name: slide description: The smallest autonomous unit of communication in a deck — a single frame with one Claim and the Proof for it.

Slide

A slide is the smallest autonomous unit of communication in a deck. It is the frame the audience holds in their eye for 8–60 seconds, and it should deliver one Claim supported by the Proof on it.

A slide is not a paragraph in a written document. It is a self-contained unit that should make sense if pulled out and forwarded alone.

Anatomy of a slide

  • Action title — the slide-level Claim, stated as a complete sentence.
  • Body — the Proof for that title: chart, table, quote, framework, or text.
  • Source / footer — attribution, methodology note, or context.
  • Optional kicker / eyebrow — locates the slide in the deck (block name, section).

The eight-second test

Most slides are looked at, not read. The audience should be able to extract the main message in 8 seconds of looking. If they need 30, the slide is doing the work the action title should have done. See eight-second-test.

Slide-level decisions

  • Is the action title a Claim, not a topic?
  • Does the body prove exactly that title — no more, no less?
  • Is there one focal point, or is the eye fighting two competing centres?
  • Is the slide standalone, or does it depend on context the audience may not have?

Failure modes

  • Topic title. "Customer churn" instead of "Onboarding, not pricing, drives churn".
  • Two slides in one. Action title makes one Claim, body proves a different one.
  • Decoration. Pretty body, no Claim. Looks like analysis; is wallpaper.
  • No focal point. Eye does not know where to land.
  • Footer-heavy. More room for source and disclaimers than for the message.

Canonical phrasing

A slide is a Claim and the Proof for it, in a frame the eye can read in eight seconds. Everything else is a question of taste.

See also

action-title, component, eight-second-test, headline-test