In this blog post, I’m showing you presentation design, how to design a standout presentation to win business, pitch deck design, and basic branding for presentations.

Before you even speak, your presentation design tells your audience who you are and what your brand stands for. From your presentation title and title slide design, your audience can be intrigued or impressed at best or skeptical and disinterested at worst.
In a crowded marketplace, your slides are often your brand’s first impression—especially for investors, partners, and clients. Give yourself the best opportunity to hook and impress your audience by following key steps to make sure your presentation deck is on lock.
As a brand designer with 20 years of experience designing decks, presentations, and pitch decks for multinational brands and founders, I’ll give you my playbook that I follow with every single presentation project I do to help my clients secure millions of dollars for funding and contracts.
Thoughtful, brand-aligned presentation design helps you capture attention, build trust, and communicate your message with clarity.
A cohesive presentation design reinforces brand recognition and professionalism. If there is one word that best sums up a successful brand identity, it’s consistency. Or, in the case of ineffective brand identity design, inconsistency. Without consistency, you cannot build trust. Your audience wants to trust you. And one way to do that in a visual way is to be consistent in your presentation design. Use consistent imagery, colors, and formatting.
Match the tone of your presentation to your brand’s voice, whether you’re innovative, elegant, bold, approachable, or playful.
For example, compare how minimalist vs. vibrant design styles reflect different brand stories. A presentation that uses a lot of white space and a serif typeface will feel significantly different than a presentation with bold colors and graphics. What is your brand’s personality? Make sure that comes through in every element in your slides. The very format of a presentation makes it a format ripe for storytelling. Make sure to express our brand’s storytelling through design.
But, like I usually like to do when engaging in any kind of brand design project, let’s start with presentation strategy, not slides. If we secure our strategy, designing the slides will be easy. (Well, relatively so.)
Using presentation design principles, you can lead your audience’s eye to what matters most. Usually, when I receive a raw deck draft with copy from a client that is ready for designed slides, I approach each slide one by one and determine one thing: What is the takeaway of this particular slide? It’s usually the title of the slide, but not always. By the time I receive the deck, usually, several members of my client’s team has had a hand in editing the deck. Sometimes, the information can get lost. (“Too many cooks” comes to mind.) As a designer with a fresh eye on the content, I can approach it with the point of view of the audience and determine whether or not the client’s intended takeaway comes through.
Nevertheless, whatever this takeaway is, I make that statement in a super large type size, at least 72 point, most of the times larger. Boom. (My mother always said, “You have to exaggerate in order to emphasize.”) This is the first thing that the audience will read. The next main point will be in a smaller size that is at least half of the headline size. This will be the second thing the audience will read. Then, any supporting body copy will be in a slightly smaller type size. The body copy is usually the smallest type size on the slide.
Clean layouts project confidence and clarity. There should not be any large blocks of copy. Anything more than a paragraph should be communicated by the actual speaker. (There are a few exceptions to this. For example, if the deck is part of training and the paragraphs of copy is a scenario exercise.)
My secret tip for instantly giving a professional presentation a design upgrade: Break out any one slide that has a ton of copy into several slides. That way, the audience takes in the information in effective bite sizes rather than being overwhelmed with large blocks of copy that are both unsightly and ineffective.
Limit colors, fonts, and alignments to strengthen your brand presence. If you’re new to the color palette game, here’s a formula you can follow:
If you’re talking about each individual content slide, here’s a guideline you can follow:
As for fonts, limit your usage to 2 different typefaces, max. If design isn’t your strong suit, I would advise sticking to one typeface and using the different styles (bold, italic, etc.) within that typeface for variation. The reason for this is to refer back to the foundational brand concept of consistency that we covered earlier.
And as for alignments, make sure the title of each slide is in the exact same spot on the slide throughout the entire presentation. This has exceptions of course, but it’s a good rule of thumb that goes back to… that’s right: Consistency. Also, make sure lists and body copy more than 3 lines are left-aligned.
Use imagery, charts, and icons that clarify your message. Look at your main takeaway from each slide, and if it’s appropriate to use an image, use one that links to your main takeaway. For example, in a training presentation, if your slide’s content discusses the concept of building blocks for foundational learning, use an image of building blocks. And make sure that particular image aligns stylistically with your brand identity’s visuals. For example, if your brand visuals use bold and colorful illustrations, use bold and colorful illustrations and avoid photography that doesn’t match the look and feel of your brand. One way to easily guide your brand style decisions while designing your presentation or any other marketing tool is to have a brand style guide or stylescape on hand to reference.
Design for screens and distance; use large type and contrast wisely. Even if your audience will be sitting up close to their screen in a video call setting, it’s important to apply the same concepts of large type in a professional presentation. Because of the nature of the form, your audience is looking for key takeaways first and then supporting information to those takeaways. Think of them taking one big bite to taste and then taking little bites to follow up. Your presentation better be delicious and easy to eat! (Yum!)
When it comes to branding for presentations, use your brand color palette, typography, and imagery style. Like we covered earlier, make sure to stay within your brand’s established style. Using a completely different style from your established brand visuals will confuse your audience. You want them focused on your message
Ask yourself this: How do you want your audience to feel—confident, inspired, reassured? Keep brand storytelling in mind and be sure to help your audience feel a certain way while you’re communicating your message. If you’re designing a pitch deck to inspire an investor to invest in your company, you might want to make them feel compelled, urgent, or excited. If you’re designing a presentation for a town hall to engage with the community about a new mural, you might want them to feel a sense of belonging and engagement. With any successful presentation, it’s important to engage both the head and the heart.
Consistency in tone, visuals, and flow builds recognition and trust. Every slide carries the opportunity to express your brand storytelling whether it’s through text, images, or colors.
No matter where you are on the design spectrum, there are different presentation design tools that fit your needs. If you’re a more experienced presentation designer, you can start from scratch in PowerPoint or Google Slides using their pitch deck templates as a starter. Or you can use Canva, Beautiful.ai, or Pitch for super easy presentation design software.
Pro tip: Invest in a custom presentation template to save time and keep your visuals on-brand.
For example, I helped a client who specializes in leadership training. They received an RFP for a major streaming service. This streamer needed an experienced firm to train their leadership team to incorporate inclusion and identity frameworks into their strategy. For this, my client needed a bold and targeted presentation to win the business, so they hired Brim Branding as their presentation design expert. This client needed hyper-focus on content and had no time to fiddle with design. They needed professional presentation design services that would elevate their pitch and impactfully communicate their expertise in leadership training. As a result, my client handily won the lucrative contract.
In another example, I helped a client who is a creator of billion-dollar beverage brands. He wanted to secure investor funding for a new beverage he was launching. For this, my client needed a compelling deck to show potential investors a complete understanding of the shelf-to-shelf competition and full data sets to communicate a clear timeline and projected return on investment. This deck included a blend of compelling market success stories, projections, custom photo mockups of the product in hand on the shelf, all with the tone of emotional appeal and urgency. “Invest in this sure-fire success now or miss out.” As a result, my client was able to secure funding and launched the product in partnership with powerhouse influencers.
Great presentation design makes your ideas not just prettier, but more powerful. It’s essential to incorporate a clear presentation design strategy for success. Remember to focus on key takeaways. Your audience should be able to sum up your message in each slide, as well as in your overall deck. They will always be asking, “What is the point? What do I need to know?” Make your presentation memorable.
If you have a presentation that needs an extra set of eyes, book a Brew Your Brand one-on-one call for a presentation audit with me. I will review your presentation with the lens of a brand designer with 20 years of experience designing decks, presentations, and pitch decks for multinational brands and founders who have secured millions of dollars for funding and contracts.
I also offer custom presentation design services that serve your specific needs. Whether it’s fully custom decks or a template with your basic brand style and visuals for you to plug and play later, an expert, professional touch can help elevate your next pitch or keynote.
And that’s it! You just learned tips on how to use presentation design to stand out and win business. As I always tell my clients before they’re scheduled to present, go get ’em.