The Problem With 10 Presentations and a One-Week Window
I had a stack of presentations that needed to go out — ten decks, each running 25 to 30 slides — and all of them had animation and transition issues that were quietly undermining the viewing experience. Timing felt off. Transitions were inconsistent from section to section. Some animation sequences appeared to have been built slide-by-slide without any governing logic, which meant the flow lurched in places where it should have glided.
These weren't catastrophic problems in isolation. But stacked across ten decks intended for a professional audience, the cumulative effect was a presentation suite that felt unfinished. The deadline was real and the window was tight — about a week. I knew immediately that the right move was not to open each file and start clicking through panes. This needed someone who understood how animation and transition design actually works at scale.
What a real PowerPoint presentation visual enhancement project actually requires — and why engaging the right team is the move when you're on deadline — that's what this case study covers.


