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January 15, 2026FURTHER EXPERTISE
How to efficiently and quickly write presentations
Expert Opinion from Rich Watts published February 17, 2026
For many managers and leaders, writing a presentation sits permanently on the to do list. And then suddenly it’s done at the last minute in a mad rush.
It’s fine, we get it - work life and those other million tasks get in the way.
But so often our presentations REALLY matter. They are our one chance to communicate to large, valuable audiences and to get them to think, feel and do as we wish them to.
And yet writing the presentation is still squeezed in between meetings, emails and day to day priorities. Presentations that are written late, rushed, or over engineered, usually also take far longer to create than they should.
The good news is that writing effective presentations does not need to be time consuming. With the right structure and a few practical techniques, it is possible to draft clear, focused presentations quickly and with far less effort.
In this article we explore how to do exactly that.

UNDERSTANDING
Why writing presentations often takes longer than it should
Presentations rarely take a long time because the topic is complex. They take a long time because people start in the wrong place (or too late!).
We asked the expert team at Further about the common challenges they see managers and leaders experience when creating presentations. The answers included:
- Staring at a blank slide deck without a clear structure or direction
- Trying to say everything rather than what matters most
- Writing slides before being clear on the purpose or audience
- Over polishing content (slide animations, anyone?!) instead of focusing on clarity
The key to writing presentations quickly is to build clarity first, then content. The techniques and tips that follow all build from this mindset.
Presentations often take a long time to write because people start in the wrong place (or too late!).
Learn how to craft and deliver clear, concise and effective presentations
THE FIRST THING
Start with a clear purpose and audience
Before opening PowerPoint or Google Slides (and that’s if you even need slides - check out our article on this, here!), take five minutes to answer two questions:
- Who is this presentation for?
- What do I want them to think, feel or do differently afterwards?
This step alone will save significant time. It prevents unnecessary slides and helps you prioritise what really needs to be included.
When leaders skip this stage, presentations often become unfocused and take longer to write because there is no clear decision making filter.
Knowing what you want your audience to think, feel and do after they have heard your presentation also gives you a clear measure of success. Want to know if your presentation went well? Ask yourself; ‘is my audience now thinking, feeling and acting as I want them to?

NEXT UP
Use a simple structure to write faster
One of the fastest ways to draft a presentation is to use a repeatable structure that works for most workplace situations and presentation scenarios.
A highly effective option is to organise your presentation around key questions. These questions can become your agenda and/or slide headings and will guide your content.
A practical question-based structure for your presentation could be:
- What is the situation or issue?
- Why does it matter?
- Who is affected?
- What are the options or recommendations?
- How will this work in practice?
- When will it happen?
- Where does this apply?
- What happens next (or what do the audience need to do next)?
You do not need to use every question every time. Select the ones that are relevant. The value of this approach is speed and clarity.
By answering each question in simple bullet points, you can draft the core of a presentation very quickly. You can then refine and simplify it all once the content exists.

THE THIRD THING
Write each of your slide headings as questions
Writing slide headings as questions forces clarity. It also makes it much easier to know what content belongs on each slide.
For example:
- “Why are we making this change?”
- “How will this affect customers?”
- “What do we need from you today?”
If you cannot answer the question clearly, it is a sign the slide may not be needed yet.
This technique not only speeds up writing, it also improves delivery. Question based headings help audiences follow your thinking and stay engaged. As a speaker, it reduces your need for notes as you just have to glance at the slide heading and answer the question!
CLEAR VISUALS
Focus on one message per slide
Trying to say too much on a single slide is one of the biggest time drains in presentation writing.
A useful rule of thumb is one clear message per slide. If you are struggling to summarise the message into one sentence, the slide is probably not specific enough.
Keeping slides focused reduces editing time and makes your presentation easier to deliver with confidence.

PROCESS
Draft quickly, refine later
Many people slow themselves down by trying to perfect slides as they write them.
Instead, aim for a rough first draft. Get the structure down. Answer the key questions and capture the main points.
Once the content exists, refining it becomes much easier and faster. You can simplify language, remove duplication and sharpen your messages with far less effort than if you try to do this upfront.

VISUAL SIMPLICITY
Design supports clarity, not complexity
Visual design should support your message, not distract from it. Simple layouts, consistent formatting and minimal text help audiences understand your message quickly.
It’s tempting, but… avoid spending time adjusting fonts, colours or animations until the content is clear. Design tweaks are far easier and quicker once the message is settled.
OPEN IT UP
Invite questions to reduce content overload
One of the most effective ways to shorten a presentation is to deliberately leave space for questions. This also helps to make the audience feel more involved and to buy-into your message.
Instead of trying to anticipate and answer every possible query on slides, include clear moments to invite questions from the audience. This allows you to focus on what matters most and respond to what is actually relevant.
This approach saves time when writing and often leads to more engaging, useful discussions.
if you're keen to boost your performance in Question and Answer sessions, then check out our training course on mastering Q&A sessions.
VISUAL SIMPLICITY
Some final thoughts on quickly writing presentations under pressure
Like you, many managers and leaders are writing presentations under tight deadlines and competing demands. The aim should always be not perfection, but clarity. If you focus on clarity, everything else becomes much easier and quicker.
A clear, well structured presentation delivered with confidence will always outperform an over complicated deck that took too long to write.
By using simple structures, question based headings and a disciplined focus on purpose, it becomes far easier to write presentations quickly, even when time and headspace are limited.
NEXT STEPS
Developing presentation skills across your organisation
At Further, we help managers and leaders write and deliver presentations efficiently and effectively. Our training focuses on practical structures and techniques that work in real workplace situations, not overly-complicated theoretical models.
If you would like to explore how presentation skills training could help your teams save time and communicate more clearly, we would be very happy to talk.
Get in touch to find out more about our presentation skills training programmes and how we help organisations communicate successfully in the most vital moments.




