Tag: promotion presentation

29 May 2026
Promotion Business Case Presentation: The 5-Slide Structure That Wins

Promotion Business Case Presentation: The 5-Slide Structure That Wins

Quick answer: A promotion business case presentation that wins committee approval uses five slides, in this order: (1) the role and the gap it fills, (2) the specific scope you have already been carrying, (3) the business outcomes attributable to your work, (4) the operating model after promotion (what changes for the team and the work), and (5) a clean ask with a defined start date. The slides committees reject are the ones that argue for the person rather than the role. The slides committees approve describe a structural decision that happens to involve you.

Aigerim, a senior marketing manager at a regional bank in Almaty, walked into her promotion committee meeting with twenty-two slides. She had spent two weekends building it. The deck opened with a personal narrative — how she had grown into the role, what she had learned, the moments she was proud of. Slide 8 was an organisation chart with her current reports highlighted. Slide 14 listed every campaign she had run in the previous eighteen months. The committee scrolled politely through the first six slides, asked one question at slide 11, and broke for coffee at slide 14. The decision the next week was deferred. Six weeks later, the role was opened to external candidates.

The deck did not lose Aigerim the promotion. The framing did. Twenty-two slides argued, implicitly, that the committee should be persuaded that she deserved it. Five slides — the right five — would have framed the same decision differently: as a structural question the committee needed to answer for the business, where the obvious answer happened to be her. That distinction is the difference between a deferred decision and an approved one.

This article walks through the five slides. Each slide has a job. Each slide has things that must be on it and things that must be off. The structure is deliberately constrained — committees approving senior promotions cannot give a long deck the attention it asks for. Five slides forces the discipline that wins.

If you want the slide structure for the case, not just the framework:

The Executive Slide System gives you 26 templates and 93 AI prompts designed for senior decision presentations — including the structural patterns that work for promotion committees, board approvals, and executive sponsors.

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Why five slides, not fifteen

Promotion committees are usually small — three to seven senior people, often from outside your direct reporting line. They sit through several promotion cases in a single session. By the third case of the morning, attention is fraying. Decks that ran past ten slides on case one are skimmed; decks that run past ten slides on case three are barely read.

This is structural, not personal. The committee is not less interested in your case than in the first one — they are just operating under cognitive load that compounds across the morning. A long deck punishes them for taking your case last on the agenda. A five-slide deck reads the same in slot one or slot four.

Five slides also forces a different kind of writing. You cannot pad. You cannot list every project. You cannot include the organisation chart, the personal journey, the testimonials, the culture-fit narrative. You have to compress the case to its load-bearing claims and let the slides carry only those. That compression is what makes the case land.

Slide 1: The role and the gap

Slide 1 does not introduce you. It introduces the role you are asking the committee to approve. Title at the top: the role title. Two lines underneath: what the role is responsible for in the business and why the business needs it filled now.

The structural insight here is critical. Most promotion decks open with the candidate’s narrative — “I joined the company in 2019 and have grown through three roles…” This framing makes the committee evaluate you as a person. The role-first framing makes them evaluate a structural decision. Those are different conversations. The structural one is much easier to approve.

Underneath the role definition, name the gap. What is currently happening in the business that this role would solve, that is not happening today? Is it scope a current senior leader is overloaded with? A function that does not currently have an owner? A coordination problem between two teams that needs a single accountable person? Be specific. The gap is the business case, not your readiness.

The 5-slide promotion business case structure infographic showing each slide's job: Slide 1 the role and the gap, Slide 2 scope already carried, Slide 3 business outcomes, Slide 4 the operating model after promotion, Slide 5 the ask — with the core principle that committees approve structural decisions, not personal narratives.

Slide 2: Scope already carried

Slide 2 is the bridge between the role and you. Its job is to demonstrate that the role already exists, informally, in the work you have been doing — and that promotion is the formalisation of that scope, not its expansion.

The pattern is deliberate. Promotions that look like rewards for past work are easier to defer than promotions that look like recognition of current scope. A committee can always argue that past work is already paid for. They cannot argue, with the same ease, that scope you are visibly carrying today should remain unrecognised.

List three to five concrete examples of work you are doing that sits at the level of the proposed role. For each, name the work, the stakeholders involved, and the level of decision-making you are exercising. “Led the Q1 strategic review for the regional team” is informative. “Owned the strategic prioritisation that determined the Q1 investment allocation across three product lines, including the recommendations the regional MD took to the executive committee” is structural. The second framing makes the committee see the role you are already in.

For more on how to position scope and decision authority on a slide that holds up to senior scrutiny, see the 8-slide CFO presentation template.

Slide 3: Business outcomes

Slide 3 is the only slide in the deck that should contain numbers. It is also the slide most commonly built badly.

The mistake is to list outcomes you contributed to and let the committee work out attribution. “Revenue growth of 12% in the regional segment” sits on the slide; the committee, generous and time-pressed, mentally allocates some fraction of that to your work. This is dangerous because the fraction the committee allocates is almost always smaller than the fraction you intended to claim.

The disciplined approach is to lead with attribution, then state the outcome. “Led the pricing review that recovered £4.2m in margin across the affinity portfolio in 2025.” “Designed and delivered the customer-segmentation framework adopted by the executive team in March 2026, now in use across four product lines.” Three to four outcomes of this shape, each with attribution, scope, and a verifiable business consequence.

If you cannot write outcomes in this shape, you have a different problem than slide design. Either the work has not been visible enough at the right level, or the outcomes are softer than the case requires. That is a real-world signal, not a slide problem. Promotion business cases are won on visible outcomes attributable to the candidate. If those do not exist yet, the case is not ready.

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Slide 4: The operating model after promotion

Slide 4 answers the question committees worry about most but rarely ask out loud: what changes for the team and the work if this promotion is approved?

This is the slide that separates first-time promotion presenters from senior ones. First-timers describe what changes for them — new title, new pay band, new responsibilities. Senior presenters describe what changes for the organisation: who picks up the work they currently do, how the new accountabilities sit relative to existing ones, what the team structure looks like in three months. Committees approve the second framing because it is the framing they need to make the decision.

Three things must be on this slide: the proposed reporting line into and out of the role, the work you currently do that needs to transfer to someone else (and the rough plan for that), and the new accountabilities the role will own that are currently sitting elsewhere or going unowned. Keep it crisp. Bullet form is fine. The committee is not looking for a detailed transition plan — they are looking for evidence that you have thought through the operational change, not just the personal one.

The unspoken question this slide answers is whether you are ready to own the next role or whether the promotion is largely a recognition of past work. The first framing wins; the second framing defers.

What committees approve versus what they defer comparison: approved promotion cases lead with the role and structural gap, lead with attribution on outcomes, describe the operating model change, and end with a clean ask — deferred cases open with personal narrative, list contributions without attribution, focus on the candidate's readiness, and end with vague timing.

For senior leaders preparing the broader case for a structural change — including the kind of stakeholder buy-in that promotion committees often involve — the structural approach in the 15-minute board presentation template applies directly.

Slide 5: The ask

Slide 5 is the cleanest slide in the deck. Title: “The ask.” Three lines of body content:

  1. The role title and band you are asking to be promoted to.
  2. The proposed start date of the new role.
  3. The single open question you would like the committee to discuss in the room.

The third item is the move most candidates miss. By offering the committee a specific question to discuss — “Should the role report into the regional MD or directly into the executive committee?” — you take control of the conversation. Without it, the committee discusses you. With it, they discuss the question you have framed. The decision they reach on your question is also, structurally, the decision they reach on the promotion.

The ask slide should not include “and here is why I am ready” or any kind of closing personal statement. The case has been made on slides 1–4. Slide 5 closes the loop and hands the room back to the committee for a focused discussion. A clean close, with one specific question, is what disciplined senior decisions look like.

For the structural psychology behind the ask:

When the audience is being asked to approve a senior decision (promotion, budget, board approval), the framework that earns serious approval is the same. The Executive Buy-In Presentation System covers the structure, psychology, and preparation behind those decisions — self-paced programme, £499, optional recorded Q&A calls.

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What to leave off the deck

Five slides means four categories of content stay off the deck entirely. These are the four most commonly included items that weaken promotion cases.

Personal narrative. The story of how you joined the organisation, what motivated you, what you have learned. Committees do not approve narratives — they approve roles. Save the narrative for the conversation if it comes up in Q&A; keep it off the slides.

Organisation charts. A current-state org chart with your name highlighted is the single most common space-waster in promotion decks. Committees know the structure. The information they need on structure belongs on slide 4 (operating model after promotion), in compressed form.

Testimonials and quotes. “X said I was the most reliable person on the team.” Testimonials are below the level of seriousness a promotion committee operates at. They feel like advocacy rather than business case. Leave them off.

Comprehensive project lists. A list of every project you have run in the last two years signals “I have been busy” rather than “I have been operating at the next level.” Slide 3 picks the four outcomes that demonstrate level. The other twenty stay off the deck.

For the broader story of presenting after the promotion is approved, see the first presentation after promotion — the structural patterns that work in the case for the role also apply to the work in the role.

Frequently asked questions

Is five slides really enough for a promotion business case?

Yes — for the formal committee presentation. The five slides do the load-bearing work: role and gap, scope already carried, business outcomes, operating model after promotion, the ask. Supporting evidence — detailed project documentation, peer feedback, performance reviews — sits in an appendix or a separate document the committee can reference if asked. The presentation itself stays at five slides.

What if the committee asks for more detail than five slides allow?

That is the right outcome. A focused five-slide deck triggers the conversation; the appendix or supporting documents answer the questions raised in discussion. A sprawling twenty-slide deck pre-empts the conversation and leaves the committee with no questions to engage on, which often translates into a deferred decision rather than an approved one.

Should I rehearse this presentation, or is the slide structure enough?

Rehearse it. The structure does most of the work, but how you handle the discussion after slide 5 is what most committees actually weight. Rehearse the opening of each slide so you do not over-narrate, and rehearse three or four likely committee questions out loud. Twenty minutes of rehearsal the day before is more useful than twenty hours of slide refinement.

What if my company does not have a formal promotion committee?

The same five-slide structure works for promotion conversations with a single decision-maker — your manager, your manager’s manager, an HR partner. The framing changes slightly (less formal, more conversational), but the load-bearing slides stay the same: role and gap, scope carried, outcomes, operating model, ask. A clean five-slide document is also a useful artefact for the decision-maker to reference internally when they take the case to anyone else.

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Next step: Open a blank document and write the five slide titles before you build a single slide. Role and gap. Scope carried. Outcomes. Operating model. The ask. If you cannot write a tight one-line summary for each, the case is not ready for the committee — work on the case before you touch the deck.

About the author

Mary Beth Hazeldine is Owner & Managing Director of Winning Presentations Ltd, founded in London in 1990. With 24 years of corporate banking experience at JPMorgan Chase, PwC, Royal Bank of Scotland, and Commerzbank, she advises executives across financial services, healthcare, technology, and government on structuring presentations for high-stakes funding rounds and board approvals.

21 Apr 2026
Senior female executive presenting her career case to two board-level leaders in a polished boardroom, composed and authoritative, navy tones, editorial photography style

Promotion Presentation: How to Make the Business Case for Your Own Advancement

Quick Answer

A promotion presentation is not a request for recognition — it is a business case. Frame your advancement as the solution to a specific organisational problem, support it with quantified evidence from the past twelve months, anticipate the “not ready” objection with pre-emptive evidence, and deliver it in a format that mirrors the standards you apply to every other executive decision. Senior leaders approve promotions when they can see the business logic, not just the tenure.

Priya had been doing the CFO role in everything but title for fourteen months. She managed the treasury function, chaired the audit subcommittee, deputised for the outgoing CFO during his extended sick leave, and delivered the annual accounts presentation to the board — an event no other Finance Director in the business had ever been asked to lead. She had not been passed over; no formal process had started. She simply assumed that the evidence was visible and that the right conversation would happen when the time was right.

The time never quite arrived on its own. A restructure was announced. An external search was commissioned for a Group CFO. Priya’s name appeared on nobody’s shortlist because nobody had a structured record of what she had been doing. The hiring panel knew she was capable. They did not know how to articulate her case internally, because she had never given them the language to do it.

Priya was not passed over because she lacked the evidence. She was passed over because she had never organised that evidence into a format her organisation could act on. The business case for her promotion existed; it simply had not been presented.

The executives who consistently advance are not always the most accomplished. They are the ones who have learned to treat their own career advancement with the same analytical precision they apply to any other business decision they take to a senior committee.

Why Most Promotion Pitches Fail Before They Reach the Decision-Maker

The most common failure mode in promotion conversations is not rejection — it is deferral. “Let’s revisit this in six months” is almost always code for: the person making the case did not give us a clear enough reason to act now. Decision-makers rarely say that explicitly. They schedule another review instead.

Promotion pitches fail at three points. The first is framing: the candidate presents their tenure and competence rather than the business problem their advancement would solve. The second is evidence: achievements are described rather than quantified, making comparison with any external candidate impossible. The third is timing: the conversation is initiated before the candidate has built sufficient internal support, leaving the formal decision-maker without allies when the case is discussed.

Each of these failures is structural. They are not personality failures or confidence failures — they are presentation failures. The evidence may be solid; the problem is that it has not been organised into a format that a busy senior leader can process, evaluate, and act on under time pressure.

The solution is to treat your own promotion like any other business case you have presented: with a clear recommendation, supporting evidence, a response to the most predictable objections, and a specific ask.

The Business Case Framing: You Are Solving a Problem, Not Asking a Favour

The shift that changes everything in a promotion conversation is moving from a narrative about yourself to a narrative about the organisation. “I have been performing at this level for two years and I believe I deserve recognition” is a request. “The business has a gap at Group Finance leadership level, and my track record in the deputy role makes me the lowest-risk path to filling it” is a business case.

The distinction is not cosmetic. It changes the entire structure of the conversation. When you frame your promotion as a business problem — a capability gap, a succession risk, a transition challenge — you give the decision-maker something to agree with before they have to agree with you. They can support the idea of solving the problem without committing to you personally in the first instance. Your case then becomes the argument for why you, specifically, are the most efficient solution.

To build this frame, identify the specific business problems your promotion would solve. Is there a succession gap? A capability shortage? A risk created by the current structure? A growth objective that requires senior capacity at your level? Each of these is a legitimate business driver for promotion, and each is more persuasive than personal merit alone, because it gives your advocate something to present on your behalf when you are not in the room.

The question to answer in your framing is: “Why does the business need this to happen now?” The answer to that question is the foundation of your case.

Building Your Evidence File: The Twelve-Month Impact Audit

Before any promotion conversation, conduct a structured audit of your impact over the previous twelve months. Do not rely on memory and do not rely on your performance review documents, which tend to capture activity rather than impact. Instead, build a working document that contains four categories of evidence.

The first is financial outcomes: revenue generated or protected, costs reduced, budget variances managed, capital deployed. Any figure that appears in a management account or board report and that your decisions influenced belongs here. Quantify in absolute terms and as a percentage improvement where relevant.

The second is organisational outcomes: projects delivered, teams led, structural changes implemented, risks identified and resolved. These are the contributions that do not always appear in financial metrics but that senior leaders recognise as the work of someone operating above their grade.

The third is stakeholder outcomes: relationships built, decisions influenced, external credibility established, internal alignment achieved. If you have managed an external client relationship, led a major procurement, or been the internal face of a significant initiative, record it explicitly.

The fourth is scope evidence: instances where you performed at a higher level than your role required — covering a more senior colleague, leading a cross-functional workstream, representing the function at board or committee level. This is the category that most directly supports the case that your title has not kept pace with your actual level of operation.

Compile the audit before you begin structuring your promotion conversation. The material is unlikely to surprise you, but organising it systematically will reveal patterns of contribution that are not visible when the evidence is scattered across emails, project updates, and memory.

Translating Your Achievements Into Board-Ready Language

Senior decision-makers evaluate people using the same language they apply to any resource allocation decision: impact, risk, and return. Your evidence file needs to be translated from the language of individual performance into the language of organisational investment.

The translation rule is: every achievement should have a measurable outcome attached. “Led the supplier renegotiation” becomes “Led the supplier renegotiation, reducing annual category spend by 12% and extending contract terms by three years.” “Managed the team during the restructure” becomes “Maintained team retention at 94% through a six-month restructure period, against a sector average of 78%.”

When a direct financial metric is unavailable, use proxy metrics: time saved, risk reduced, scope managed, or scale of stakeholders involved. The goal is not to fabricate precision but to attach some external reference point that allows a decision-maker to calibrate the significance of what you did.

Avoid comparative language that positions you against your peers inside the organisation — this generates political risk without adding persuasive value. Instead, use external benchmarks where available: sector averages, industry norms, or publicly reported figures from comparable organisations. External comparisons strengthen the case without creating internal friction.

The Promotion Business Case — four evidence categories: Financial Outcomes, Organisational Outcomes, Stakeholder Outcomes, Scope Evidence

The Executive Slide System — Structure Every High-Stakes Deck

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Anticipating and Answering the “Not Ready” Objection

The most common reason promotion conversations stall is the unspoken objection: “We’re not sure you’re ready for the full scope of the senior role.” This objection is rarely stated directly. It surfaces instead as a request for more time, a suggestion that you “continue to develop in the current role”, or a commitment to “revisit this in the next cycle.”

Because the objection is rarely explicit, most candidates never address it. The most effective approach is to surface it yourself and respond to it before it is raised. “I want to address directly the question of whether I am ready for the full scope of the role, because I know that is likely to be a concern given that I haven’t held the title formally.” Then answer it with the scope evidence from your audit: the specific instances where you have already been performing at the higher level.

The structure for this response is: acknowledge the concern, present the contrary evidence, and offer a specific reference. “My concern would be well-founded if I hadn’t been operating at this level for the past fourteen months. During that period I led [X], managed [Y] directly, and delivered [Z] in a context that was structurally equivalent to the senior role.” If a more senior colleague can attest to your performance at that level, reference them explicitly and ensure they have agreed to do so in advance.

Addressing the objection directly demonstrates the kind of confident self-awareness that senior leadership roles require. It also eliminates the gap that usually allows the objection to persist quietly beneath a polite deferral.

The One-Slide Personal Career Brief

In a formal promotion presentation, whether written or verbal, you need one slide — or one clearly delimited section — that summarises your entire case in ninety seconds. This is the component that your advocate will use when your case is discussed without you present, which is where most promotion decisions are actually made.

The one-slide brief has five components. The first is your current title and the level at which you have been operating in practice. The second is the business problem your promotion solves. The third is three to four headline impact metrics from your twelve-month audit, stated in board-ready language. The fourth is your response to the most predictable objection. The fifth is the specific ask: the title, the timing, and — if relevant — any structural change to your remit.

Keep the slide or section genuinely brief. The purpose is not to summarise your CV — it is to give a decision-maker a clear, memorable argument that they can repeat accurately to others. If someone who reads it once cannot reproduce the core logic five minutes later, it is too complex.

The discipline of constructing this brief will also help you identify the weakest element of your case. If any of the five components feels thin, that is where your preparation needs more work before the formal conversation begins.

Build a sharper promotion case with the Executive Slide System →

Structuring the Promotion Conversation: Timing, Audience, and Format

The most effective promotion conversations do not happen spontaneously. They are requested explicitly, prepared for in advance, and structured as a working meeting rather than an informal discussion. The distinction matters: an informal conversation gives the decision-maker permission to respond informally, which usually means no commitment and no timeline.

Request a dedicated meeting — thirty minutes, framed as a structured career conversation. Send a brief agenda in advance: three items, each stated as a business question rather than a personal request. This positions the meeting as a professional dialogue rather than a lobbying exercise.

Before the formal conversation, apply the same pre-meeting approach you would use for any other high-stakes decision. Identify the two or three people whose informal support will influence the formal outcome. Meet them individually, understand their perspective, and address any concerns privately before the formal meeting. The principles of stakeholder alignment apply as directly to career conversations as they do to any other executive decision.

On the question of format: for a formal promotion into a senior leadership role, a written one-page summary sent in advance of the meeting is worth preparing. It signals seriousness of intent and gives the decision-maker time to formulate a considered response rather than an instinctive one. It also creates a record of the conversation’s basis, which is useful if the outcome is a conditional commitment with milestones attached.

Promotion conversation structure roadmap: Step 1 Stakeholder alignment (2 weeks before), Step 2 Written summary sent (3 days before), Step 3 Formal meeting (the ask), Step 4 Follow-up with milestones

When the Answer Is “Not Yet”: Using the Conversation to Create a Pathway

A “not yet” response is not the end of the conversation — it is the beginning of the next one. How you handle the deferral determines whether it becomes a genuine developmental pathway or a polite way of managing you out of the conversation indefinitely.

If the answer is “not yet”, ask three specific questions before you leave the room. The first: what specific evidence or capability would need to be demonstrated for the answer to change? The second: what is the realistic timeline, and what external factors — headcount, restructure, budget cycle — will influence it? The third: who else needs to be part of this conversation for a decision to be made, and is it appropriate for you to speak with them directly?

These questions serve two purposes. They convert a vague deferral into a structured commitment, and they reveal whether the deferral is genuine or indefinite. If the decision-maker cannot answer the first question with any specificity, the barrier to your promotion is probably not developmental — it is political, structural, or budgetary. Knowing that allows you to make an informed decision about whether to continue building your case internally or to consider whether the organisation has the capacity to advance you at all.

Document the conversation and any commitments made immediately afterwards. If milestones were agreed, write them up and share them with the decision-maker within 24 hours: “Following our conversation, I understood the next steps to be…” This is not aggressive — it is professional. It also prevents the well-intentioned deferral from quietly disappearing from the decision-maker’s priority list. If you are planning a different kind of career move — into a new organisation or a lateral transition — the principles of the career pivot presentation apply to structuring that case.

Rescue Block

If your promotion conversation is imminent and you haven’t had time to build the full business case, focus on one thing: the scope evidence. The single most persuasive argument for promotion is concrete evidence that you have already been performing at the higher level. Write down the five most significant things you have done in the past twelve months that were above your current grade. Lead with those. Everything else can be structured after the first conversation.

The Executive Slide System

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Frequently Asked Questions

How long should a promotion presentation be?

For a formal promotion conversation at senior level, a written summary of one page and a thirty-minute meeting is the right format. The written document’s purpose is not to be exhaustive but to be clear: it should contain your business case framing, three to four headline impact metrics, your response to the most predictable objection, and a specific ask. The meeting itself should be structured as a working conversation rather than a monologue. Present your case in ten to twelve minutes, then invite questions. The quality of the questions tells you where the resistance lies and gives you the opportunity to address it directly in the room.

Should you share your promotion case in writing before the meeting?

Yes, for a formal senior promotion into a defined leadership role. Sharing a brief written summary two to three days before the meeting serves several functions: it signals that you are treating the conversation seriously, it gives the decision-maker time to prepare a considered response, and it creates a record of the basis on which the conversation was held. For more informal conversations — an annual review where promotion is one of several topics — a written document is unnecessary and may come across as disproportionately formal. Use your judgement about the register of the conversation before deciding.

What if you don’t have direct financial metrics to support your promotion case?

Most functional roles have significant indirect financial impact that can be quantified with some effort. If direct financial metrics are genuinely unavailable, use proxy metrics: team retention rates, project delivery rates, stakeholder satisfaction from formal feedback processes, scope of roles managed, or complexity of decisions taken. For roles in HR, legal, communications, or research, the relevant metrics might be response time, case volume, coverage scope, or error rate. The goal is not financial precision but external comparability — any figure that allows a decision-maker to calibrate the significance of your contribution against some reference point beyond your own assertion is worth including. If you are preparing for a first presentation in a new leadership role after your promotion, the same principle of evidence-first communication applies.

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About the Author

Mary Beth Hazeldine has spent 25 years in banking and 16 years training executives to present with precision and authority. She works with senior leaders on high-stakes presentations, board communications, and career advancement conversations at the executive level.