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August 17, 2025
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September 19, 2025FURTHER EXPERTISE
The Quick Guide to Structuring a Presentation
Expert Opinion from Rich Watts published August 17, 2025
Think of this page as a quick refresher, a handful of practical techniques that make it easier for your audience to follow your message and remember what matters.
If you’ve been on our foundation presentation skills course, you will recognise many of these ideas. If you haven’t joined us yet… you’re very welcome here, and you can explore the course in more detail right here.
Strong presenters use structure with purpose. They know how to use their presentation structure to guide attention, make information easier to digest, and leave their audience with something that sticks. These notes will remind you how to do it too.

Why presentation structure matters
A clear structure helps your audience to absorb and recall what you’re saying.
Try this little test:
52435132415
vs.
111 222 333 444 555
Which one is easier to remember?
The neatly organised second option, of course.
Your presentation works the same way. When your ideas are grouped into logical, bite-sized sections, your audience doesn’t have to work as hard to keep up. It means that they have more ‘brain space’ to take in more of what you say.
When your ideas are grouped into logical, bite-sized sections, your audience doesn’t have to work as hard to keep up.
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An agenda style that does the heavy lifting
Most of us can create a standard agenda slide. But there is a more effective alternative that instantly boosts clarity and engagement: the question-led agenda.
Instead of headings like Overview, Challenges, or Next Steps, turn each section into a question your audience would naturally ask.
For example:
- What problem are we solving?
- Why does it matter now?
- What are the options?
- What’s the recommendation?
This subtle shift does three powerful things:
1. It sparks curiosity.
Unanswered questions create mental “gaps” your audience instinctively wants to close and so they stay listening to you to hear the answer.
2. It positions you as the expert.
Your content becomes the answer to their question, reinforcing your credibility without you ever having to claim it.
3. It helps you present without relying on notes.
Each question acts as a natural prompt. You simply answer it out loud.
It’s also a brilliant shortcut when you’re short on preparation time: list the questions your audience cares about most, then talk through them in order.

Don’t forget your presentation transitions
Clear transitions are the unsung heroes of confident presenting. They are the simple phrases that guide your audience from one idea to the next, such as:
- “Now that we’ve explored X, let’s take a look at Y…”
- “Next, I want to share…”
- “Let’s move on to…”
They are useful because they:
- Keep your audience oriented, so nobody gets lost in the flow.
- Recapture drifting attention, especially if you deliver the transition with a little extra warmth and energy.
- Give you a moment to reset, breathe, and step confidently into your next point.




