Creators introduce 12 Claude prompts for deck hooks, scripts, and visual briefs
A creator thread packaged 12 Claude prompts for presentation blueprints, hooks, slide scripts, visual direction, objections, and rehearsal. Use them to structure pitch decks, treatments, and client meetings when delivery matters as much as the slides.

TL;DR
- A creator thread packaged 12 Claude prompts into a presentation workflow, framing the tool as a fast way to go from blank page to boardroom-ready deck structure, scripts, and rehearsal prep launch thread.
- The set starts with structure: a presentation blueprint, a tension-first opening slide, and a slide-by-slide script prompt that asks Claude for headlines, spoken lines, and transitions blueprint prompt hook slide.
- Mid-deck prompts focus on sharpening the argument, with a simplification pass, a data-storytelling prompt, an objection slide, and a one-slide executive summary simplify pass data story.
- The back half covers delivery and polish: a 3-act story rewrite, competitor framing, a closing slide, a visual direction brief with hex codes and font pairings, and a rehearsal stress test with hostile Q&A story arc visual brief stress test.
What the pack covers
The thread is less a product launch than a ready-made prompt library for anyone building pitch decks, treatments, sales narratives, or client presentations. Its strongest move is sequencing: first Claude defines the objective, audience, key message, and slide flow; then it writes the opening hook and full spoken script; then it trims the story down to three core ideas using the creator’s “Brutal Simplification Engine” blueprint prompt simplify pass.
From there, the prompts break deck work into specific presentation jobs instead of one vague “make my slides better” request. The pack includes a data-slide storyteller, an objection-killer slide, and an executive-summary slide that compresses the whole case into problem, solution, proof, and ask data story exec summary.
How the prompts map to a deck workflow
For creatives, the useful pattern is that the prompts span all three layers of a presentation: narrative, visuals, and delivery. The narrative layer gets a 3-act rewrite for slide order and stakes, plus a competitor-comparison prompt built to make the switch or decision feel inevitable story arc comparison slide.
The visual layer is unusually concrete. The visual-direction brief asks Claude for color palette hex codes, font pairings, layout rules, image style, and a recurring visual metaphor tailored to Canva, PowerPoint, or Google Slides visual brief. The delivery layer closes the loop with a final-slide negotiation prompt and a rehearsal stress test that simulates skeptical investors, hostile board members, and distracted executives, producing two-sentence answers for the hardest audience questions closing slide.