presentation-notes

Generate speaker notes and talking points for conversational, off-the-cuff delivery. Creates scannable prompts designed for riffing — not scripts to read. Use when asking "write speaker notes for...", "talking points for...", "what should I say on this slide...", or when preparing to present a deck live.

Safety Notice

This listing is imported from skills.sh public index metadata. Review upstream SKILL.md and repository scripts before running.

Copy this and send it to your AI assistant to learn

Install skill "presentation-notes" with this command: npx skills add aaronvanston/skills-presentations/aaronvanston-skills-presentations-presentation-notes

Presentation Notes

Generate speaker notes designed for natural, conversational delivery — not scripts to read verbatim.

Philosophy

  • Riff from headlines — the slide is the prompt, not the script
  • Add context verbally — explain the "why" that isn't on screen
  • Tell stories — concrete examples land better than abstractions
  • Acknowledge the room — react to the audience, don't just broadcast
  • Land the key point — each slide has ONE thing to remember

Note Format

Speaker notes should be scannable prompts, not paragraphs.

Per-slide structure:

## Slide: [Headline]

**Key point:** [The ONE thing they must remember]

**Open with:** [First sentence or hook]

**Talk track:**
- [Bullet prompt 1]
- [Bullet prompt 2]
- [Bullet prompt 3]

**Transition:** [Bridge to next slide]

Example:

## Slide: Speed is a feature

**Key point:** Being fast isn't just nice — it's a competitive advantage.

**Open with:** "This slide captures something we keep rediscovering..."

**Talk track:**
- Every time we ship faster, customers notice and tell us
- Our competitors take months for changes we do in days
- Speed compounds — fast shipping builds momentum and morale

**Transition:** "So how do we protect that speed as we scale? That's what this next section is about..."

Notes by Slide Type

Statement slides — Focus on the story behind the statement: what led to this conclusion, what's the implication, why does it matter?

Question slides — Pause and let it land. Don't rush to answer your own question. Acknowledge the tension, then bridge to your answer.

Data slides — Contextualize the numbers: what story does the data tell? What surprised you? What would be concerning if different?

Section dividers — Keep it brief: quick framing of what's coming and how it connects to what came before.

Recap slides — Don't re-present. Touch each point quickly, add one synthesis insight, set up the "so what."

Delivery Cues

When relevant, include delivery notes:

**Delivery:**
- [PAUSE] after the question, let it land
- Scan the room before transitioning
- Good moment for: "Questions so far?"

Context Adjustments

Internal (team/company): More informal, reference shared history, challenge directly, be candid about what's hard.

External (investors/customers): Build credibility first, prove before concluding, leave room for questions.

Recorded/async: Tighter, less tangential, stronger signposting and transitions.

Source Transparency

This detail page is rendered from real SKILL.md content. Trust labels are metadata-based hints, not a safety guarantee.

Related Skills

Related by shared tags or category signals.

General

presentation-design

No summary provided by upstream source.

Repository SourceNeeds Review
General

presentation-outline

No summary provided by upstream source.

Repository SourceNeeds Review
General

presentation-pitch-deck

No summary provided by upstream source.

Repository SourceNeeds Review
General

convex-migrations

No summary provided by upstream source.

Repository SourceNeeds Review