From Idea to a Finished Pitch Deck in Minutes

Brief AskDeck by voice, text, web, or email. Get back a structured, editable .pptx you can refine. Here's exactly how it works.

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The hardest part of a pitch deck is rarely the design. It's the blank slide. You know your business cold, but turning that into a clean, structured story takes hours you usually don't have.

AskDeck collapses that work. You explain what you need, our AI agent Eric drafts a real deck, and you get an editable PowerPoint back. Here's the whole flow.

1. Brief it however you like

There's no form to wrestle with. Pick whatever's fastest in the moment:

  • Voice — call Eric and just talk it through.
  • SMS — text the details from your phone.
  • Web — fill in a short brief at askdeck.ai/start.
  • Email — send the context to eric@askdeck.ai.

Use whichever fits. A two-minute voice memo on your commute works as well as a typed brief at your desk.

2. Give it the right raw material

The quality of the deck tracks the quality of the brief. You don't need polished copy — you need the substance. A strong brief usually covers:

  • What it is — the company or product in a sentence or two.
  • The problem — who hurts, and how badly.
  • Your solution — what you built and why it works.
  • The audience — investors, a sales prospect, an internal team. This changes the tone.
  • Any real facts — traction, market size, milestones. Hand over what's true; don't pad it.
  • The ask — what you want the reader to do at the end.

If you have an existing doc, notes, or a one-pager, include it. More signal means fewer revisions.

3. The AI drafts a structured deck

From your brief, AskDeck builds a full presentation with a logical arc — problem, solution, market, how it works, and the ask — not a pile of disconnected slides. It organizes your points into a narrative a reader can actually follow.

4. You get back an editable .pptx

This is the part that matters. You download a real, editable PowerPoint file — not a locked PDF or a screenshot. Open it in PowerPoint, Keynote, or Google Slides and change anything: wording, order, your own branding, a logo, a chart.

5. Revise until it lands

First drafts are drafts. If a slide misses, tell Eric what to fix — tighten the market section, add a slide on pricing, warm up the tone for a different audience — and get an updated version. You iterate the same way you briefed it.

6. Pay once, or subscribe

Pay for a single deck when it's a one-off, or subscribe if decks are a regular part of your work. Current options live on the pricing page.

The takeaway: spend your energy on the thinking, and let the tool handle the assembly. A clear five-minute brief is often the whole job. Start a deck and see what comes back.