AI presentation design combines content structure and visual decision-making to produce decks that look professionally designed without a designer or expensive software. On aidowith.me, the Presentation route runs 12 steps in about 1 hour. You describe your content and audience. AI recommends a layout type for each slide: full-bleed image, 2-column comparison, chart with callout, bulleted list, or quote card. The route includes a 4-rule visual hierarchy system: 1 headline per slide, maximum 3 bullets, no slide with more than 40 words of body text, and font size minimum of 24pt for all text. AI also generates a color palette recommendation with 4 colors: primary, accent, neutral, and text, plus specific use rules for each. You finish with a design brief that any deck, from PowerPoint to Gamma to Canva, can implement consistently. Decks following this system take 45% less time to produce because design decisions are made once, not slide by slide. aidowith.me provides the layout library and the visual decision prompts.
Last updated: April 2026
The Problem and the Fix
Without a route
- Your slides look different from each other because you make design decisions slide by slide without a system
- You know your deck content is strong but the visual presentation undermines the message
- You've tried Canva templates but the output still looks like a template rather than a designed deck
With aidowith.me
- A 4-rule visual hierarchy system that makes every slide consistent without manual design decisions
- Layout type recommendations for each slide so you're not choosing between 20 blank options
- A 4-color palette with specific use rules that applies across every deck you build from this point
Who Builds This With AI
Marketers
Content, campaigns, and briefs done in hours instead of days.
Founders
Move fast on pitches, pages, research. AI as your first hire.
Managers & Leads
Reports, presentations, and team comms handled faster.
How It Works
Define your visual direction
Describe your brand, audience, and presentation context. AI recommends a visual direction: clean corporate, modern minimal, or data-heavy analytical.
Apply layout logic and visual rules
Get layout type recommendations for each slide plus the 4-rule hierarchy system. Apply once, use for every slide.
Generate your design brief
Export a design brief with color palette, layout rules, and font guidance. Use it in any tool: PowerPoint, Canva, or Gamma.
Build Slides That Look Professional Without Hiring a Designer
The Presentation route covers AI presentation design in 12 steps: visual hierarchy, layout logic, and color system in 60 minutes.
Start This Route →What You Walk Away With
Define your visual direction
Apply layout logic and visual rules
Generate your design brief
A 4-color palette with specific use rules that applies across every deck you build from this point
"My CEO told me my deck was the best-designed one from the leadership team. I'm not a designer. I just followed the visual system from the route."- Finance Director, mid-size retail company
Questions
The route produces a design brief that works with any presentation tool: PowerPoint, Google Slides, Canva, Gamma, or Beautiful.ai. The visual rules and layout logic apply regardless of software. If you use a tool with AI design features like Gamma, the route shows you how to prompt those features to match your brief rather than using their default styles.
Yes. The design brief step includes a brand integration section where you input your company's hex codes, approved fonts, and logo usage rules. AI applies these constraints to the layout and color recommendations so the output stays within your brand guidelines rather than generating something visually appealing but impossible to use in a real company context.
Too much text per slide. The average business presentation has 68 words per slide. Effective presentation design keeps it under 40. When you have too many words, the audience reads the slides instead of listening to you. The route's 40-word rule and layout system force you to decide what's essential and what belongs in speaker notes.