From brief to a deck that argues.
AskDeck develops the narrative before it designs a slide — audience, objective, evidence — then builds an editable PowerPoint on your master template.
Six ways to hand off a brief.
No new canvas to learn. The brief arrives however you already work — the producer reads all of it.
- WEBWrite it in the studio
Type the brief in the web form — a few plain sentences, plus who the deck has to convince and what it has to achieve.
- UPLOADAttach the material
Documents, decks, spreadsheets, notes, images — PDF, DOCX, PPTX, XLSX, CSV, and more, read as source material.
- LINKPoint it at a page
Paste a link as source material — or let the brand kit read colors, fonts, and logo straight from your website.
- EMAILSend it by email
The brief and attachments in one message. You're emailed when the deck is ready to preview.
- VOICECall it in
Talk the brief through on the phone. You get a written summary to review and confirm before production starts.
- SMSText it over
Send the brief by text, attachments included — the link to your finished deck comes back the same way.
Exactly what happens.
- NO. 01Brief the assignment
Upload documents, paste text, or speak it. AskDeck reads everything and asks what the deck has to achieve.
- NO. 02The story comes first
AskDeck develops the narrative — audience, argument, slide sequence — before any slide is designed.
- NO. 03Preview the deck
A native, editable PowerPoint on your master template, speaker notes included. The full preview is free and watermarked — you pay only to keep the file.
- NO. 04Revise in plain language
“Tighten slide 4; move pricing after the proof.” The revised version lands next to the original — a free revision is included on Pro and Teams.
Editable means editable.
No flattened images, no locked layouts. Charts are real PowerPoint shapes; the deck opens as if a producer on your team made it — because one did.
Preview it with your own material.
A free watermarked preview of the full deck, before any purchase.