Tailored presentations?

  • Thread starter JackRosieMaisie
  • Start date
J

JackRosieMaisie

I would like to provide our sales team (who are not particularly tech-savvy)
with a Powerpoint presentation tailored to their product/geographic needs.

But there are many permutations so it would be great if I could produce a
master presentation with a page for each and every product and then the sales
person could decide which pages to include/exclude via a simple drag-and-drop
or tickbox to produce their own tailored presentation.

I would keep the master presentation read-only and up-to-date and in a
single location and really minimise my workload!

Does any know if this can be done in Powerpoint or with an add-in?

I would appreciate any help.
 
D

David Marcovitz

There are a variety of ways to do this. The simplest is to use Custom Shows.
You could create custom shows for each of the sales people. Then, you could
have a menu page where a saleperson simply clicks on his/her name which
links to the custom show. It's not quite drag and drop (and is possibly not
easy enough for your salespeople to do themselves), but it should be easy
for you to set up.

An alternative is for each person to simply hide the slides he/she doesn't
want to show.

--David

I would like to provide our sales team (who are not particularly tech-savvy)
with a Powerpoint presentation tailored to their product/geographic needs.

But there are many permutations so it would be great if I could produce a
master presentation with a page for each and every product and then the sales
person could decide which pages to include/exclude via a simple drag-and-drop
or tickbox to produce their own tailored presentation.

I would keep the master presentation read-only and up-to-date and in a
single location and really minimise my workload!

Does any know if this can be done in Powerpoint or with an add-in?

I would appreciate any help.

--
David M. Marcovitz
Author of _Powerful PowerPoint for Educators_
http://www.PowerfulPowerPoint.com/
Microsoft PowerPoint MVP
Associate Professor, Loyola University Maryland
 
O

Old in Dallas

Jack - the easiest way would be to put all the slides in the program and then
use the "hide" setting on the slides they don't want to show.
 

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