Tag: Copilot Powerpoint Prompts

15 Apr 2026
Male executive reviewing AI-generated PowerPoint slides on a laptop, focused expression, Copilot interface visible, navy suit, gold accents

Copilot Prompts for Executive Presentations

Most Copilot prompts for presentations were written for generic slide decks — “create a presentation about our Q3 results.” That works for an internal update to a team who already knows the context. It does not work for a board budget approval, a project pitch to a risk-averse executive committee, or a decision recommendation where the ask needs to be framed with care. Copilot prompts for executive presentations need to be built differently — structured around how senior decision-makers read slides, not how AI tools generate them.

Marcus had been using Copilot for three months when he prepared the slides for the most important board presentation of his career — a £4M capital investment proposal. He typed his prompt, got eleven slides in forty seconds, and felt efficient. The deck covered the right topics in roughly the right order. But when he showed a draft to his director the following morning, she looked at it for two minutes and handed it back. “The recommendation is buried on slide seven,” she said. “The board will have formed a view before they get there.” Marcus had used Copilot correctly — technically. He had asked it to create a presentation. What he had not given it was a prompt built for a board approval scenario: one that specified recommendation-first structure, compressed evidence architecture, and a risk summary designed to pre-empt the questions the board’s non-executives always ask. The tool was capable. The prompt was not. He rebuilt the deck using scenario-specific prompts, moved the recommendation to slide two, condensed his evidence to four slides, and added a governance risk table. The board approved the investment on first presentation.

Already using Copilot or ChatGPT for slides? The Executive Prompt Pack contains 71 prompts built specifically for executive presentation scenarios — board updates, budget proposals, project pitches, and decision decks. Explore the Pack →

Why Generic Copilot Prompts Fail for Executive Presentations

A generic AI prompt tells the tool what to create, not how the audience will read it. “Create a ten-slide presentation for our board on the Q2 financial results” tells Copilot the topic and the format. It tells it nothing about the decision the board is being asked to take, the information the non-executive directors will focus on, the risk questions they will raise before approving any forward commitment, or the language that signals governance credibility rather than management spin.

Senior decision-makers — board members, executive committees, investment panels — read slides in a specific sequence. They look for the ask first: what is this presentation requesting me to do or approve? Then they look for the rationale: is the evidence structured logically, and does it hold under scrutiny? Then they look for risk: what has this presenter anticipated, and how competently have they addressed it? A generic prompt produces slides that answer none of these questions in the right order.

The structural problem is compounded by a register problem. Executive presentations require a precise tone — authoritative but not combative, specific without being granular, direct without appearing to pre-empt deliberation. That register is not Copilot’s default. Its default is informative and comprehensive: it covers the topic rather than making the case. Scenario-specific prompts correct for this by building the executive register into the instruction itself.

The result is that executives who use generic prompts often receive technically correct outputs that require significant restructuring before they are suitable for a senior audience. Executives who use scenario-specific prompts receive first drafts that are closer to the finished deck — because the prompt has already encoded the structure, the register, and the decision logic that the audience will apply.

71 Prompts Built for Executive Presentation Scenarios

The Executive Prompt Pack covers board updates, budget proposals, project pitches, decision recommendations, and more — designed for use with Microsoft Copilot and ChatGPT. £19.99, instant download.

  • ✓ 71 prompts covering executive presentation scenarios
  • ✓ Works with Microsoft Copilot AND ChatGPT
  • ✓ Prompts for complex, multi-stakeholder presentations
  • ✓ Instant download — use in your next presentation

Get the Executive Prompt Pack → £19.99

Designed for executives preparing high-stakes presentations

Copilot Prompts for Board Updates and Governance Briefings

Board update presentations have a specific information architecture that differs from internal management reporting. Non-executive directors do not want operational detail — they want to understand material developments, the decisions those developments require or imply, and the risk landscape. The prompt that generates a useful board update slides must encode all three.

An effective Copilot prompt for a board update includes: the type of update (strategy, performance, compliance, risk), the material development you are presenting, the decision or note you are asking the board to take, and the board’s composition in terms of background and typical focus areas. For a quarterly performance update, that might look like: “Draft a board update slide covering Q1 financial performance. The board has three non-executive directors with finance backgrounds. Lead with a single performance headline, follow with three supporting metrics, note one material variance with management’s assessment, and close with the forward-looking indicator for Q2.”

The specificity of that prompt is what makes it work. Copilot is not being asked to describe Q1 performance — it is being asked to structure it in the way a board-facing document should be structured. The output will require editing and the addition of actual data, but the architecture will be right. That is what scenario-specific prompting achieves: a structurally sound first draft that you populate and refine rather than rebuild from scratch.

For governance briefings — audit committee presentations, risk committee updates, remuneration committee papers — the prompt architecture shifts again. These presentations are read before the meeting as much as presented during it. The prompt needs to specify document-style formatting, a clear finding-and-response structure for each agenda item, and supporting appendix material that pre-empts technical questions without cluttering the main body.

Copilot Prompts for Budget Proposals and Financial Cases

Budget proposal presentations carry a specific conversational burden: you are asking for resources from people who are simultaneously trying to reduce costs or protect existing allocations. The prompt that generates a useful budget proposal must encode the tension and address it structurally, not ignore it.

The most effective Copilot prompts for budget proposals specify three things that generic prompts omit. First, the decision context: who holds the budget authority, what their current position is likely to be, and what information they will need to move from sceptical to supportive. Second, the investment logic: not just the cost but the return on doing this and the cost of not doing it. Third, the risk framing: what the committee is most likely to push back on, and how to address those objections in the deck rather than waiting to handle them in Q&A.

A prompt for an infrastructure budget proposal might specify: “Create a five-slide investment case for a £2M IT infrastructure upgrade. The audience is the CFO and two non-executive directors. Structure: (1) decision summary — what we are asking for and why now, (2) the cost of delay — operational impact of the current system over 18 months, (3) investment breakdown with first-year and ongoing costs, (4) risk table covering the top three objections with specific mitigations, (5) next steps with approval path and implementation start date.” That prompt will produce a slide set that is closer to what a CFO needs to say yes than anything a generic prompt generates.

The financial language within the output also matters. A well-constructed prompt will specify whether the audience uses NPV, payback period, or annualised cost comparison as their preferred evaluation framework — because Copilot will use whatever framing you specify, and the right framing for your committee is part of the persuasion architecture.

For the structural side of building decision-ready slides, the executive presentation outline framework covers how to sequence context, recommendation, evidence, and risk — the same logic that makes AI-generated budget proposal slides work when the prompt is built correctly.

Copilot Prompts for Decision Recommendations and Project Pitches

Decision recommendation presentations — where you are asking a senior stakeholder or committee to choose between options, approve a course of action, or commit resources — have the highest structural requirements of any executive presentation type. They are also the presentation type where generic Copilot prompts fall shortest, because they require the AI to encode a persuasion logic that generic prompts do not specify.

An effective prompt for a decision recommendation builds in the recommendation-first structure that senior decision-makers expect. It specifies that the ask comes before the evidence, not after — a structural choice that runs counter to the instinctive impulse to build the case before making it. It also builds in a clear options frame: even when you are recommending one course of action, a decision deck that presents the alternatives and explains why the recommended option is superior is more credible than one that presents a single path without context.

Project pitch prompts for new initiatives have a different emphasis. Here, the audience is often evaluating both the proposal and the presenter’s credibility to execute it. An effective pitch prompt should specify an implementation section that demonstrates operational thinking — not just “here is the plan” but “here is the first ninety days, here are the milestones, and here is how we will know it is working.” This is the section that separates presentations that secure approval from those that receive an encouraging “we’ll come back to you on this.”

For multi-stakeholder presentations — where different people in the room have different priorities and the presenter needs to address all of them without losing the thread — the prompt architecture becomes more sophisticated still. The prompt needs to specify the different audience segments, their specific interests, and the slides or sections that speak to each, while maintaining a coherent overall narrative. This is where having a library of scenario-specific prompts becomes most valuable: you select and combine the right building blocks rather than constructing the prompt logic from scratch each time.

The framework for structuring presentations to hostile audiences is directly relevant here — when your decision recommendation faces expected resistance, the prompt needs to encode a pre-emption structure, not just a persuasion structure.

If you are working on building the broader narrative architecture for your presentation before generating slides, the Executive Prompt Pack includes prompts specifically for narrative and structure generation — not just individual slide creation — which makes the overall deck architecture more coherent before you move into PowerPoint.

How to Use Copilot Prompts Effectively in Practice

Scenario-specific prompts work best when used in sequence rather than as single commands. Most executive presentations are built in layers: the narrative architecture first, then the individual slide structures, then the language refinement for specific audiences. Each stage benefits from a different prompt type.

In practice, this means using a structure prompt to generate the deck architecture (slide count, sequence, purpose of each slide), then using individual slide prompts to generate content for the most structurally critical slides — the recommendation slide, the risk table, the decision summary — and then using refinement prompts to adjust register, condense over-written sections, and sharpen the language for the specific committee or individual who will read it.

The refinement stage is where most executives using generic prompts stop making progress. They have a reasonable first draft but it reads like AI output: comprehensive but undifferentiated, covering the topic but not making the case. Refinement prompts that specify the audience’s likely objections, their preferred information density, and the register of the organisation’s decision-making culture transform adequate AI output into a presentation that sounds like it was written by someone who understands the room.

Microsoft Copilot within PowerPoint has an additional layer of utility: it can refine individual slides in the context of the full deck, adjusting language for consistency and suggesting visual layout changes. Using it at this stage — after the architecture and core content are established by ChatGPT or Copilot in a chat interface — produces better results than trying to generate the full deck from PowerPoint’s Copilot panel from a standing start.

The tools that support effective virtual executive presentations work alongside well-constructed slides — once you have the content architecture right through prompt-driven drafting, the delivery environment matters too, particularly for remote or hybrid board presentations.

71 Prompts for Executive Presentation Scenarios

The Executive Prompt Pack includes prompts for board updates, budget proposals, project pitches, decision recommendations, and multi-stakeholder presentations — designed for Microsoft Copilot and ChatGPT. £19.99, instant download.

Get the Pack Now → £19.99

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best Copilot prompts for PowerPoint executive presentations?

The most effective Copilot prompts for executive presentations are scenario-specific — built for board updates, budget proposals, project pitches, and decision recommendations. Generic prompts like “create a presentation about X” produce generic outputs. Effective prompts specify the decision-maker audience, the ask, the structure (context, recommendation, evidence, risk, next steps), and the slide type. Prompts designed for these specific scenarios generate content that matches how senior decision-makers read and process information.

How do I use Microsoft Copilot for executive presentations?

Use Copilot most effectively by treating it as a structured drafting partner, not a one-command tool. Give it the decision context (what you are asking for and who is in the room), the structure you want (recommendation-first, evidence by slide, risk acknowledgement), and any constraints (slide count, tone, terminology). The more specific the prompt, the more usable the output. Then use Copilot’s refinement prompts to adjust register, condense evidence sections, or strengthen the recommendation slide.

Can I use the same Copilot prompts for board presentations and internal business case presentations?

Different presentation types need different prompts because the audience’s role, decision-making context, and information needs differ. A board presentation needs governance language, a clear recommendation, and compressed evidence. An internal business case needs stakeholder context, financial modelling language, and implementation detail. Using the same generic prompt for both produces slides that fit neither. Scenario-specific prompts — built for each presentation type — generate more usable first drafts.

Do these Copilot prompts work with ChatGPT as well as Microsoft Copilot?

Yes. Well-structured executive presentation prompts work across both Microsoft Copilot and ChatGPT. The Executive Prompt Pack (71 prompts) is designed to work with either tool — the prompts are built around clear instruction structures that any capable AI model can action. Some presenters use ChatGPT for the initial draft and Copilot in PowerPoint for refining individual slides; the prompts work at both stages.

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About the author

Mary Beth Hazeldine, Owner & Managing Director, Winning Presentations. With 25 years of corporate banking experience at JPMorgan Chase, PwC, Royal Bank of Scotland, and Commerzbank, and 16 years training executives across financial services, healthcare, technology, and government, she advises leaders on structuring high-stakes presentations for senior decision-makers.

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.

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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.