Who UsesThis Platform?

From sales teams to educators, see how professionals adapt their presentations for different audiences

Enterprise Sales

Sales teams present to different stakeholders—CEOs want ROI, engineers want architecture details, and procurement wants pricing. Instead of rewriting your deck for each meeting, create one presentation and generate versions for every audience. Practice each version during your commute.

Example:

A sales engineer uploads their product demo. They generate an executive version (focused on business outcomes, 5 minutes), a technical version (detailed architecture, 20 minutes), and a security version (compliance and safeguards, 10 minutes). They practice all three on the drive to the client site.

Corporate Training

Training managers need to teach the same content to different groups—frontline employees, managers, and executives. Create comprehensive training materials once, then adapt the complexity and detail level for each group. Provide audio versions for remote learners.

Example:

An L&D manager creates a product training deck. The frontline version covers basic features and common questions. The manager version includes handling edge cases and coaching techniques. The executive version summarizes adoption metrics and business impact.

Education

Professors teach the same concepts to undergraduates, graduate students, and conference audiences. Adjust your explanations for each group without rebuilding your entire presentation. Give students audio versions they can review while commuting or exercising.

Example:

A computer science professor uploads lecture slides on machine learning. The undergraduate version uses everyday analogies and avoids complex math. The graduate version includes formal proofs and recent research. The conference version focuses on novel contributions.

Conference Speaking

Conference speakers often present at multiple events with different audience levels—keynotes for general audiences, breakout sessions for practitioners, and workshops for deep-dives. Prepare multiple versions efficiently and practice each one.

Example:

A technology leader has a talk on AI ethics. The keynote version (15 minutes) covers high-level principles for a general audience. The practitioner session (30 minutes) includes implementation guidelines. The workshop (90 minutes) provides hands-on frameworks.

Common Benefits Across All Use Cases

Time Savings

Instead of spending 2-3 hours rewriting notes for each audience, generate multiple versions in 5-6 minutes. Focus your time on refining content, not repetitive editing.

Consistency

Maintain your core message across all versions while adjusting complexity and tone. Ensure key points remain consistent regardless of audience.

Better Rehearsal

Practice with audio narration anywhere—during commutes, at the gym, or while doing chores. Improve delivery and confidence through repetition.

Audience Appropriateness

Deliver content at the right complexity level. Executives get high-level summaries, technical teams get implementation details, and beginners get clear explanations.

Ready to Adapt Your Presentations?

Start creating audience-specific versions in minutes. See how much time you can save.

    Use Cases | SlideFlow - Who Uses This Platform