There is something that almost no one questions in a company’s daily routine: the time wasted building presentations.
We’re not talking about thinking through ideas or defining strategies. That’s part of the job. The problem comes afterward, when everything has to be brought into PowerPoint. Hours adjusting charts, fixing axes, aligning text boxes, checking that numbers match Excel, reworking slides because “something doesn’t look professional.”
And the most interesting part is that this problem is not about lack of skills. It affects junior profiles as well as senior analysts, consultants, and finance teams. It’s a structural issue: PowerPoint was not designed to handle complex data efficiently.
When design interferes with analysis
In theory, a presentation should be the final step of the process. But in practice, it often ends up shaping how data is presented.
Charts are simplified because they are difficult to build. Certain formats are avoided because they take too long. Images are copied from Excel instead of working with dynamic data. And along the way, clarity gets lost.
The result is presentations that work… but don’t stand out. Slides that communicate, but don’t convince.
The bottleneck no one measures
In teams that work with frequent reporting — finance, consulting, strategy, operations — this problem multiplies.
A small change in the data means rebuilding charts. A last-minute adjustment requires manually reviewing multiple slides. And when working as a team, maintaining visual consistency becomes a constant challenge.
It’s not uncommon for an important presentation to take more time to “build” than to analyze.
Automating the repetitive without losing control
This is where solutions begin to appear that don’t replace PowerPoint, but enhance it.
Tools like think-cell allow you to work directly in PowerPoint but with a data-driven logic. Instead of building charts from scratch, they are generated from structures that already ensure consistency, alignment, and automatic updates.
For example, a chart that changes its values doesn’t need to be redrawn. Labels adjust automatically, elements stay aligned, and visual integrity is preserved without manual intervention.
This doesn’t just save time. It changes the way you work.
From “making slides” to thinking about the message
When the technical process stops being an obstacle, the focus returns to where it should be: the content.
You can explore more visual alternatives, experiment with different ways of telling a story with data, and react faster to changes. Even in high-pressure contexts — such as monthly closings or executive presentations — the margin for error decreases.
And perhaps most importantly, it reduces friction between teams. Everyone works with the same logic, delivering consistent results.
A silent advantage
What’s interesting is that these types of improvements are not always immediately visible. It’s not about “making prettier slides,” but about making them better and faster.
In environments where speed and clarity are key, that difference adds up. Presentation after presentation.
For companies that rely heavily on PowerPoint, adopting this type of tool is not just an operational improvement. It’s a way to reclaim time and focus it on what truly adds value.
In this context, having partners like Aufiero Informática, who facilitate access to solutions like think-cell in Latin America, makes it possible to take that step smoothly, with local support and specialized guidance.
