skills/sales-enablement/references/deck-frameworks.md
Detailed slide-by-slide guidance for building sales decks that tell a story and close deals.
Every great deck follows a narrative structure: Situation → Complication → Resolution.
The goal is not to present features. The goal is to make the buyer feel understood, then show them a better way.
What to include:
What to avoid:
Copy prompt: "What is the one problem that, if you could describe it perfectly, would make your buyer say 'that's exactly my situation'?"
What to include:
What to avoid:
Copy prompt: "If your buyer does nothing for the next 12 months, what does it cost them?"
What to include:
What to avoid:
Copy prompt: "What has changed in the market that makes the old approach unsustainable?"
What to include:
What to avoid:
Copy prompt: "What do you believe about solving this problem that most people get wrong?"
What to include:
What to avoid:
Copy prompt: "Walk through 3 things the buyer would do in your product in their first week."
What to include:
What to avoid:
Copy prompt: "What are 3 numbers that prove your product works?"
What to include:
What to avoid:
Copy prompt: "Tell the story of one customer who went from struggling to succeeding with your product."
What to include:
What to avoid:
Copy prompt: "How does a customer get from signing to live? What does each week look like?"
What to include:
What to avoid:
Copy prompt: "If they buy today, what does the next 12 months look like in dollars and hours?"
What to include:
What to avoid:
Copy prompt: "What does it cost, what do they get, and which plan is right for them?"
What to include:
What to avoid:
Copy prompt: "What is the one thing you want them to do after this meeting?"
Add:
Remove or minimize:
Adjust tone: Precise, no fluff, respect their expertise. Avoid marketing superlatives.
Add:
Remove or minimize:
Adjust tone: Business-focused, outcome-driven. Speak in dollars and percentages.
Add:
Remove or minimize:
Adjust tone: Empowering, equipping. Make them look smart to their boss.
Every slide is a feature with a screenshot. No story, no "so what," no connection to the buyer's world. Reps click through it; prospects tune out.
Slides with 200+ words. Nobody reads them during a presentation. If the slide requires reading, it belongs in a leave-behind.
Slides exist in isolation — no narrative flow from problem to solution to proof. The deck feels like a brochure, not a conversation.
Product screenshots without callouts, annotations, or context. The prospect can't tell what they're looking at or why it matters.
Jumping to product features before establishing the problem. The buyer has no frame of reference for why your features matter.
Trying to address every persona, every use case, every feature in one deck. The result is a 40-slide monster that nobody wants to sit through.