Blog2021-05-06T12:54:43-07:00

Format Presenter Notes Handouts

Before diving into Presenter View’s display of Presenter Notes, let’s first look at PowerPoint’s Notes Master.

This is where the slide and Presenter Notes are merged for print. But, really, it’s another “hidden” function within PowerPoint that few know about, and even fewer consider customizing. 

Each Master Slide in a PowerPoint file has a Notes layout, which is used for printing slide notes pages. The Microsoft default layout has a fairly large image, or thumbnail, of the slide, and a text box below it for the Presenter Notes using the same font as the master slide text and sized at 12 point. Along with the Header, Footer, date, and page number placeholders in the 4 corners of the page.  

[image of default notes layout showing the placeholders] 

To access the Notes Master, go to the VIEW tab > MASTER VIEWS section > and click the NOTES MASTER icon. 

Note: To close the Notes Master and return to the slides, go to the HANDOUT MASTER tab > CLOSE section > click the CLOSE icon. 

For TLC Creative, we have our own version of Notes Master layout that we like, and it is included on all PowerPoint templates we create. 

  • Smaller and positioned higher slide image 
  • Larger text box 
  • Preset bullets, font sizes, line & paragraph spacing 
  • Date moved to the lower left 
  • Footer centered at the bottom of the page 
  • Header and page number placeholders stay in their respective corners 

A special note is that if a presentation has multiple master slides, each master slide has its own Notes Master. This is important for slide deck printouts where formatting of each Notes Master needs to be reviewed to ensure the Notes View printout is consistent. 

So… how does this relate to using Presenter View when presenting? We will address that in the next post! 

Troy @ TLC Creative

By |May 12th, 2026|PowerPoint|

Typo on the slide

The TLC Creative Services design team receives presentation slides continuously as part of design projects, presentation makeover projects, and to run for live corporate event projects. This is a nice graphic that was core to a recent event (eg. I received the presentation at an event and had nothing to do with the presentation design).

THE ASK, THE PROBLEM

– First was an ask to animate the graphic, which was not possible as it was inserted into the presentation as a flat raster image (e.g. a JPG image). Inserting as a vector .svg would have been great!

– Second, and only because I was asked to work with the graphic did I take a closer look, and then discovered (and called out) the problem… do you see it?

Note: by the time I was working with this graphic, it had already been used in presentations, other attendee collateral, and a website… I am certain it was reviewed and vetted by multiple people, all of whom were asked to approve the graphic.

There is an important, real-world lesson here. Even with multiple layers of reviewing and proofing, typos happen!

Time’s up! Did you spot the typo? “DRVIEN

I am guessing the typo would’ve been caught had it been the only graphic on the slide. However, in this case, the word “DRIVEN” is just one element in a busy graphic – and I was looking at it on a busy slide with several other text boxes. And all that ‘other’ text pulled attention away from this circle graphic.

THE EMERGENCY FIX

Having this graphic as an .SVG on the slide would have solved many problems. It could have been ungrouped and animated, which was the original request. It also could have been ungrouped and then modified to fix the typo.

Since the source art was not going to be available in time for that day’s meeting, I did some Photoshop work and produced a “fixed” version of the graphic – at least the graphic used in the presentation I was running was fixed!

-Troy @ TLC Creative

By |May 7th, 2026|PowerPoint|

New Podcast Episode Available! “Inside the Creative Process: Designing a Partnership Pitch Deck”

New episode of The Presentation Podcast now available!

In episode 245 of The Presentation Podcast, Troy and Lori Chollar of TLC Creative Services give us access to their team’s design process by pulling back the curtain of a completed partnership pitch deck project. 

This project got them thinking about how we all approach presentation design. Everything starts before a single slide is designed with understanding and defining the purpose (and type) of presentation it is, which then influences the visual design and on-slide messaging. Our candid conversation is a great listen full of strategies and ideas for crafting visually rich, purpose-driven presentations! 

Listen on your favorite podcast app, or at The Presentation Podcast site here.

By |May 5th, 2026|Resource/Misc|

ToolsToo Remove Masters Part 2: PowerPoint QAT

Sometimes, reducing a formatting process from 6+ clicks to 3 clicks is just not enough. In this case, my previous blog post showcased the ToolsToo Remove Unused Masters feature, which reduces the 6+ click process of opening the PowerPoint presentation master, finding an unused slide master, deleting it, and closing the master slide view.

But I do this process often enough that I have moved it to my QAT, and it’s now a 2-click process!

All you have to do is click the QAT button, then click “Yes”, and you’re done!

 

Troy @ TLC Creative

By |April 30th, 2026|Software/Add-Ins|

ToolsToo Remove Unused Masters

The ToolsToo add-in has a lot of tools! One of my favorite “hidden” features is the Remove Masters option. I use this on every event where I have a master show file of 2-3-9, or more individual presentations that have been combined into a single presentation to run during that event. At the end of the event I need to break apart the master show file into those original individual presentations again for the archive. But if I only delete the unneeded slides and do a save as – that is a sloppy and unprofessional file. There are lots of steps in finalizing a presentation for the archives or to provide back to the client; remove PowerPoint sections, clear the file properties, optimize, and remove master slides from the other presentations.

ToolsToo makes the step of removing unused master slides, and unused master layouts, a 2-click process!

Troy @ TLC

By |April 28th, 2026|Software/Add-Ins|

When Bullet Points Are Bad

This is directly from The Presentation Podcast episode 244 conversation (listen here) where the podcast hosts, Troy – Nolan – Sandy, talked about bullet points, specifically when they are not needed on a slide. The conversation was envisioned after Troy received this slide from a client recently:

  • Note: client content has been stripped from the slide, and master.
  • The conversation focused not only about the bullet list text boxes not being aligned (which was very obvious when the slide was on a 30′ wide screen!), but also that the icon + bullet + key word does not make an effective slide.
  • Listen to the podcast for a full conversation about this slide’s bullets and many other bullet point talking points. 😂 (The Presentation Podcast, episode 244)

In preparing for the podcast I sent the example slide to Nolan and Sandy, and some of the TLC Creative design team. Today I get to share the slide makeovers!

 

(Troy)

(Sandy)

(Nolan)

(this version from Nolan was set up as a multi-slide animation)

(Lori – and this slide was a full animation sequence! Static 1st frame shown here)

(Amber)

 

By |April 23rd, 2026|PowerPoint|
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