Presentation Workflow Efficiency: From 6 Hours to 90 Minutes — The Workflow That Changed Everything
The fastest path to presentation workflow efficiency isn’t better tools—it’s a framework-first approach. Most professionals spend 6+ hours on presentations because they start with slides instead of structure. The workflow that cuts creation time by 75% has four phases: Clarify the Decision, Build the Narrative Spine, Draft Content Blocks, then Polish and Refine. This is the system I’ve taught to senior leaders who don’t have 6 hours to spare.
⚡ Presentation due tomorrow? Here’s your 90-minute shortcut:
- Write the decision you need in one sentence (5 min)
- Draft 5-7 slide headlines as assertions, not topics (15 min)
- Add one proof point per slide — data, example, or visual (40 min)
- Polish formatting and flow (20 min)
Want the full system with templates, AI integration, and expert feedback? Enroll in AI-Enhanced Presentation Mastery →
If you want to master this workflow with guided practice and expert feedback, AI-Enhanced Presentation Mastery teaches the complete framework—plus how to use AI tools to accelerate each phase without sacrificing quality.
In this article:
Early in my banking career, I spent an entire Sunday building a Monday presentation. Fourteen hours across the weekend. Forty-seven slides. The CFO flipped through it in 3 minutes and asked, “What’s the recommendation?”
I didn’t have a clear one. I’d spent so long on slides that I’d lost the thread of what I was actually trying to say.
That was the moment I realised my workflow was backwards. I was building presentations from the outside in—starting with slides, then trying to figure out the story. No wonder it took forever.
Over the next 24 years in corporate banking—at JPMorgan Chase, PwC, RBS, and Commerzbank—I rebuilt my approach from scratch. The workflow I developed now takes 90 minutes for presentations that used to take 6 hours. And the presentations are better, because the thinking happens first.
Here’s the system.
⭐ Master the Framework That Cuts Presentation Time by 75%
Stop spending weekends on Monday presentations. Learn the workflow senior leaders use to create executive-ready decks in 90 minutes.
AI-Enhanced Presentation Mastery includes:
- The Decision Clarifier worksheet (Phase 1)
- Narrative Spine builder template with worked examples
- Headline-first slide writing method + before/after samples
- AI prompt library for each phase (Clarify, Structure, Draft, Polish)
If you build 4 presentations/month, saving 4 hours each gives you 16 hours back — every month.
Enroll in AI-Enhanced Presentation Mastery →
A Maven course built from 24 years of executive presentations. 70% framework mastery, 30% AI enhancement.
Why Presentations Take So Long (The Real Problem)
Most professionals approach presentations like this:
- Open PowerPoint
- Create a title slide
- Start adding content to slides
- Reorganise slides repeatedly
- Realise the story doesn’t flow
- Rebuild large sections
- Run out of time and ship something mediocre
This is the outside-in approach, and it’s why presentations take 6+ hours. You’re making design decisions before you’ve made thinking decisions. You’re arranging slides before you know what story they need to tell.
The result: endless reorganisation, late-night edits, and presentations that look polished but don’t land.
The fix isn’t working faster. It’s working in the right order.
Framework-first means you complete the thinking before you touch the slides. By the time you open PowerPoint, you know exactly what goes where. There’s nothing to reorganise because the structure is already solid.
This is the same principle behind effective presentation structure—get the architecture right first, and everything else falls into place.
The Framework-First Approach: Why It Works
Framework-first presentation workflow efficiency comes from a simple insight: clarity before creation.
When you know these three things before you start building, presentations come together fast:
1. The Decision You Need
Every executive presentation should drive a decision. What do you need from the room? Approval? Resources? Awareness? Direction? If you can’t articulate this in one sentence, you’re not ready to build slides.
2. The Narrative Spine
What’s the logical flow that leads to your decision? For most executive presentations, this follows a pattern: Situation → Complication → Resolution → Ask. The spine is 4-7 points that, spoken aloud, tell a complete story without any slides.
3. The Evidence That Matters
What data, examples, or proof points does your audience need to reach the decision you want? Not everything you know—just what they need. Most presentations fail because they include too much evidence, not too little.
When these three elements are clear, building slides is almost mechanical. You’re not creating—you’re translating.
Whether you’re building a quarterly OKR update or a board-level strategic recommendation, the framework stays the same. Only the content changes.
Want to master framework-first thinking?
AI-Enhanced Presentation Mastery teaches you to clarify the decision, build the narrative spine, and identify evidence that matters—with guided practice on real presentations.

The 90-Minute Presentation Workflow
Here’s the exact workflow I use and teach. It assumes a standard executive presentation of 7-15 slides.
Phase 1: Clarify (15 minutes)
Before anything else, answer these questions in writing:
- What decision do I need from this presentation?
- Who is my audience, and what do they already know?
- What’s the ONE thing they must remember?
- What would make them say no, and how do I address it?
This phase feels slow but saves hours later. Most presentation problems trace back to unclear thinking at the start.
Phase 2: Structure (20 minutes)
Build your narrative spine—no slides yet, just an outline:
- Opening: Hook + context + preview
- Body: 3-5 main points in logical sequence
- Close: Summary + specific ask + next steps
Write this as bullet points you could speak aloud. If the flow doesn’t make sense when spoken, it won’t make sense on slides.
Phase 3: Draft (40 minutes)
Now—and only now—open PowerPoint:
- Create slides for each point in your structure
- Focus on headlines first (the slide title should state the point, not describe the topic)
- Add supporting content: one key visual or 3-4 bullets per slide
- Don’t format yet—just get content in place
This phase is fast because you’re not thinking—you’re executing a plan that’s already clear.
Phase 4: Polish (15 minutes)
With content in place, refine:
- Strengthen headlines (make them assertion-led, not topic-led)
- Cut anything that doesn’t directly support the decision
- Apply consistent formatting
- Review the flow: does each slide lead naturally to the next?
Total: 90 minutes.
This workflow assumes you know the framework. The first few times, it takes longer as you build the habit. By the fifth or sixth presentation, 90 minutes becomes realistic for most executive decks.
⭐ Stop Trading Weekends for Monday Presentations
Learn the workflow that senior leaders use to create executive-ready presentations in a fraction of the time—without sacrificing quality.
AI-Enhanced Presentation Mastery includes:
- The 4-phase workflow with timing guides for each phase
- Framework templates for board updates, budget requests, and strategy decks
- AI integration playbook: which tools, which prompts, which phases
Methodology + templates + AI techniques + expert feedback — all in one course.
For executives and senior professionals who are done spending 6 hours on presentations that should take 90 minutes.
Where AI Fits (And Where It Doesn’t)
AI tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Copilot can dramatically accelerate presentation creation—but only if you use them correctly.
Where AI Helps
- Phase 1 (Clarify): AI can help you articulate your decision and identify potential objections through structured questioning
- Phase 2 (Structure): AI can suggest narrative frameworks and help sequence your points logically
- Phase 3 (Draft): AI can generate first-draft content for each slide, which you then refine
- Phase 4 (Polish): AI can strengthen headlines, cut filler, and check for consistency
Where AI Fails
- Strategic judgment: AI doesn’t know what decision you actually need or what your audience cares about
- Organisational context: AI can’t account for internal politics, history, or relationships
- Original thinking: If you rely on AI to do the thinking, you get generic presentations that don’t land
The key insight: AI accelerates execution, but framework does the thinking.
This is why I teach 70% framework mastery, 30% AI enhancement. Without the framework, AI just helps you build bad presentations faster. With the framework, AI becomes a powerful accelerator.
For a deeper dive into AI presentation workflows, the principles are the same: framework first, AI second.
Ready to integrate AI the right way?
AI-Enhanced Presentation Mastery teaches you exactly where to use AI in each phase—and where human judgment is irreplaceable.
People Also Ask
How long should it take to create a presentation?
A standard executive presentation (7-15 slides) should take 60-90 minutes using a framework-first workflow. If you’re regularly spending 4+ hours, the issue is usually workflow—starting with slides before the thinking is clear. Investing 15 minutes in clarifying your decision and structure saves hours of reorganisation later.
What’s the fastest way to create a presentation?
The fastest sustainable approach is framework-first: clarify the decision, build the narrative spine, then draft content. This feels slower at the start but eliminates the reorganisation cycles that consume most presentation time. Combined with AI tools for execution, this workflow can cut creation time by 75%.
How do executives create presentations so quickly?
Experienced executives use mental frameworks they’ve internalised over years—they automatically know the structure, evidence requirements, and decision points for different presentation types. They’re not faster at building slides; they’re faster at thinking. Framework-first training accelerates this process.
3 Workflow Mistakes That Double Your Time
Mistake 1: Starting in PowerPoint
Opening PowerPoint before your thinking is clear guarantees hours of reorganisation. The slide canvas encourages decoration before direction. Start in a blank document or even on paper. Move to slides only when you can articulate your narrative spine aloud.
Mistake 2: Perfecting as You Go
Formatting slides while you draft them creates constant context-switching that destroys efficiency. Draft all content first (ugly is fine), then polish everything in one pass. This single change can save 30+ minutes per presentation.
Mistake 3: Including Everything You Know
More content doesn’t mean better presentations—it means longer creation time and audiences who can’t find the point. Ruthlessly cut anything that doesn’t directly support the decision you need. If in doubt, leave it out. You can always add if asked.
These mistakes are why the executive presentations guide emphasises structure and clarity over comprehensiveness.
⭐ Reclaim Your Weekends. Master the Workflow.
Join senior leaders who’ve transformed how they create presentations—from dreaded time-sink to efficient, high-impact process.
What you get inside:
- Decision Clarifier + Narrative Spine templates
- Headline-first slide writing with before/after examples
- Phase-by-phase AI prompts that enhance your thinking
- Live practice sessions with expert feedback
4 presentations/month × 4 hours saved = 16 hours back. Every month. That’s 2 full working days.
Enroll in AI-Enhanced Presentation Mastery →
Built from 24 years of executive presentations in banking. For professionals who value their time and their impact.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does this workflow work for complex, data-heavy presentations?
Yes, and it’s especially valuable for complex presentations. The framework-first approach forces you to identify which data actually matters before you start building charts. Most data-heavy presentations fail because they include too much data, not too little. Clarifying the decision first helps you curate rather than dump.
What if I don’t know what decision I need?
That’s a signal you’re not ready to build a presentation. Spend more time in Phase 1. Ask: “If this presentation goes perfectly, what happens next?” If you can’t answer that, schedule a conversation with your stakeholder to clarify expectations before you start building.
Can I use this workflow with my existing templates?
Absolutely. The workflow is template-agnostic. Your corporate template handles the visual layer; the framework handles the thinking layer. In fact, having a consistent template makes Phase 3 (Draft) even faster because you’re not making design decisions.
How long does it take to get to 90 minutes consistently?
Most professionals see significant improvement within 3-5 presentations if they follow the phases strictly. The temptation is to skip Phase 1 (Clarify) because it feels unproductive. Resist that. The time investment in clarity pays back 3x in Phases 2-4.
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Your Next Step
Presentation workflow efficiency isn’t about working faster—it’s about working in the right order. Framework first, slides second.
The 90-minute workflow: Clarify (15 min) → Structure (20 min) → Draft (40 min) → Polish (15 min).
Try it on your next presentation. Resist the urge to open PowerPoint until Phase 3. Notice how much easier the build becomes when the thinking is already done.
And if you want to master this workflow with guided practice and expert feedback—to truly transform how you create presentations—AI-Enhanced Presentation Mastery gives you the complete system.
Your weekends are worth more than Monday presentations. It’s time to reclaim them.
