Improving a deck you’re not allowed to rebuild

Small edits that have outsized effects

Published

Topic

Slide Craft

In CME the faculty usually owns the slides. You can polish. But you can’t impose a new structure, redraw the figures, or talk them out of their format. So the instinct is to make lots of small fixes everywhere — and spread thin across forty slides, none of them gets felt. You’ve worked hard and changed nothing anyone will notice.

The move that’s worked best for me is to leave the layout completely alone and change one thing. Make sure every slide has a single findable takeaway. Almost always that lives in the title: “Efficacy results” becomes “Therapy X cut relapse by half.” The body doesn’t move an inch. But the title now tells the reader what they’re looking at and why it matters.

Small edit, outsized effect — the deck suddenly reads at a glance, and you never had to fight anyone over their slides. Inside a tight constraint, the highest-leverage move is usually the one that respects the constraint completely.

From New York City with ♡

©2026 Al Pittampalli