investor decks
  • Rescue and rewrite — audit an existing deck, condense it, or fix one slide at a time
  • Industry-specific prompts for financial services, banking, consulting, and executive audiences
  • Power modifiers that transform any prompt into board-ready output
  • The 25-minute deck workflow that replaces 3–4 hours of manual building

Works with ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot, and Edit with Copilot (formerly Agent Mode). Updated March 2026.

Get the Executive Prompt Pack → £19.99

The 5-Minute Fix for Generic-Looking Copilot Slides

Five minute framework for fixing generic AI generated Copilot slides


Reference Your Actual Brand Template by Name

Stop saying “professional slides.”

Start saying “slides using [Your Template Name].”

When I work with banking clients, their Copilot prompts now include: “Create slides using Goldman Equity Pitch Template” or “Use Morgan Stanley House Style deck as base.”

This single change eliminates 80% of the “Copilot slides look generic” problem.

Why it works: Copilot can see your existing PowerPoint files. When you reference a specific template by name, Copilot pulls fonts, colors, layouts, and master slide formatting from that template instead of defaulting to Microsoft’s generic options.

The exact prompt structure:
“Create [number] slides about [topic] using [Your Template Name] as the base format. Match all fonts, colors, and layouts to this template.”

A private equity client tested this last week. Their first Copilot attempt without template reference? Generic AI-generated slides that took 3 hours to reformat. Their second attempt with template specified? Slides that needed 15 minutes of minor tweaks.

If you’re still struggling with writing effective PowerPoint Copilot prompts, the template reference technique is your fastest path from generic output to professional slides.

Specify Your Exact Fonts and Colors in Every Prompt

Don’t assume Copilot knows your brand.

Tell it explicitly.

Generic prompt: “Create management presentation”

Brand-specific prompt: “Create management presentation using Helvetica Neue 28pt for headers, 18pt for body, navy #1F4788 for titles, gold #C4A33C for accents”

I learned this the expensive way on a £10M debt financing pitch. I didn’t specify fonts. Copilot defaulted to Calibri. The partner spotted it immediately at 11:30pm: “This doesn’t look like our work. Did you use AI for this?”

That question.

That’s the question you never want from a senior partner on the night before a pitch.

We spent 2 hours fixing what should have taken 5 minutes with the right prompt. The deal closed successfully, but I learned: when Copilot slides look generic, clients notice. And they judge.

[YES] Pro tip: The professionals who never have generic-looking Copilot slides keep a brand prompt snippet saved:

  • Exact font names and sizes
  • Hex codes for brand colors
  • Approved color combinations
  • Logo placement requirements

They paste this snippet into every Copilot prompt. Five seconds of setup eliminates hours of reformatting.

Request Your House Style Formatting Rules

Here’s what surprised me about Copilot.

It can follow complex formatting rules—if you tell it what they are.

Most asset managers and banks have house style guides. Specific requirements for:

  • Chart formatting (colors, gridlines, axis labels)
  • Table styling (borders, shading, alignment)
  • Title slide layouts (logo placement, partner names)
  • Text hierarchy (when to use bullets vs. paragraphs)

When your Copilot slides look generic, it’s usually because you didn’t include these house style requirements in your prompt.

A boutique advisory firm client sends me their prompt template. It includes: “Follow [Firm Name] house style: charts with gray gridlines, no 3D effects, data labels above bars, tables with thin borders and alternating row shading, title slides with logo top-right.”

Their Copilot output now requires minimal cleanup because they frontload the formatting requirements instead of fixing generic slides afterward.

The same principle applies when you’re using ChatGPT for PowerPoint—specific brand instructions upfront prevent generic output later.

Show Copilot an Example Slide for Complex Formatting

Sometimes your brand requirements are too complex for a text prompt.

That’s when you show instead of tell.

Open an existing on-brand deck. Point Copilot to a specific slide: “Create 5 slides about market analysis matching the format and style of slide 8 in [filename].”

This works brilliantly for:

  • Complex waterfall charts with specific formatting
  • Multi-level comparison tables with intricate styling
  • Executive summary slides with unique layouts
  • Cover pages with precise logo and text placement

I watched an investment banking analyst struggle for 90 minutes trying to describe his firm’s standard market analysis format in a prompt. His Copilot slides looked generic because the text description couldn’t capture the visual complexity.

Then he switched to: “Match the format of slide 12 in Q3_Market_Analysis.pptx.”

Copilot produced slides that matched their brand in one attempt.

No more generic AI-generated slides that need hours of reformatting.

Create a Copilot Brand Prompt Library

Stop reinventing prompts every time you create a deck.

The highest-performing teams I work with maintain a Copilot prompt library with brand-specific snippets:

For pitch decks: “Use [Firm] Pitch Template, Gotham Bold 32pt titles, Gotham Book 18pt body, navy #003366 titles, gold #B8860B accents, white backgrounds only, logo top-right on all slides”

For internal updates: “Use [Firm] Internal Update format, Arial 24pt headers, 16pt body, gray #666666 and blue #1F4788 color scheme, simple bullets, no graphics unless data visualization”

For board presentations: “Use [Firm] Board Deck Template, Helvetica Neue 28pt headers, 18pt body, conservative formatting, detailed slide titles that could stand alone, appendix-ready backup slides”

They copy-paste the relevant snippet into every Copilot prompt.

Result? Copilot slides that look like their brand from the first draft, not generic AI output that requires hours of cleanup.

If you’re exploring alternatives to PowerPoint Copilot, you’ll find this same principle applies: AI tools need explicit brand instructions or they default to generic templates.

My £50M Generic Copilot Slides Disaster

[WARNING] Don’t make my mistake:

I created a sell-side pitch for a £50M transaction using a vague Copilot prompt: “Create investor presentation slides.”

The fonts were wrong. The colors didn’t match the client’s brand. The charts looked like every generic AI-generated slide deck on the internet.

The client’s head of corporate development called me at 6:45pm—75 minutes before the board dinner where they planned to share the deck with prospective buyers.

“Mary Beth, did you actually create this, or did you just let AI do it?”

Silence.

That silence cost me more than the 6 hours I spent reformatting. It cost credibility.

I spent those 6 hours fixing what should have been client-ready from Copilot. We missed the board dinner. The presentation happened the next morning instead. All because I didn’t include brand specifications in my initial prompt.

Here’s what I learned: PowerPoint Copilot is brilliant at following instructions—but only if you give it specific instructions about your brand. Generic prompts produce generic slides. Brand-specific prompts produce professional output that clients can’t distinguish from manually-created decks.

Now every Copilot prompt I write includes: template name, exact fonts with sizes, hex color codes, and house style requirements. My clients can’t tell the difference between my Copilot slides and manually-created decks.

That’s the goal.

Why Most Copilot Slides Look Like AI Made Them

The pattern I see with banking and asset management clients?

They treat Copilot like a mind reader instead of a tool that follows instructions.

They don’t specify:

  • Which brand template to use
  • What fonts and sizes are approved
  • What colors are on-brand vs. off-brand
  • What formatting rules their firm requires
  • What style they need (formal vs. casual, detailed vs. high-level)

Then they’re surprised when Copilot slides look generic.

The ones crushing it with Copilot? They frontload specificity. They spend 30 seconds writing a detailed prompt that includes brand requirements. They save 3 hours of reformatting generic slides.

Simple math.

For 71 tested prompts covering every scenario — build from scratch, rescue an existing deck, or fix individual slides — the Executive Prompt Pack gives you exactly what to type, updated for the latest Copilot and ChatGPT capabilities.

Common Mistakes That Make Copilot Slides Look Generic

Common mistakes that make PowerPoint Copilot slides look generic

Mistake 1: Using the Same Vague Prompt for Every Deck Type

“Create slides about [topic]” produces different quality depending on topic complexity.

For financial analysis? You get generic charts and basic layouts.

For strategic recommendations? You get bullet points that could apply to any company.

Smart professionals use different prompt structures for different deck types:

  • Pitch decks: Emphasize visual impact, clear data visualization, executive-friendly layouts
  • Board updates: Request detailed slide titles, appendix-ready format, conservative styling
  • Client deliverables: Specify consultative tone, professional polish, branded templates

This same principle drives effective pitch deck software selection—different tools for different presentation types.

Mistake 2: Not Testing Copilot on Throwaway Decks First

I watched a consultant create a client presentation with Copilot for the first time.

Live.

During billable hours.

The Copilot slides looked generic. The formatting was wrong. The tone was off.

He spent 4 hours fixing what should have tested on a practice deck first.

Test your brand-specific Copilot prompts on internal decks before using them for client work. Refine until the output matches your standards. Then deploy with confidence.

Mistake 3: Blaming Copilot Instead of Improving Your Prompts

Every time someone tells me “Copilot slides look generic and I hate it,” I ask: “Did you specify your brand requirements in the prompt?”

95% of the time: No.

Copilot isn’t the problem. Vague prompts are the problem.

The fix takes 5 minutes: Create brand-specific prompt snippets, test them, refine them, reuse them.

Let me be honest: I wasted 40+ hours reformatting generic Copilot slides before I figured this out. You don’t need to make the same mistake.

How to Link Copilot to Your Brand Guidelines

Copilot brand integration system for presentations and slide decksHere’s the system that works for professional services firms:

Step 1: Create a master brand template in PowerPoint with:

  • All approved fonts at correct sizes
  • Full color palette with hex codes
  • Standard layouts for common slide types
  • Your logo properly positioned
  • Master slide formatting locked in

Step 2: Name this template something Copilot-friendly: “[YourFirm]_Brand_Template.pptx”

Step 3: Reference this template in every Copilot prompt: “Using [YourFirm]_Brand_Template format…”

Step 4: Add specific instructions for deviations: “Exception: use navy background for title slide only”

This eliminates 90% of “my Copilot slides look generic” complaints.

For the complete PowerPoint Copilot setup including brand integration, template optimization, and prompt libraries that work for investment banking and asset management presentations, check out my comprehensive PowerPoint Copilot guide.

Why Generic-Looking Slides Cost You Deals

Let me be honest about something uncomfortable.

Your clients judge your slides in the first 30 seconds.

Generic AI-generated slides signal: “We used a shortcut.”

Brand-perfect slides signal: “We invested time in this presentation specifically for you.”

I’ve seen asset managers lose pitches because their Copilot slides looked generic. Not because the content was weak. Because the formatting screamed “we didn’t care enough to make this look professional.”

The private equity partner told me: “If they can’t get their own slides right, why would I trust them with our portfolio companies?”

Harsh.

Fair.

Your Copilot slides need to look indistinguishable from manually-created decks. That’s the standard for high-stakes presentations.

The November 2025 updates to PowerPoint Copilot actually make brand consistency easier—but only if you know how to prompt for it. See my November update breakdown for the latest features that prevent generic output.

71 Prompts. Every Scenario Covered.

Build from scratch, rescue an existing deck, or perfect individual slides — the Executive Prompt Pack covers every scenario. Works with ChatGPT, Copilot, and Edit with Copilot. Updated March 2026.

Get the Prompts → £19.99

FAQ: Fixing Generic Copilot Slides

Q: How long does it take to fix generic-looking Copilot slides?

A: If you catch it during prompt creation, 5 minutes to add brand specifications. If you’re reformatting generic Copilot slides after creation, expect 2-4 hours depending on deck length and complexity. Front-loading brand requirements in your prompt saves exponentially more time than fixing generic slides afterward. Investment banking teams I work with spend 30 seconds on detailed prompts to save 3+ hours of reformatting.

Q: Can PowerPoint Copilot automatically detect my brand colors and fonts?

A: No. Copilot cannot automatically detect your brand standards unless you specify them or reference a branded template file. Even if you’ve created dozens of on-brand decks before, each new Copilot session starts fresh with no brand memory. You must include brand specifications (fonts, colors, template names) in every prompt. This is the #1 reason Copilot slides look generic—people assume Copilot knows their brand when it doesn’t.

Q: Do I need to reformat every slide Copilot creates?

A: Only if your prompt was too generic. When you include specific brand requirements—template name, exact fonts, hex color codes, house style rules—Copilot typically produces slides that need only 10-15 minutes of minor tweaking versus 3-4 hours of complete reformatting. The quality of your Copilot output directly correlates to the specificity of your prompt. Generic prompts produce generic slides that require extensive reformatting.

Q: What’s the fastest way to make Copilot slides look professional?

A: Create reusable prompt snippets with your brand specifications: template name, fonts with sizes, color hex codes, and formatting rules. Save these as text files you can copy-paste into every Copilot prompt. Asset management firms I work with maintain 3-5 prompt snippets (pitch decks, board updates, client deliverables, internal analysis) that transform generic Copilot output into branded slides from the first draft. Initial setup: 20 minutes. Time saved per deck: 2-3 hours.

Q: Why do my Copilot slides still look generic even when I specify formatting?

A: Three common causes: (1) You’re using generic descriptions (“professional colors”) instead of specific values (“navy #1F4788”), (2) You’re not referencing an actual template file by name, or (3) Your template file isn’t properly saved in a location Copilot can access. Test by creating a simple 3-slide deck with maximum specificity: exact template name, precise font names and sizes, hex color codes for every color you need. If that works, your original prompt lacked sufficient detail. When Copilot slides look generic despite your best efforts, the issue is almost always prompt specificity, not Copilot’s capability.

Q: Should I create different Copilot prompts for different presentation types?

A: Absolutely. Your pitch deck formatting requirements differ dramatically from board updates or internal analysis decks. Maintain separate prompt templates for each presentation type: investor pitches (visual impact focus), board decks (detailed titles, appendix-ready), client deliverables (consultative polish), internal updates (speed over aesthetics). This prevents the “one generic prompt fits all” approach that produces generic-looking Copilot slides regardless of use case.

Stop Fighting Generic Copilot Slides

A boutique M&A advisory client told me last week: “I used to spend 30% of my deck creation time fixing Copilot’s generic formatting. Now I spend 5% because I frontloaded brand requirements into my prompts.”

That’s the shift.

But here’s the result that matters more: Three weeks after implementing brand-specific prompts, she closed a £15M deal. The buyer specifically mentioned the “professional quality and attention to detail” in her presentation materials.

Her Copilot slides looked so good that buyers assumed she had a full design team.

She didn’t. She had a 2-sentence prompt snippet.

Stop fighting generic AI-generated slides after the fact. Start preventing them with specific, brand-focused prompts upfront.

The 5-minute investment in prompt specificity saves hours of reformatting frustration.

PowerPoint Copilot Power Pack guide with prompts, workflows, templates, and troubleshooting tools from Winning Presentations

If you want the complete prompt library I use with investment banking and asset management clients—including 50+ brand-specific prompt templates tested on £100M+ deals—grab the PowerPoint Copilot Starter Pack:

Get the £9.99 PowerPoint Copilot Starter Pack

Includes: Brand integration prompts * Template setup guide * Industry-specific examples

Or for the comprehensive resource with 100+ tested prompts organized by financial services use cases:

Get the £29 PowerPoint Copilot Master Guide

201 pages * 8 industry playbooks * Banking and asset management workflows

Your Copilot slides should look like you made them, not like AI made them.

Fix it in 5 minutes with the right prompt.

13 Nov 2025
Professional using PowerPoint Copilot to create executive presentation with AI-generated chart

PowerPoint Copilot Tutorial: What Actually Works (And What Wastes Your Time)

📅 Last Updated: January 25, 2026

Copilot built my client’s 40-slide board deck in 22 minutes last Tuesday. Six months ago, the same deck took her team 4 hours.

That’s not marketing speak. That’s what happened when Microsoft shipped Agent Mode in December—and then expanded it to Mac and web this month.

I’ve tested every PowerPoint Copilot update since launch on real client work: investment banking pitches, biotech submissions, SaaS sales decks worth £100M+. This guide contains only what actually works—not feature lists, not theory.

Looking for ready-to-use AI prompts for executive presentations?

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 71 structured prompts for ChatGPT and Copilot — covering board decks, investor pitches, quarterly reviews, and strategy presentations.

Explore the Prompt Pack →

Quick Answer

PowerPoint Copilot is Microsoft’s AI assistant built into PowerPoint. It creates slides, writes content, designs layouts, and reorganizes decks from text prompts. The January 2026 updates added Agent Mode on Mac/web, SharePoint brand asset integration, and Claude-powered agents for document generation.

Requirements: Microsoft 365 Business/Enterprise + £30/month Copilot license
Time savings: 75% reduction (4-hour deck → 45-60 minutes)
Best for: Business presentations, board decks, investor pitches, sales materials

⚡ Presenting Tomorrow? Use These 3 Prompts Right Now:

Updated 27 March 2026 — Revised for the latest Microsoft Copilot and ChatGPT capabilities.

1. Fix your structure: “Reorganize this deck with the key recommendation on slide 2, supporting data on slides 3-5, and next steps on the final slide.”

2. Make it executive-ready: “Rewrite all slide titles as insights, not labels. Each title should tell the audience what to think, not what they’re looking at.”

3. Generate speaker notes: “Write speaker notes for each slide with 3 talking points and one likely executive question.”

Executive Resource

Stop Writing AI Prompts From Scratch

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 50 battle-tested prompts for executive-level presentations — board updates, budget requests, investor briefs, and Q&A prep. Built for PowerPoint Copilot and ChatGPT.

Get the Executive Prompt Pack →

Used by executives preparing for board briefings, budget requests, and investor meetings.

What’s In This Guide


Wednesday afternoon. I’m on a call with a VP of Marketing at a mid-market SaaS company. She needs her quarterly board presentation ready by Friday. Forty slides. Competitive analysis. Revenue breakdown. Product roadmap.

“Can Copilot actually help,” she asks, “or am I going to spend tonight fixing its output?”

I’d heard this question dozens of times since Copilot launched. The answer used to be: “It’ll save you 2 hours creating, then cost you 45 minutes fixing.”

That answer changed completely in the past two months.

Microsoft shipped Agent Mode in December—and I tested it live on that call. Total time to create a 24-slide investor-ready deck: 22 minutes.

The VP’s response: “This is the first time AI has actually felt like working with someone, not fighting with a tool.”

That’s what this guide teaches. Not Copilot theory—Copilot that actually works, tested on real client decks.


“Win the room. Every time.” — weekly tactics on executive presentations, Copilot for PowerPoint, and the psychology of persuasion. Free, from Mary Beth Hazeldine.

Send me the free newsletter →

What’s New in PowerPoint Copilot (January 2026)

I update this guide monthly. Here’s what changed this month:

🚀 Agent Mode Now Available on Mac and Web

The biggest news: Agent Mode is no longer Windows-only. Microsoft completed the rollout to Mac and web versions in early January. This means conversational, multi-turn presentation building is now available regardless of your platform.

What Agent Mode changes:

  • Ask Copilot to build your deck through conversation, not single prompts
  • Copilot asks clarifying questions before generating
  • Make surgical edits (“make slide 7 more visual”) without regenerating entire slides
  • 1-3 prompts per deck instead of 5-10

🎨 SharePoint Brand Asset Integration

Copilot now pulls images and templates directly from your organization’s SharePoint asset library. If your company has a centralized brand repository, Copilot can access approved visuals automatically.

What this means: No more hunting for the “right” logo or brand-compliant images. Copilot suggests visuals from your approved library. For teams with strict brand guidelines, this eliminates 30-45 minutes of manual image replacement per deck.

🤖 Claude-Powered Document Agents

Microsoft integrated Anthropic’s Claude model to power new document generation agents. These agents can create entire PowerPoint decks, Excel workbooks, and Word documents from Copilot Chat—with files saved directly to OneDrive.

The workflow: Describe what you need in Copilot Chat → Agent builds the presentation iteratively → File saves to OneDrive → Open and refine in PowerPoint.

Other January Updates

  • Read Aloud: Copilot responses can now be read aloud in the chat pane—useful for reviewing while multitasking
  • Auto-rewrite on Canvas: Select any text box, click the Copilot icon, and choose “Auto-rewrite,” “Condense,” or “Make professional” without opening the chat pane
  • AI Disclaimer Controls: Admins can now customize how AI disclaimers appear in Copilot Chat
  • Pricing Update Announced: Microsoft 365 commercial pricing increases July 1, 2026—lock in current rates if possible

PowerPoint Copilot January 2026 updates showing Agent Mode on Mac, SharePoint integration, and Claude-powered agents

📅 Previous Updates (December 2025)

December 2025 brought:

  • Agent Mode Launch (Windows): Multi-turn conversations for building presentations
  • Translation Fixed: 40-language translation now preserves brand fonts, colors, and templates
  • New UI: Copilot moved from ribbon to canvas—contextual suggestions appear near what you’re editing
  • SMB Pricing: Microsoft 365 Copilot Business at $21/user/month for organizations under 300 users
  • Work IQ: Copilot remembers your preferences across sessions

These features remain active and work alongside January updates.


Stop Guessing What to Type. Start Building in 25 Minutes.

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 71 tested prompts for ChatGPT and Copilot — structured by scenario so you know exactly what to type:

  • Build from scratch — scenario prompts for board reviews, budget requests, and investor decks
  • Rescue and rewrite — audit an existing deck, condense it, or fix one slide at a time
  • Industry-specific prompts for financial services, banking, consulting, and executive audiences
  • Power modifiers that transform any prompt into board-ready output
  • The 25-minute deck workflow that replaces 3–4 hours of manual building

Works with ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot, and Edit with Copilot (formerly Agent Mode). Updated March 2026.

Get the Executive Prompt Pack → £19.99

What PowerPoint Copilot Does Well

After testing Copilot on 200+ client presentations across investment banking, biotech, SaaS, and consulting, here’s where it genuinely saves hours:

1. Turning Documents into Slides

Feed Copilot a 30-page Word document and ask it to create a presentation summary. This is where the tool shines. It extracts key points, organizes them logically, and creates a first draft in under a minute.

Best prompt: “Create a 10-slide presentation summarizing this document. Focus on [specific topic]. The audience is [role] who need to [decision/action].”

2. First Drafts at Speed

Copilot creates reasonable first drafts in 30-60 seconds that would take 45-90 minutes manually. The draft isn’t perfect—but it’s a solid starting point.

A SaaS client needed 12 slides for a product launch. Previous method: 3+ hours. With Copilot: first draft in 4 minutes, refinement in 25 minutes. Total: 29 minutes.

3. Speaker Notes

Writing speaker notes is tedious. Copilot handles it well. Prompt: “Write speaker notes for each slide with 3-4 talking points and likely audience questions.”

4. Reformatting and Restructuring

Have a 40-slide deck that needs to become 15 slides? Copilot handles consolidation efficiently. It’s also good at changing tone—making technical content executive-friendly, or vice versa.

5. Brand-Compliant Generation (Enhanced January 2026)

With SharePoint integration, Copilot now pulls approved images and templates from your organization’s asset library. Combined with the Brand Consistency Engine, this reduces manual brand cleanup from 45 minutes to under 10 minutes.


What PowerPoint Copilot Does Poorly (Be Honest)

Copilot has real limitations. Knowing them saves you from frustration:

1. Strategic Thinking

Copilot creates slides. It doesn’t create strategy. If you don’t know what story you’re telling, Copilot will give you generic content that sounds professional but says nothing.

The fix: Spend 10 minutes outlining your narrative BEFORE touching Copilot. What’s the problem? What’s your solution? What’s the proof? What do you want them to do?

2. Accurate Data

Copilot invents plausible-sounding statistics. A banking client’s Copilot slide stated “European fintech funding increased 43% in Q3 2025.” The actual number was 12%.

The fix: Never trust Copilot’s numbers. Always verify against your source data.

3. Subtle Design

Copilot creates functional layouts, not beautiful ones. For high-stakes presentations, you’ll still need design refinement.

The fix: Use Copilot for content, then run PowerPoint Designer for visual polish. Or start with a well-designed template. I cover this workflow in my Copilot vs Designer comparison.

4. Industry-Specific Nuance

Copilot doesn’t understand that investment banking pitch books require specific formatting, or that biotech regulatory submissions have strict requirements.

The fix: Provide industry context in your prompts. Better yet, use industry-specific prompt templates.


Getting Started with PowerPoint Copilot

Requirements

  • Microsoft 365 Business or Enterprise—Personal accounts not supported
  • Copilot license: £30/user/month add-on (SMBs under 300 users: $21/user/month)
  • Updated PowerPoint: Mac, Windows, or Web—current version
  • Internet connection: Required (all AI processing happens in Microsoft’s cloud)

How to Access Copilot

  1. Open PowerPoint
  2. Look for the Copilot icon in the ribbon (top-right) or on the canvas near your slides
  3. If you don’t see it, check your Microsoft 365 license or contact IT

Troubleshooting

  • Can’t see Copilot icon? Verify your M365 license includes the Copilot add-on
  • Copilot grayed out? Check internet connection
  • Getting errors? Ensure PowerPoint is fully updated
  • Agent Mode not available? Check your IT admin has enabled it—some organizations restrict new features

Essential PowerPoint Copilot Prompts

These are the commands that actually work. Tested on hundreds of client presentations.

Create New Slides

  • “Add a slide about [topic]”
  • “Create 3 slides covering [A, B, C]”
  • “Insert a slide summarizing key metrics”

Generate Specific Slide Types

  • “Create a comparison slide: [option A] vs [option B]”
  • “Add a process diagram for [process]”
  • “Create an agenda slide”
  • “Add a timeline from Q1 to Q4 with milestones”

Write or Rewrite Content

  • “Write speaker notes for this slide”
  • “Rewrite for a non-technical audience”
  • “Summarize in 3 bullet points”
  • “Make this more concise”

Fix Layout and Design

  • “Make this slide more visual”
  • “Suggest a better layout”
  • “Apply consistent formatting across all slides”

For the complete prompt library (100+ prompts by use case), see: Best Copilot PowerPoint Prompts That Actually Work


For 71 tested prompts covering every scenario — build from scratch, rescue an existing deck, or fix individual slides — the Executive Prompt Pack gives you exactly what to type, updated for the latest Copilot and ChatGPT capabilities.

Agent Mode Tutorial

Agent Mode changes how you write prompts. The old approach—cramming everything into one detailed instruction—is now counterproductive.

The New Prompt Philosophy

❌ Old approach:

“Create a 12-slide quarterly board presentation with executive summary, revenue breakdown by region showing Q3 vs Q2, customer retention metrics with cohort analysis, competitive positioning versus our top 3 competitors, product roadmap for Q4-Q1, and next steps slide. Use professional formatting with our brand colors.”

✓ New approach:

“Help me build a quarterly board presentation. Let’s start with what the board cares about most.”

The difference? Agent Mode asks you the right questions. You don’t need to anticipate everything upfront.

Agent Mode Session Starters

For board presentations:
“I need to create a board presentation. Before we start, ask me about the audience’s priorities, the key metrics they care about, and the level of detail they expect.”

For investor pitches:
“Help me build a pitch deck for our Series B. Start by asking what makes our company unique and who we’re presenting to.”

For quarterly reviews:
“I’m building a quarterly business review. Ask me which metrics my leadership team focuses on and what story I want the data to tell.”

Mid-Conversation Commands

Once you’re in an Agent Mode session:

  • “Slide 7 is too dense. Split it into two slides.”
  • “Add a customer quote slide between the ROI section and the case study.”
  • “The charts are all bar graphs. Use a line chart for trend data.”
  • “Make the headline punchier.”

Step-by-Step: Build a Deck in 25 Minutes

Here’s exactly how I created a client deck last week.

Scenario: Q4 marketing performance review for executives
Previous method: 3-4 hours
With Copilot: 25 minutes

Step 1: Start an Agent Mode Session (30 seconds)

Prompt: “I need to create a 12-slide executive presentation about Q4 marketing performance. Before you start, ask me about the metrics leadership cares about most.”

What happens: Copilot asks clarifying questions about KPIs, comparison periods, and what decisions executives need to make.

Step 2: Answer Questions and Generate (5 minutes)

Copilot asks 3-4 questions. I answer: MQL growth, conversion rates, campaign ROI, and budget recommendations for Q1. Copilot generates a complete 12-slide structure.

Step 3: Refine Key Slides (10 minutes)

  • “Add a Q3–Q4 comparison chart showing 34% increase in qualified pipeline”
  • “Transform campaign slides into before/after visuals”
  • “Add specific recommendations: increase LinkedIn budget 40%, test ABM in Q1”

Step 4: Apply Branding (5 minutes)

Apply corporate template, update logos, replace generic images (or let Copilot pull from SharePoint if configured), verify color consistency.

Step 5: Generate Speaker Notes (5 minutes)

Prompt: “Write speaker notes with 3-4 talking points per slide and likely executive questions about ROI.”

Total: 25 minutes (vs 3-4 hours traditional method) = 3.5 hours saved per presentation


7 PowerPoint Copilot Mistakes to Avoid

After training 200+ professionals, these are the errors I see constantly:

❌ Mistake 1: Vague Prompts

Wrong: “Make a presentation about marketing”

Right: “Create a 10-slide B2B marketing strategy for SaaS companies selling to enterprises with 500+ employees. Cover market analysis, buyer personas, and measurement KPIs. Professional tone.”

❌ Mistake 2: Not Verifying Output

Copilot invents plausible-sounding statistics. Always verify facts and numbers against your source data.

❌ Mistake 3: Using First Draft as Final

Always iterate. Budget 20-30% of your time for refinement with prompts like “Make this more visual” or “Simplify for executives.”

❌ Mistake 4: Ignoring Brand Guidelines

Copilot creates generic designs. Apply your brand template first, include hex codes in prompts, and enable SharePoint integration if available.

❌ Mistake 5: Over-Relying on Copilot

Copilot accelerates creation but doesn’t replace your strategic thinking, industry expertise, or presentation skills.

❌ Mistake 6: Treating Agent Mode Like Traditional Copilot

Agent Mode is designed for conversation. Start simple and let it ask questions—don’t front-load everything.

❌ Mistake 7: Not Testing Before Client Delivery

Budget 10-15 minutes for review before any external delivery. Copilot is excellent but not perfect.

For the complete breakdown with fixes, see: 7 Deadly PowerPoint Copilot Mistakes (And How to Fix Them)


ROI Calculator: Is Copilot Worth It?

Time Savings by Task

Task Traditional With Copilot
Structuring and outlining 45 min 2 min
Creating slides 2 hr 15 min 8 min
Images and formatting 45 min 5 min
Brand cleanup 45 min 8 min
Total 4 hours 28 min

Annual ROI

For a professional creating 2 presentations per week:

  • Time saved per presentation: 3.5 hours
  • Weekly savings: 7 hours
  • Annual savings: 364 hours
  • Value at £75/hour: £27,300
  • Copilot annual cost: £360
  • Net ROI: 7,483%


71 Prompts. Every Scenario Covered.

Build from scratch, rescue an existing deck, or perfect individual slides — the Executive Prompt Pack covers every scenario. Works with ChatGPT, Copilot, and Edit with Copilot. Updated March 2026.

Get the Prompts → £19.99

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does PowerPoint Copilot cost?

£30/user/month on top of your Microsoft 365 Business/Enterprise subscription. Not available for personal accounts. SMBs (under 300 users) can get Copilot Business at $21/user/month. Note: Microsoft announced pricing increases effective July 1, 2026.

Is there a free version of PowerPoint Copilot?

No full free version. However, Microsoft 365 Copilot Chat (free tier) now includes basic Agent Mode capabilities in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint—though without access to your work data.

Does PowerPoint Copilot work on Mac?

Yes. As of January 2026, Agent Mode is now available on Mac and web—feature parity with Windows is complete.

Does Copilot work offline?

No. Requires internet connection—all AI processing happens in Microsoft’s cloud.

What’s the difference between Agent Mode and Standard Copilot?

Agent Mode works conversationally—asking questions, maintaining context, and allowing surgical edits to specific slides. Standard Copilot requires you to guide each step with separate prompts. Agent Mode typically needs 1-3 prompts per deck versus 5-10 for standard mode.

How accurate is Copilot’s content?

Copilot generates plausible content but can fabricate statistics. Always verify facts, especially for investor or board presentations. Never trust Copilot’s numbers without checking your source data.

Can Copilot replace presentation skills?

Absolutely not. Copilot creates slides faster. Effective presenting requires delivery skills, audience awareness, and strategic thinking. If you struggle with presentation anxiety, see my guide on how to calm nerves before a presentation—Copilot can’t help with that.

Is Copilot suitable for investor pitches?

Use it for structure and drafting. Refine strategic messaging yourself—high-stakes pitches need human insight. My clients have s, but never Copilot-only decks.


PS: I send monthly Copilot updates + presentation tips to 2,000+ professionals. Join The Winning Edge newsletter—it’s free.

PPS: Want to start with a quick checklist? Download the free Copilot Quick Start Checklist—25 essential prompts to get started immediately.


Related Guides


About the Author

Mary Beth Hazeldine is Owner and Managing Director of Winning Presentations. After 25 years in corporate banking at JPMorgan Chase, PwC, Royal Bank of Scotland, and Commerzbank, she combines business credibility with expertise in NLP and clinical hypnotherapy. Her clients have n methodologies. She tests every Copilot update on real client work before recommending anything.

10 Nov 2025
Professional using Copilot PowerPoint prompts to create executive presentation

50 Best Copilot PowerPoint Prompts That Actually Work [2026]

The best Copilot PowerPoint prompts follow a 5-element formula: Action + Content Type + Topic/Data + Audience + Tone/Style. Vague prompts like “make a slide about revenue” produce generic output. Specific prompts like “Create a revenue slide showing Q3 results for the board with a waterfall chart and 3 key drivers” produce executive-ready slides. Below you’ll find 50+ copy-paste prompts organised by category — updated for Agent Mode — plus the modifiers that control layout, tone, and structure.

📋 Jump to Section:

⚡ Presenting Tomorrow? The 3-Step Rescue

Updated 27 March 2026 — Revised for the latest Microsoft Copilot and ChatGPT capabilities.

No time to read 50 prompts. Use this:

  1. Open your draft deck in PowerPoint with Copilot enabled
  2. Paste this prompt: “Review this presentation for a [senior leadership / board / client] audience. Identify the 3 weakest slides and suggest specific improvements for clarity and impact.”
  3. Then for each weak slide: “Rewrite this slide for a time-poor executive. Lead with the insight, not the data. Maximum 3 bullets, 10 words each.”

That sequence alone has rescued dozens of decks the night before high-stakes meetings.

“I’ve wasted three hours trying to fix this. Copilot is useless.”

That message landed in my inbox last month from a Director at a consulting firm. She’d typed “Create a client presentation about our Q3 results” and gotten 12 slides of generic bullet points, stock icons, and zero insight.

I asked her to try one prompt I’d refined over months of testing: a 47-word instruction that specified the slide type, the three metrics that mattered, the audience (partner-level), and the tone (data-driven, no fluff). Seven minutes later, she had a board-ready executive summary.

The difference wasn’t the tool. It was the prompt.

After testing hundreds of variations with clients across banking, biotech, and SaaS — and now with Agent Mode changing the workflow — I’ve identified the patterns that consistently produce slides worth presenting. Here they are.

Looking for ready-to-use AI prompts for executive presentations?

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 71 structured prompts for ChatGPT and Copilot — covering board decks, investor pitches, quarterly reviews, and strategy presentations.

Explore the Prompt Pack →

Why Most Copilot Prompts Fail (And How to Fix Them)

After training professionals on Microsoft Copilot for PowerPoint over the past year, I see the same three mistakes repeatedly:

Mistake 1: Prompts Are Too Vague

Examples that fail:

  • “Make this look professional.”
  • “Improve this slide.”
  • “Create a presentation about marketing.”

Vague prompts force Copilot to guess. That’s how you get slides that could belong to any company in any industry. Related: Fix Generic Copilot Slides in 5 Minutes

Mistake 2: Prompts Are Overloaded

Example: “Create a 45-slide board presentation covering Q1–Q4 performance, market trends, competitor analysis, customer feedback, operational improvements, and financial projections with detailed charts and executive summaries.”

Overloaded prompts produce unfocused decks. You still end up rebuilding most of it.

Mistake 3: No Audience, No Objective

Most prompts never mention who the deck is for, or what the slide must achieve (decision, approval, update). Copilot then defaults to safe, generic language that doesn’t drive action.

“Win the room. Every time.” — weekly tactics on executive presentations, Copilot for PowerPoint, and the psychology of persuasion. Free, from Mary Beth Hazeldine.

Send me the free newsletter →

The 5-Element Copilot Prompt Formula

Every effective Copilot prompt includes these five elements:

  1. Action — what you want (create, rewrite, summarise, improve)
  2. Content Type — slide type or section (agenda, executive summary, comparison, roadmap)
  3. Topic & Data — what it’s about and the key numbers/messages
  4. Audience — who will see it (board, investors, internal team, clients)
  5. Tone & Style — how it should sound and look (executive, concise, data-driven, clean layout)

Formula: Action + Content Type + Topic/Data + Audience + Tone/Style

Example:

“Create a 7-slide executive update for the senior leadership team on our Q4 2025 results. Include: headline results, key drivers, risks, mitigation actions, and 3 decisions we need from them. Use a concise, data-driven tone and a clean layout with generous white space and minimal text per slide.”

Power Modifiers That Instantly Improve Output

Add these phrases to almost any prompt:

  • “Use a clean, minimalist layout with plenty of white space.”
  • “Avoid clipart or cartoon icons.”
  • “Keep bullets concise — maximum 10 words per bullet.”
  • “Write for a time-poor executive audience.”
  • “Highlight the three most important points.”

For a complete tutorial on Copilot’s capabilities, see our PowerPoint Copilot Complete Guide.

The 5-Element Copilot Prompt Formula showing Action plus Content Type plus Topic and Data plus Audience plus Tone and Style equals executive-ready slides

Agent Mode Prompts

Microsoft’s Agent Mode introduces conversational AI that builds presentations through multi-turn dialogue. Instead of writing one detailed prompt and hoping, you can have a back-and-forth conversation where Copilot asks clarifying questions and refines as you go.

What Agent Mode adds:

  • Conversational slide creation — describe what you need, answer Copilot’s questions, iterate
  • Work IQ — Copilot remembers your preferences across sessions
  • SharePoint Asset Library integration — pulls brand-approved images automatically
  • “Explain this” feature — select any text, table, or slide for instant explanation
  • Image editor integration — edit images directly within PowerPoint

Note: Availability varies by organisation, platform, and rollout schedule. Check your Microsoft 365 Copilot release notes or tenant settings for current feature access.

Agent Mode Conversation Starters (Prompts 51-55)

51. Full Deck Build: “I need a 10-slide board presentation on our Q4 results. Can you help me build it slide by slide? Start by asking what metrics matter most to my board.”

52. Iterative Refinement: “I have a draft deck open. Walk me through each slide and suggest improvements. Ask me questions about audience and purpose as we go.”

53. Brand-Consistent Build: “Create a client presentation using our corporate template. Pull images from our SharePoint asset library. Ask me about the key messages before you start building slides.”

54. Multi-Source Integration: “I’m referencing /Q4-report.docx and /sales-data.xlsx. Build a presentation that tells the story of our quarter. Ask clarifying questions about what to emphasise.”

55. Rapid Revision: “Make slide 3 more visual. Add a timeline to slide 5. Change the tone of slide 7 to be more confident. Then show me the updated deck.”

Old workflow: Write detailed prompt → Wait → Review → Write another prompt → Wait → Fix manually

Agent Mode workflow: Describe what you need → Answer Copilot’s questions → Watch slides generate → Say “make slide 3 more visual” → Done

Executive Summary & High-Level Slides (Prompts 1-5)

1. Executive One-Slider: “Create a one-slide executive summary for [audience] explaining [project/initiative]. Include: 1 key headline, 3 bullet points on impact, and 1 clear ask. Write for very busy senior leaders.”

2. Board-Level Update: “Create a board update slide summarising [topic, e.g., Q4 performance]. Focus on: results vs target, 3 key drivers, and 2 decisions required from the board. Use concise, non-technical language.”

3. Strategic Recommendation: “Create a strategic recommendation slide that compares Option A vs Option B for [decision]. Show: summary, pros/cons, risks, and a recommended option with one-sentence justification.”

4. Leadership Snapshot: “Create a one-slide ‘Leadership Snapshot’ for [initiative]. Include: current status (RAG), top 3 wins, top 3 risks, and the next major milestone with date.”

5. Vision Slide: “Create a vision slide for [programme/strategy] that explains: where we are now, where we want to be in 3 years, and the high-level path to get there. Use simple, inspiring language.”

For more on executive summary slides, see: The Executive Summary Slide: How to Write the Only Slide That Matters

Stop Guessing What to Type. Start Building in 25 Minutes.

The Executive Prompt Pack gives you 71 tested prompts for ChatGPT and Copilot — structured by scenario so you know exactly what to type:

  • Build from scratch — scenario prompts for board reviews, budget requests, and investor decks
  • Rescue and rewrite — audit an existing deck, condense it, or fix one slide at a time
  • Industry-specific prompts for financial services, banking, consulting, and executive audiences
  • Power modifiers that transform any prompt into board-ready output
  • The 25-minute deck workflow that replaces 3–4 hours of manual building

Works with ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot, and Edit with Copilot (formerly Agent Mode). Updated March 2026.

Get the Executive Prompt Pack → £19.99

Data & Chart Slides (Prompts 6-10)

6. Revenue Performance: “Create a revenue performance slide showing [time period] actual vs target, with % variance and 3 drivers of the result. Use a clean chart plus 3 short bullets interpreting the data.”

7. KPI Dashboard: “Create a KPI dashboard slide for [business area]. Show 5–7 KPIs with current value, target, and RAG status, plus one line under the chart summarising overall performance.”

8. Trend Analysis: “Create a slide showing the trend for [metric] over the last [X] quarters. Include a simple line chart and 3 bullets explaining what changed, why, and what it means.”

9. Before/After Impact: “Create a before/after comparison slide showing the impact of [initiative]. Left side: baseline metrics. Right side: improved metrics. Underneath, add 3 bullets on what drove the improvement.”

10. Risk Heatmap: “Create a risk heatmap slide for [project]. Show likelihood on one axis and impact on the other, with 6–9 key risks plotted. Add 3 bullet points summarising overall risk posture.”

These prompts give you content — but keeping them organised matters. The Copilot Prompt Pack (£9.99) has all 55 prompts sorted by slide type so you can find what you need in seconds.

Story & Narrative Slides (Prompts 11-15)

11. Problem–Solution Story: “Create a slide that tells the story of [client/problem]. Structure it as: context, problem, impact if not solved, our solution, and expected outcome. Use concise, story-like language.”

12. Customer Journey: “Create a customer journey slide showing the stages from [awareness] to [renewal or advocacy] for [customer segment]. Highlight pain points in red and opportunities in green.”

13. Case Study: “Create a one-slide case study describing how we helped [client] achieve [result]. Include: client situation, what we did, and quantified outcome. Use 3–5 short bullets.”

14. Before/After Storyboard: “Create a two-column slide comparing the ‘Before’ and ‘After’ experience of [process/solution] from the user’s perspective. Use 3 bullets per column with clear, specific language.”

15. Origin Story: “Create a slide telling the origin story of [project or product]. Explain why it started, what problem it aims to solve, and what success looks like. Use simple, engaging language.”

Meeting, Agenda & Structure Slides (Prompts 16-20)

16. Value-Focused Agenda: “Create an agenda slide for a [type of meeting] with 4–6 items. For each item, include one line explaining the value or outcome for the audience, not just the topic.”

17. Decision-Focused Agenda: “Create an agenda slide for a decision-focused meeting with [stakeholders]. Emphasise: context, options, evaluation, recommended decision, and next steps.”

18. Timeline / Roadmap: “Create a timeline slide showing [project] phases from [start date] to [end date]. Include 5–7 key milestones with dates. Use a horizontal visual layout.”

19. Next Steps: “Create a ‘Next Steps’ slide with 4–6 action items. For each, include: owner, deadline, and one-line description. Format as a clear table or list.”

20. Meeting Recap: “Create a meeting recap slide summarising: key decisions made, open questions, action items with owners, and date of next meeting. Keep it to one page.”

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Comparison & Evaluation Slides (Prompts 21-25)

21. Option Comparison Table: “Create a comparison slide evaluating [Option A] vs [Option B] vs [Option C]. Use a table with rows for: cost, timeline, risk, and strategic fit. Highlight the recommended option.”

22. Vendor Evaluation: “Create a vendor comparison slide for [category]. Compare 3–4 vendors on: features, pricing, support, and implementation time. Use a scoring system (1–5) and highlight the winner.”

23. Pros and Cons: “Create a pros and cons slide for [decision]. Two columns: 4–5 pros on the left, 4–5 cons on the right. Add a summary line at the bottom with a recommendation.”

24. Feature Matrix: “Create a feature comparison matrix for [product/service]. Rows = features, columns = competitors. Use checkmarks for included features, X for missing. Highlight our advantages.”

25. Investment Prioritisation: “Create a prioritisation slide for [initiatives]. Use a 2×2 matrix with ‘Impact’ on one axis and ‘Effort’ on the other. Plot 6–8 initiatives and label each quadrant.”

Comparison slides are where presentations win or lose. If you’re presenting options to leadership, having the right prompt ready makes the difference. The Copilot Prompt Pack (£9.99) includes prompts for every decision-slide type.

For 71 tested prompts covering every scenario — build from scratch, rescue an existing deck, or fix individual slides — the Executive Prompt Pack gives you exactly what to type, updated for the latest Copilot and ChatGPT capabilities.

Financial & Budget Slides (Prompts 26-30)

26. Budget Request: “Create a budget request slide for [project]. Include: amount requested, what it funds, expected ROI, and payback period. Write for a CFO audience.”

27. P&L Summary: “Create a P&L summary slide showing [time period] results. Include: revenue, costs, gross margin, operating expenses, and net income. Compare to budget and prior year.”

28. ROI Calculation: “Create an ROI slide for [investment]. Show: total investment, expected returns over 3 years, payback period, and key assumptions. Use a simple table format.”

29. Cost Breakdown: “Create a cost breakdown slide for [project/initiative]. Show categories as a pie chart or bar chart, with percentages and absolute values. Highlight the largest cost driver.”

30. Forecast vs Actual: “Create a forecast vs actual slide for [metric]. Show monthly data with forecast line and actual line. Add variance analysis with 3 bullets explaining the gap.”

Team & People Slides (Prompts 31-35)

31. Team Introduction: “Create a team slide introducing [X] people. For each: name, role, and one sentence on relevant experience. Use photos if available. Clean grid layout.”

32. Org Chart: “Create an org chart slide showing the structure of [department/team]. Include reporting lines, names, and titles. Keep it to one level of detail.”

33. RACI Matrix: “Create a RACI slide for [project]. Rows = key activities, columns = stakeholders. Fill in R (Responsible), A (Accountable), C (Consulted), I (Informed).”

34. Stakeholder Map: “Create a stakeholder map for [initiative]. Plot stakeholders on a 2×2 grid with ‘Influence’ and ‘Interest’ as axes. Label each quadrant with engagement strategy.”

35. Skills Matrix: “Create a skills matrix slide for [team]. Rows = team members, columns = key skills. Use a 1–5 rating or colour coding. Identify gaps and strengths.”

Full Presentation Structures (Prompts 36-40)

36. 10-Slide Investor Pitch: “Create a 10-slide investor pitch for [company]. Structure: problem, solution, market size, business model, traction, team, competition, financials, ask, and contact. Executive tone.”

37. QBR Presentation: “Create a 12-slide QBR presentation for [client]. Include: executive summary, KPI performance, wins, challenges, account health, renewal status, and next quarter priorities.”

38. Board Presentation: “Create a 15-slide board presentation covering: company performance, strategic initiatives, financial results, risks, and decisions needed. Use executive language and minimal text.”

39. Multi-Slide Narrative: “Create a 10-slide presentation for [audience] on [topic]. Structure it as: context, problem, impact, options, recommended solution, implementation plan, risks, and next steps.”

40. Story-First Redraft: “Restructure this presentation so it tells a clear story: starting situation, tension/problem, turning point, solution, and outcome. Propose a new slide order based on that story arc.”

Meeting-Specific Prompts (41-45)

41. Budget Meeting Opener: “Create a budget meeting opening slide for [project]. Include: amount requested, strategic alignment, and the one question you need answered today.”

42. Board Meeting Opener: “Create a board meeting opening slide for [date/meeting]. Include: purpose, key topics, and decisions required today, in one clear overview.”

43. QBR Overview: “Create a QBR overview slide for [client/business unit]. Show: period covered, key achievements, main challenges, and priorities for next quarter.”

44. Escalation Slide: “Create an escalation slide to senior leadership about [issue]. Include: brief summary, impact, what we’ve tried, and what decision/support we now need.”

45. Change Approval: “Create a slide requesting approval for [change]. Include: why change is needed, options considered, recommended option, and risks/mitigation.”

71 Prompts. Every Scenario Covered.

Build from scratch, rescue an existing deck, or perfect individual slides — the Executive Prompt Pack covers every scenario. Works with ChatGPT, Copilot, and Edit with Copilot. Updated March 2026.

Get the Prompts → £19.99

Training & FAQ Slides (Prompts 46-50)

46. How It Works: “Create a ‘How it works’ slide explaining [process/tool] in 3–5 simple steps. Use short descriptions suitable for training non-expert users.”

47. Dos and Don’ts: “Create a ‘Dos and Don’ts’ slide for [topic]. Include 4–6 dos and 4–6 don’ts, written as clear behavioural guidance.”

48. FAQ Slide: “Create an FAQ slide answering the 4–6 most common questions about [topic]. Keep answers to one sentence each.”

49. Onboarding Overview: “Create an onboarding overview slide for new users of [system/tool]. Include: what they need to know in week 1, key training, and where to get help.”

50. Playbook Summary: “Create a slide that summarises the key rules for using PowerPoint Copilot effectively. Focus on: prompt structure, audience focus, and layout clarity.”

FAQ: Best Copilot PowerPoint Prompts

How long should a good Copilot prompt be?

The sweet spot is 3–5 sentences (around 50–100 words). Short prompts produce generic output. Overly long prompts become confusing. Aim for clear, focused detail that includes audience, objective, and specific content requirements.

What’s the difference between standard Copilot and Agent Mode?

Standard Copilot requires you to guide each step with separate prompts. Agent Mode works conversationally — asking questions, maintaining context, and allowing surgical edits like “make slide 3 more visual” without rewriting your entire prompt. Feature availability varies by organisation and platform.

Should I use the same prompts in ChatGPT and PowerPoint Copilot?

Not exactly. ChatGPT excels at content generation (outlines, talking points, rewriting text). PowerPoint Copilot excels at slide creation (layouts, charts, visual structure). Use them together, but with different prompt styles for each tool.

What if Copilot ignores parts of my prompt?

This usually happens when your prompt contradicts earlier context, you’re asking for something Copilot can’t do (e.g., external data without the right integrations), or your instructions are too vague. Fix it by tightening the prompt, numbering your instructions, and running it on a single slide at a time.

Can I rely on Copilot for high-stakes presentations?

Copilot is excellent for speed and structure — but it doesn’t replace your judgement. For high-stakes decks, use Copilot to get to a strong first draft quickly, then apply your own expertise to refine story, emphasis, and nuance. If presenting makes you nervous, see our guide on how to calm nerves before a presentation.

Is the Copilot Prompt Pack worth £9.99 if these prompts are free?

The free prompts here give you examples you can bookmark or copy. The Prompt Pack gives you a structured, searchable document you can reference instantly while working — organised by slide type, with power modifiers and Agent Mode scripts included. If you use Copilot weekly, it pays for itself in the first deck.

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Get the 10 most essential Copilot prompts plus power modifiers in a one-page PDF — free.

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Your Next Step

You now have 55 prompts that actually work — including the Agent Mode conversation starters. Pick 3–5 that match the slides you create most often (executive summary, data slide, next steps) and use them consistently for the next month.

If you want all 55 prompts organised, searchable, and ready to copy-paste while you’re working, the Copilot Prompt Pack (£9.99) is the fastest way to level up your Copilot workflow.


PS: If you create board updates, budget requests, or stakeholder presentations regularly, the Executive Slide System (£39) gives you the templates and frameworks that turn Copilot output into slides that actually get approved.


About the Author: Mary Beth Hazeldine spent 25 years in corporate banking at JPMorgan Chase, PwC, Royal Bank of Scotland, and Commerzbank. She now coaches executives on high-stakes presentations and tests every Copilot update on real client work.

Last updated: January 25, 2026