AI Presentation Maker

AI Presentation Maker

Term explanation

Definition and meaning

An AI presentation maker is a tool that uses artificial intelligence to automatically generate, structure, and design slide decks based on user input — such as a topic, a text document, or a data file. Most AI presentation makers follow a similar process: the AI analyzes the input, builds a logical slide structure, applies a suitable layout and design, and populates the content. Advanced AI presentation makers go beyond one-time generation: they connect to live data sources, adapt decks to different audiences, and keep presentations updated automatically over time.

LIZ AI is an enterprise-grade AI presentation maker built for PowerPoint: it generates complete, brand-compliant decks from data and context — and unlike consumer tools, keeps them continuously up to date through agentic automation.

Learn more →

Other glossary terms

AI Hallucination

AI hallucination describes the phenomenon where an LLM confidently produces content that is factually incorrect, fabricated, or entirely made up — presented as though it were true. Hallucinations occur because language models generate statistically probable text based on training patterns, without access to verified facts. In enterprise contexts, hallucinations in presentations are a serious risk. AI grounding — anchoring outputs to verified company data — is the primary strategy for preventing hallucinations in production AI systems.

Learn more

Master view

Master View in PowerPoint allows presenters to edit the Slide Master — a top-level template that controls the default fonts, colors, backgrounds, and layouts applied across all slides in a presentation. Changes made in Master View propagate automatically to every slide that uses that layout, making it the most efficient way to apply brand guidelines and maintain visual consistency across large presentations. Master View is essential for template creation and company-wide design standardization.

Learn more

Vocalized pause

A vocalized pause is a filler sound — such as 'um', 'uh', 'er', or 'like' — used involuntarily by speakers when they pause to think or gather their thoughts. While occasional pauses are natural, frequent vocalized pauses can undermine a speaker's credibility, reduce clarity, and make a presentation feel less polished. Reducing vocalized pauses is a common goal in public speaking coaching, and is typically addressed through practice, conscious awareness, and the deliberate use of silent pauses instead.

Learn more

Computer Based Training (CBT)

Computer-based training (CBT) refers to self-paced educational programs delivered through software on a computer, without requiring an internet connection or live instructor. CBT packages typically include multimedia content, simulations, and assessments. This format was widely adopted in the 1990s and 2000s as an alternative to classroom training, offering consistency and repeatability. Today, CBT is largely succeeded by web-based training (WBT), though it remains in use where internet access is limited or security is a concern.

Learn more

Top blog articles
More posts

English Presentation Structure (Introduction, Closing) & useful Phrases

20 Poll Ice Breaker Questions to ask in your next Presentation

Microsoft-Partner Logo

Official Partnership

SlideLizard is an official Microsoft-Partner

Find us in the Microsoft-Partner network