Tag: leadership

26 Mar 2026
Executive standing at a podium in a corporate meeting room preparing to deliver a difficult announcement to staff

How to Announce Redundancies With Executive Credibility

When you announce redundancies poorly, trust collapses. Employees hear dismissal instead of strategy. Remaining staff question their own security. Within hours, your credibility has eroded across the entire organisation. The difference between a managed redundancy announcement and a crisis lies in one thing: structure. This article walks you through the slide framework, language choices, and executive positioning that transforms a difficult conversation into a demonstration of leadership integrity.

You’re handling the hardest conversation your organisation will have.

Without a clear framework, redundancy announcements backfire. The Executive Slide System gives you the architecture, language patterns, and credibility cues that demonstrate leadership under pressure.

Get the Framework → £39

A Real Scenario

Margaux leads a financial services team of 18 people. Three months ago, her organisation decided to consolidate two teams due to market conditions. She has two hours to announce the redundancy programme to her department. Her hand shakes as she opens the presentation editor. Without a clear structure, she’s terrified she’ll create panic or appear defensive. She knows that how she frames this—the words she uses, the evidence she presents, the dignity she conveys—will determine whether her team remains functional or fractures. She needs a framework that demonstrates leadership, not just delivery of bad news.

The Three-Part Structure That Maintains Credibility

A redundancy announcement breaks into three distinct parts, and each serves a different purpose. If you skip or collapse any of them, credibility suffers. The first part is context—not excuses, but the business reality that forced this decision. The second is the actual redundancy information: who, when, and support available. The third is organisational clarity: how the remaining structure works and what comes next.

Most executives compress these into one blur. Employees can’t hear the support offer because they’re still processing the shock of redundancy. Remaining staff can’t think about restructuring because they’re anxious about their own jobs. By separating these three movements, you give your audience time to absorb each layer.

Redundancy Announcement roadmap infographic showing four milestones on a winding path: Acknowledge, Explain Why, Detail Support, and Next Steps — each with concise guidance for structuring the announcement

The Executive Slide System for £39

This is exactly what you get:

  • Pre-built slides for difficult conversations (redundancy, restructuring, crisis)
  • AI prompts to draft your specific language and messaging
  • Executive frameworks for maintaining credibility under pressure
  • Delivery checklists and tone guidance
  • Customisable slide templates for your organisation’s data

Used by thousands of executives. 24 years corporate banking experience embedded in every slide.

Get the Executive Slide System → £39

Setting Context Without Fear

The first slide must answer: Why are we here? Not in a defensive way—that reads as justification and triggers defensiveness. Instead, present the business reality with clarity and confidence. Market shift, strategic consolidation, efficiency requirement. Name it directly.

This is where many executives falter. They soften the language: “We’re exploring some structural changes” or “We’re looking at ways to streamline.” Soft language creates anxiety because employees hear euphemism, which they interpret as weakness or deception. Instead, use direct language: “The market environment has shifted, requiring us to restructure our team capacity.”

The context slide should show evidence—market data, financial position, strategic necessity—that demonstrates this decision wasn’t arbitrary. This isn’t about overjustifying; it’s about showing that leadership has done its homework. When employees see evidence, they understand the decision wasn’t personal or reactive. That distinction matters enormously for credibility. For more on how trust forms during restructuring, see our article on restructuring presentations that rebuild team trust.

Language That Demonstrates Respect

This is the section that defines how people remember this conversation. The language you choose here either demonstrates respect or appears callous. Small word choices matter enormously.

Never use: “Unfortunately”, “Regrettably” (these signal pity, not respect), “Let go” (too informal for the gravity), “Transition” (vague), “Affected staff” (dehumanising). Instead use: “Colleagues who are redundant”, “Support package”, “Outplacement services”, “Career transition services”.

When you name people, use full language: “Jane and Marcus in the client services team are redundant as of [date].” Not “Jane and Marcus’s roles are redundant.” This subtle shift—making it about the person’s transition, not just eliminating the role—preserves dignity. The redundancy is a business reality; the individual deserves respect throughout the process.

Support information must be crystal clear. Don’t bury severance details. Present them as a numbered list: notice period, financial package, benefits continuation timeline, outplacement support, reference provision. When people hear the exact details, anxiety drops because there’s clarity instead of ambiguity. You might also review how town hall presentations rebuild trust after layoffs.

Which language choice demonstrates credibility in a redundancy announcement? The Executive Slide System includes word-by-word language patterns that show respect without appearing weak, direct without appearing harsh.

Clear Next Steps and Organisational Clarity

After the redundancy information, remaining staff need to understand what the organisation looks like now. This is where many executives hesitate because the full restructure might not be finalised. But leaving this vague is worse than sharing partial information.

Provide what you know: the new team structure, reporting lines, any immediate role changes. Then be explicit about what’s still being determined and when staff will hear more. “We’re currently finalising the new team structure for the London office. All staff will receive their updated role descriptions by [date].” This creates expectation and prevents rumour-filling.

The final slide must answer: What does success look like, and what’s my role in it? This gives the audience something forward-looking to hold onto. It moves the conversation from loss to clarity about the future state. This is the foundation for maintaining morale and productivity during restructuring.

Crisis Communications Require Structure

When you’re announcing something difficult, the framework is what keeps credibility intact. Redundancy announcements, restructuring communications, even client escalations follow the same principle: clarity, respect, evidence. The system works because it’s built on how senior leadership actually thinks.

Delivering With Authority, Not Defensiveness

The delivery matters as much as the content. Most executives make one critical error: they apologise for the announcement rather than owning it. “I’m really sorry we’re in this position” reads as weakness. “This decision reflects our responsibility to the organisation and its future” reads as leadership.

Your tone should be: steady, matter-of-fact, respectful. This isn’t enthusiasm (which would be inappropriate), but it’s not doom either. You’re speaking as someone who has thought through this decision carefully and is implementing it responsibly.

Pause after delivering key information. Let it land. Don’t fill silence with nervous talking. A three-second pause after you’ve named the redundancies gives people a moment to absorb. Then move to the next point. This rhythm—information, pause, next point—demonstrates control and confidence.

Redundancy Language contrast panels infographic comparing corporate speak (rightsizing, HR will be in touch, we appreciate your understanding) against direct and honest alternatives (naming the number, specific packages, open questions)

Is This Right For You?

Use this framework if you’re:

  • Announcing redundancies to your department or division
  • Leading a restructuring conversation with multiple teams
  • Communicating organisational change to staff or stakeholders
  • Concerned about maintaining credibility during difficult business decisions
  • Wanting to protect team morale whilst delivering tough news

If you’re in HR preparing guidance or comms preparing enterprise-wide messaging, you’ll need additional elements. But if you’re the leader delivering this to your team, this framework is built for exactly your situation.

Lifetime Access to the System

You get slide templates for redundancy announcements, restructuring communications, crisis briefings, and all difficult conversations. Plus AI prompts to customise everything to your organisation’s context. This is the difference between sounding like you’re reading from a template and owning the conversation.

  • Crisis communication frameworks
  • Delivery checklists and tone guidance

Get the Executive Slide System → £39

The Follow-Up Conversation

The group announcement is the foundation, but the work happens after. Redundant colleagues need individual conversations with HR and their manager about their specific package, timeline, and next steps. Remaining staff need clarity about their new roles and how the change affects them.

Many organisations handle this well immediately after the group announcement, then lose momentum. By week two, nobody knows who’s handling what, and credibility begins to erode again. Maintain a communication schedule: day one is the announcement, day two staff get individual letters, day three is one-to-ones, week two is the restructure detail.

This consistency of communication — proving that leadership is managing the change thoughtfully — is what rebuilds trust. It shows that the announcement wasn’t a shock tactic but the beginning of a managed process.

The Executive Slide System includes follow-up communication frameworks alongside the announcement slides — because the presentation is only the first conversation in a series that defines your leadership credibility.

Lead the Hardest Conversation With Confidence

Redundancy announcements define leadership reputations. The difference between a conversation that destroys trust and one that preserves it comes down to structure, language, and delivery. Pre-built frameworks remove the guesswork so you can focus on your people.

  • ✓ Slide templates for crisis and restructuring announcements
  • ✓ AI prompt cards to adapt messaging to your organisation’s context
  • ✓ Framework guides for difficult leadership conversations
  • ✓ Follow-up communication structure for the weeks after announcement

Get the Executive Slide System → £39

Built from real restructuring conversations across financial services and corporate leadership

Frequently Asked Questions

What if staff ask questions I can’t answer during the announcement?

Write down the question and commit to an answer timeline: “That’s a good question. I don’t have that detail today, but I’ll get back to you by Friday.” This is far better than guessing or deflecting. It shows respect for the question and demonstrates you’re managing the process responsibly. Then actually provide the answer on schedule.

How long should the announcement presentation be?

Twenty to thirty minutes for the presentation itself, then allow thirty to forty-five minutes for questions. The presentation should be under ten slides. Longer presentations lose focus and make it seem like you’re overexplaining, which undermines confidence. Say what needs to be said, then open the conversation.

Should I announce redundancies in person or all-hands meeting?

In person, delivered by the leader who has authority over that decision. All-hands meetings work for organizational context, but redundancy information must come from the leader with accountability. This demonstrates respect and ownership. If you’re in a multi-location organisation, deliver the same message in person at each location on the same day, then provide follow-up calls for remote teams.

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Prefer a printed framework? The Executive Presentation Checklist breaks down crisis communication step-by-step. Free download.

For more on difficult conversations that matter to credibility, read our article on how to present compliance changes to regulatory boards.

Your Next Step

You’ve now got the structure. The slides, language patterns, and delivery framework live in the Executive Slide System. Get access today and customise the redundancy announcement for your organisation.

Get the Executive Slide System → £39

About the Author

Mary Beth Hazeldine, Owner & Managing Director of Winning Presentations. 24 years corporate banking experience at JPMorgan Chase, PwC, RBS, and Commerzbank. Has guided thousands of executives through redundancy announcements, restructuring communications, and crisis briefings—building the frameworks that turn difficult conversations into demonstrations of leadership credibility.

27 Dec 2025
Presentation skills for promotion - what actually gets you ahead in corporate environments

Presentation Skills for Promotion: What Actually Gets You Ahead

What I learned from watching 24 years of promotions (and non-promotions) in corporate banking

Presentation skills for promotion matter more than most professionals realize. I’ve sat in hundreds of promotion discussions. Not as the candidate — as the observer. First as a junior banker watching who got tapped for senior roles, then as a trainer noticing which clients advanced and which plateaued.

The link between presentation skills and promotion became undeniable. The conversation is never “Who has the best technical skills?” It’s “Who can we put in front of the board? Who will represent us well?”

Those questions all have the same answer: the person with presentation skills that drive promotion.

Why Presentation Skills for Promotion Matter So Much

This isn’t about corporate politics or style over substance. It’s about what leadership roles actually require.

The higher you go, the less you do the work yourself. Your job shifts from execution to influence — getting others to act on your recommendations. That requires communication skills that most technical training never develops.

When a senior leader evaluates you for promotion, they’re running a mental simulation: “Can I picture this person presenting to the executive committee? Will they hold their own when challenged? Can they explain complex issues simply?”

Your spreadsheet skills don’t answer those questions. Your presentation skills do — and that’s why presentation skills drive promotion decisions.

Related: Professional Presentation Skills: What Sets Top Performers Apart

The 3 Presentation Skills for Promotion That Matter Most

Not all presentation skills matter equally for advancement. These three consistently separate people who get promoted from people who don’t:

1. Leading With Conviction

Promoted professionals don’t just present information — they take positions. They tell the room what they think in the first 60 seconds, then defend it.

This signals ownership. It shows you’ve processed the information and formed a judgment. Executives don’t promote people who wait for others to interpret their data.

The difference:

  • Analyst: “Here’s the data. What do you think we should do?”
  • Leader: “I’m recommending Option B. Here’s why.”

2. Composure Under Challenge

Every promotion decision includes an unspoken evaluation: “How will this person handle pressure from the board? From difficult clients? From hostile stakeholders?”

The answer shows up in how you respond when challenged. If you get defensive, justify immediately, or repeat yourself more forcefully — that’s noticed. If you acknowledge the concern, stay calm, and respond substantively — that’s noticed too.

One graceful response under fire is worth ten smooth presentations. It’s the moment senior leaders remember when your name comes up for promotion.

3. Strategic Brevity

The ability to explain complex issues simply is rare — and highly valued. When you can communicate in 10 minutes what others take 40 minutes to say, you demonstrate two things executives prize: deep understanding and respect for their time.

Brevity isn’t about dumbing down. It’s about ruthless prioritisation — knowing what must be said versus what could be said. That judgment is a leadership skill in itself.

Related: How to Create Executive Presentations That Get Results

Quick Reference for Promotion-Ready Presentations

The Public Speaking Cheat Sheets (£14.99) give you pocket-sized reminders for all three skills — plus frameworks for openings, closings, and handling tough questions.

Get the Cheat Sheets →

Why Most Professionals Never Develop Presentation Skills for Promotion

If these presentation skills drive promotion so reliably, why don’t more people develop them?

No one teaches them explicitly. Business schools teach analysis, not communication. Corporate training focuses on slide design, not strategic presence. Most professionals are left to figure it out through trial and error — in high-stakes situations where errors are costly.

Practice happens under pressure. You don’t get 20 rehearsals before a board presentation. You get one shot, with your reputation on the line. That’s a terrible environment for skill development.

Feedback is vague or absent. “Good presentation” tells you nothing. “You got defensive when the CFO pushed back and it created doubt about your recommendation” — that’s actionable. But most professionals never receive feedback that specific.

This is why deliberate training matters. You need to develop these skills in low-stakes environments with specific feedback before deploying them when it counts.

Related: Business Presentation Skills: What Actually Matters in Corporate Environments

Develop Presentation Skills for Promotion Systematically

AI-Enhanced Presentation Mastery is designed specifically to build the presentation skills that drive promotion — with frameworks, practice, and personalised feedback.

8 self-paced modules (January–April 2026):

  • The AVP Framework: Action-Value-Proof structure that forces conviction upfront
  • The 132 Rule: How to cut ruthlessly without losing impact
  • Q&A Handling: Frameworks for staying composed under hostile questioning
  • The S.E.E. Formula: Story-Evidence-Emotion for persuasive messaging
  • NLP Delivery Techniques: Composure and presence under pressure
  • AI-Powered Preparation: Build presentations faster so you can rehearse more

Plus: 2 live coaching sessions (April 2026) with personalised feedback on your real presentations. This is where the skill becomes permanent — practicing under observation with specific, actionable feedback.

Presale price: £249 (increases to £299 early bird, then £499 full price)

60 seats total. Lifetime access to all materials.

See the full curriculum and reserve your seat →

The Career ROI of Presentation Skills for Promotion

Let’s be direct about what’s at stake.

A promotion typically comes with a 15-25% salary increase. For a professional earning £80,000, that’s £12,000-£20,000 annually. Over a career, the compound effect of earlier promotions is measured in hundreds of thousands of pounds.

The professionals who develop these presentation skills don’t just get promoted once. They get promoted repeatedly — because the same skills that got them the first advancement continue working at each level.

The investment in developing presentation skills for promotion isn’t an expense. It’s a multiplier on your entire career trajectory.


Your Next Step: Build Presentation Skills for Promotion

You can continue developing presentation skills through trial and error in high-stakes situations. Most people do.

Or you can build them systematically — with frameworks, practice, and feedback — so they’re ready when the moment matters.

📖 Read the complete guide: Professional Presentation Skills: What Sets Top Performers Apart — all 7 skills that distinguish those who advance.

📋 Get the quick reference (£14.99): Public Speaking Cheat Sheets — pocket-sized reminders for high-stakes moments.

🎓 Build the skills systematically (£249): AI-Enhanced Presentation Mastery — 8 modules + 2 live coaching sessions. January–April 2026, 60 seats.


Mary Beth Hazeldine spent 24 years in corporate banking at JPMorgan, PwC, Royal Bank of Scotland, and Commerzbank — watching which professionals advanced and which plateaued. She now trains executives in the presentation skills that drive promotion and career growth.

05 Dec 2025
Executive summary slide template - one-page overview structure for leadership presentations

The 3-Slide Framework That Gets Executive Decisions Fast

Executive decisions happen fast when you structure your presentation right — and get deferred indefinitely when you don’t.

That 30-slide deck you spent a week building? It’s killing your chances of getting executive decisions. Executives don’t have time for 30 slides. They don’t want to “walk through” your analysis. They want to know what you’re recommending, why they should approve it, and what happens if they don’t.

After 25 years in corporate banking and 16 years training executives on presentations, I’ve developed a 3-slide framework that gets executive decisions in 15 minutes or less. It works because it respects how executives actually process information and make decisions.

Here’s the framework that turns endless deferrals into fast executive decisions.

Executive summary slide template - one-page overview structure for leadership presentations

The executive summary structure — designed for fast executive decisions

Need a decision from leadership in the next 2 weeks?

The Executive Slide System includes slide templates built for this exact framework — decision-first layouts for budget requests, project approvals, and strategic recommendations.

Need a Faster Way to Build Executive Slides?

Most executives spend hours on slides that still miss the mark. The Executive Slide System gives you a structured framework for building slides that land with senior audiences — without starting from scratch every time.

Explore the System →

Why Long Presentations Kill Executive Decisions

Long presentations don’t fail because executives are impatient. They fail because they bury the decision in noise.

When you present 30 slides, you’re asking executives to hold everything in working memory while waiting for your point. By slide 15, they’ve forgotten slide 3. By slide 25, they’re thinking about their next meeting. When you finally ask for a decision, they defer — not because they disagree, but because they’ve lost the thread.

The 3-slide framework works because it puts executive decisions first. Everything the executive needs to decide is visible immediately. Questions and discussion focus on the decision, not on understanding your presentation.

This is how you get executive decisions fast.

The 3-Slide Framework for Executive Decisions

Every request that needs executive decisions can be reduced to three slides. Not three slides of summary with 27 slides of backup — three slides total, with supporting detail available if requested.

Slide 1: The Executive Decision Required

Your first slide answers one question: what executive decision do you need?

This slide should include:

  • The recommendation: What you’re proposing (specific and concrete)
  • The investment: What it costs (money, time, resources)
  • The return: What the organisation gains
  • The timeline: When this needs to happen

Example Slide 1 — Executive Decision Required:

Recommendation: Approve £200K for customer platform upgrade

Investment: £200K over 6 months

Return: £450K annual savings (18-month payback)

Timeline: Decision needed by December 15 for Q1 implementation

An executive can read this slide in 10 seconds and understand exactly what executive decision you need. That’s the foundation for fast executive decisions.

Slide 2: The Evidence That Supports the Executive Decision

Your second slide answers: why should the executive approve this?

This slide should include:

  • Key data points: The 3-4 most compelling facts supporting your recommendation
  • Risk mitigation: How you’ve addressed the obvious concerns
  • Alternatives considered: Why this option is best

Example Slide 2 — Evidence for Executive Decision:

Why now: Current platform failures cost £150K/quarter; compliance deadline in Q2

Confidence: 3 similar implementations delivered on time/budget in past 18 months

Risk mitigation: Phased rollout; 15% contingency included; fixed-price vendor contract

Alternatives: Evaluated patch approach (higher long-term cost) and rebuild (2x investment, 3x timeline)

This slide provides the evidence without overwhelming. An executive can evaluate the strength of your case in 30 seconds — enough to move toward an executive decision.

Want templates built for fast executive decisions?

Every template in The Executive Slide System follows decision-first structure. Designed for executives who need approval fast. For a complementary approach, see our guide to executive presentation templates.

Slide 3: The Cost of No Executive Decision

Your third slide answers: what happens if the executive doesn’t decide or decides no? For a complementary approach, see our guide to how to open a presentation.

This slide is the most underutilised lever for executive decisions. Most presenters skip it, leaving executives to assume that “no” or “defer” has no consequences. When you make the cost of inaction explicit, you create urgency for an executive decision.

Example Slide 3 — Cost of No Executive Decision:

For executives wanting a complete slide structure for recommendation presentations, the Executive Slide System includes the complete 3-slide framework with templates and AI prompts.

If we delay past Q1:

  • Compliance remediation cost increases 3x (reactive vs. proactive)
  • £150K/quarter in ongoing platform failure costs continues
  • Two key engineers have cited system frustration — retention risk
  • Competitor launches similar capability in Q2 (market positioning impact)

Now the executive decision isn’t just “should we do this?” It’s “can we afford not to?” That reframe accelerates executive decisions dramatically.

10 executive presentation templates - QBR, budget request, board meeting, investor pitch, strategic recommendation slides
Every executive presentation type can be reduced to the 3-slide framework for faster executive decisions

Get the 3-Slide Framework as Ready-Made Templates

The Executive Slide System includes slide templates built around the structure above — decision-first layouts for every scenario where executives need to approve, decline, or redirect.

Executive Slide System — £39, instant access.

  • Decision-first templates for budget requests, project approvals, and strategy
  • 30 AI prompt cards to populate each slide in minutes
  • 10 template types covering the most common executive presentation scenarios

Designed for directors and senior managers who need executive decisions fast.

How the 3-Slide Framework Gets Executive Decisions in 15 Minutes

Here’s what happens when you use this framework for executive decisions:

Minutes 1-3: You present the three slides. The executive now understands what you’re asking, why you’re asking, and what happens if they say no.

Minutes 3-12: Questions and discussion. But unlike a 30-slide presentation, questions focus on the executive decision, not on understanding your content. The executive already understands — now they’re evaluating.

Minutes 12-15: Executive decision. You’ve given them everything they need. They can say yes, no, or ask for specific additional information. No more “let me think about it” deferrals.

This framework gets executive decisions fast because it eliminates the processing time that kills momentum. The executive isn’t trying to understand your presentation while simultaneously evaluating your request. They understand immediately, so all mental energy goes to the executive decision itself.

When to Use the 3-Slide Framework for Executive Decisions

This framework works for any request that needs executive decisions:

  • Budget requests: What you need, why, what happens without it → executive decision
  • Project approvals: What you’re proposing, evidence it will work, cost of delay → executive decision
  • Headcount requests: Who you need, business impact, consequence of understaffing → executive decision
  • Strategic initiatives: What you recommend, why it’s the best option, risk of inaction → executive decision
  • Vendor selections: Your recommendation, comparison data, urgency factors → executive decision

If you need executive decisions, you can use this framework.

Executive Slide System

Structure Executive Decisions So They Get Approved Fast

The Executive Slide System — £39, instant access — includes slide templates for executive decision presentations, AI prompt cards for structuring your recommendation, and scenario playbooks for meetings where the decision itself is the agenda. Designed for presentations where clarity and precision determine the outcome.

  • Slide templates for executive decision and recommendation scenarios
  • AI prompt cards to structure your 3-slide framework
  • Framework guides for presenting options with clear decision logic
  • Scenario playbooks for approval meetings with senior executives
Get the Executive Slide System →

Designed for senior executives presenting decisions that need fast approval.

Need an executive decision this week?

The Executive Slide System includes 10 templates built for fast executive decisions, plus 30 AI prompts to draft your content in minutes. Designed for executives presenting where decisions need to happen fast.

The 3-Slide Framework vs. the Appendix for Executive Decisions

“But what about all my analysis? My stakeholder input? My detailed projections?”

Put it in the appendix. The appendix exists for executive decisions that need deeper discussion. But the decision conversation should happen on your three slides — the appendix supports if questions arise.

Structure your appendix by anticipated question:

  • “How did you calculate ROI?” → Detailed financial model
  • “What’s the implementation plan?” → Project timeline and milestones
  • “Who else supports this?” → Stakeholder alignment summary
  • “What are the detailed risks?” → Full risk register

If the executive asks a question during your presentation, you can flip to the relevant appendix slide. But don’t present the appendix — let the three-slide framework drive the executive decision, with appendix as backup.

Common Mistakes That Slow Executive Decisions

Mistake 1: Building up to the ask.

Don’t save your recommendation for the end. Executives want to know what you’re asking from the first slide. Building suspense delays executive decisions.

Mistake 2: Including “nice to know” information.

If it doesn’t directly support the executive decision, cut it. Background context, stakeholder quotes, historical analysis — unless directly relevant to the decision, it slows everything down.

Mistake 3: Multiple asks in one presentation.

One presentation, one executive decision. If you need approval on budget AND headcount AND timeline, pick the most important. Get that executive decision, then address the others in follow-up.

Mistake 4: Vague recommendations.

“We should consider expanding our platform capabilities” is not a decision. “Approve £200K for platform upgrade” is a decision. Make your ask specific enough that the executive can say yes or no to enable fast executive decisions.

FAQs About Getting Fast Executive Decisions

What if the executive wants more detail before making an executive decision?

That’s what the appendix is for. Ask “What specific information would help you decide?” Address that specific question from your appendix, then return to the executive decision.

What if the executive decision is genuinely complex?

Break it into smaller executive decisions. A £10M multi-year program might need separate decisions for Phase 1 funding, vendor selection, and team structure. Get the first executive decision, build momentum, then address the next.

What if I’m not senior enough to present directly to executives?

The framework still works for executive decisions at any level. Build the three slides for your manager. They can use the same structure when they present upward. Decision-first structure works at every level.

How do I handle executives who love detail before making executive decisions?

Executive Slide System

The Decision-Ready Slide Structure

The Executive Slide System — £39, instant access — gives you slide templates, AI prompt cards, and framework guides for executive presentations where decision quality and speed of approval are both at stake. Structure your recommendation so executives can say yes on the day.

Get the Executive Slide System →

Designed for senior executives presenting recommendations and approvals.

Have comprehensive appendix slides ready. Some executives will want to dig in before making a decision. The three-slide framework doesn’t prevent detail — it structures the conversation so detail serves the executive decision rather than delaying it.

Your Next Executive Decision

You probably have an executive decision you need. Budget approval, project green light, headcount request, strategic direction.

Before building another 30-slide deck, try this:

  1. Write one sentence: what executive decision do you need?
  2. List 3-4 facts that most strongly support that executive decision
  3. Describe what happens if the executive says no or delays the executive decision

That’s your three-slide framework. Build those three slides. Put everything else in the appendix. Present in 15 minutes.

The executive who’s been deferring your requests isn’t doing so because they disagree. They’re deferring because your presentations make executive decisions hard. Make it easy, and executive decisions happen fast.

The Executive Slide System complete package - 10 PowerPoint templates, 30 AI prompts, and quick start guide for executive presentations

Get Templates Built for Executive Decisions

The Executive Slide System includes 10 templates with decision-first structure built in — designed to get executive decisions fast. Plus 30 AI prompts to draft your content in minutes.

Clients have used these frameworks to secure over £250 million in approved funding — many executive decisions made in single meetings.

GET INSTANT ACCESS →

10 templates • 30 AI prompts • Instant download • 30-day guarantee


Related: How to Create Executive Presentations That Get Approved — the complete guide covering all 10 executive presentation types with frameworks for fast executive decisions.

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