Let's be honest.
You can architect a flawless microservices system. You can optimize a database query to run in milliseconds. You can debug production issues at 2 AM.
But when it's time to present your work to stakeholders, clients, or investors... your slides look like they were designed by someone who just discovered PowerPoint in 1998.
I've been there on the other side of the table.
I'm Jeslin. I build presentations for people who think in code.
For over 15 years, I led presentation design teams at McKinsey, EY, and Accenture. I've watched brilliant developers, engineers, and technical founders struggle to translate their genius into slides that non-technical people understand.
The problem isn't your work. It's how you package it.
The 3 Most Common Developer Presentation Mistakes
1. Too much code on screen
I get it. You're proud of that elegant solution. But your CEO doesn't need to see your for loop. They need to know what it does and why it matters.
Fix: Use diagrams (flowcharts, architecture maps) instead of raw code on slides. Save the code for a follow-up technical doc.
2. No visual hierarchy
Everything is the same font size, same bullet point, same gray box. Your audience doesn't know where to look.
Fix: One idea per slide. Use size and contrast to guide the eye. If everything is important, nothing is important.
3. Data without a story
You show a chart. The audience squints. You say "as you can see..." But they can't see. They're confused.
Fix: Every chart needs a headline that says what to conclude. Example: Not "Quarterly Revenue," but "Revenue grew 40% after the API launch."
A Before & After Example
Before slide:
- Wall of text describing system architecture
- Tiny screenshot of terminal output
- 4 bullet points explaining the same thing
After slide:
- One clean diagram showing services & data flow
- 3 short labels highlighting key wins
- A clear bottom line: "Migration completed under budget, 2 weeks early"
Which one helps you win trust (or funding)?
Practical Tips You Can Use Today
Start with a story outline before opening PowerPoint. What's the problem? What did you build? What changed as a result?
Use your company's existing template. Consistency beats custom designs if you're in a hurry.
For technical audiences: Add an appendix. Put the deep details there. Keep the main deck focused on decisions, not data dumps.
Test your slides on a non-technical friend. If they get lost, you need to simplify.
When You Need More Than a Template
Sometimes you're building a pitch deck for investors or a sales presentation that has to win a million-dollar client. That's where I come in.
I take your technical content and turn it into clear, compelling, professional slides. No fluffy "design jargon." Just structure, clarity, and results.
"Really fast turnaround, great designs, took feedback incredibly well. I'm thrilled with my results!" β Stephanie Nelson (verified client)
Want to See My Work?
Check out my portfolio and client testimonials here:
πhttps://jeslinmathews.com/
I also offer a free design consultation, no pressure, just a conversation about your next presentation.
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