Most people type “make me a presentation about cyber security” into Copilot, watch it spit out ten generic slides, and decide the whole thing is a gimmick.
I don’t blame them. That output is rubbish.
But that’s not Copilot failing. That’s Copilot doing exactly what you asked — building from nothing, with no source, no structure, no brand.
Garbage in, garbage slides out.
Here’s the shift. Copilot in PowerPoint isn’t a “write my deck” button. It’s a converter. You already have the content — a Word doc, a PDF proposal, last quarter’s report. The job isn’t inventing slides. It’s turning what you’ve already written into something you can stand up and present.
What is Copilot in PowerPoint, really?
Think of it as the worst part of your week, automated.
You know the drill. The thinking is done. The report is written. The client signed off on the wording. Now you’ve got two hours of copy-pasting into slides, fighting text boxes, and nudging the logo a pixel to the left.
Copilot eats that two hours.
You point it at a file. It reads the structure, pulls the key points, and drafts slides — text, layout, the lot. You’re not staring at a blank slide anymore. You’re editing a first draft.
That’s the whole game. Not creativity. Removal of drudgery.
Step-by-Step: building a deck that doesn’t look generic
Open your template first
This is the step everyone skips, and it’s the one that matters most.
Before you touch Copilot, open your organisation’s PowerPoint template — your branded .potx, your client’s deck, whatever carries the right fonts and colours. Microsoft is explicit about this: start from your template and Copilot keeps the theme and reuses your existing layouts.
Skip it, and you get Microsoft’s house style. Every. Single. Time.
Reference your file, don’t describe it
Open the Copilot pane, then reference a file — click the paperclip, or just type / and pick the document. Word, PDF, Excel, a Loop page. Now Copilot reads the actual content instead of guessing at it.
Write a prompt that points, not pleads
Don’t ask for a slide “about the project”. Tell it exactly where to look:
Create slides from the attached proposal.
Use the "Scope" and "Pricing" sections only.
One slide per phase. Key points, not full sentences.
Notice what’s missing? Any mention of colours, fonts, or design. You don’t ask Copilot for those — your template already decided them. Ask once, point clearly, and let the template do the rest.
Review, then refine in place
Copilot drafts. You read. Then you tell it what’s wrong — “tighten slide three”, “drop the jargon”, “add a summary slide” — in plain English, right there in the pane. No re-prompting from scratch.
A couple of traps before you sell this to clients
Two things will bite you.
First, dense slides. Copilot tends to lift whole paragraphs straight off the page. If your source doc reads like a report, your slides will too. Fix it in the prompt — “bullet points, not sentences” — or trim after.
Second, the file has to be readable. Text-based PDFs work. Scanned images and password-protected files don’t. And keep source files under 24MB, or the results get flaky.
Old thinking: “I’ll block out the afternoon to build the deck.” New thinking: “I’ll point Copilot at the doc and spend the afternoon making it good.”
That’s not a small change. That’s where your hours go back.
Why this actually changes behaviour
Here’s the real win for anyone running this in a business.
Your team already produces the content. Proposals, reports, meeting notes — the substance exists. What kills them is the packaging. The deck that has to look right for the board, the client, the pitch.
Copilot collapses the gap between “we’ve written it” and “we can present it”. The expensive part — the thinking — stays human. The tedious part disappears.
And be straight about the cost. The file-referencing piece sits behind the paid Microsoft 365 Copilot add-on, not the base subscription. For a lot of SMB clients, this is the use case that justifies the licence. Not chatbots. This.
Show a client how an afternoon of slide-building becomes ten minutes, and the conversation about value is over.
If you’re running Microsoft 365 for clients and you’re not showing them this, you’re leaving real money — theirs and yours — on the table.
Copilot in PowerPoint isn’t there to make your slides.
It’s there to delete the part of the job nobody ever wanted.