Nonprofit Presentation Templates
Nonprofits need to tell compelling stories with limited resources. These templates help you present professionally without the budget for design agencies or expensive software subscriptions.
Nonprofits present to survive
Donors, boards, grantmakers, volunteers, partners — nonprofits are constantly making the case for support. Every presentation is a chance to advance the mission. Or lose momentum.
What nonprofits present
- Fundraising pitches — the case for support, impact stories, specific asks
- Grant proposals — program design, outcomes, budget, sustainability
- Board reports — financials, programs, development, governance
- Impact presentations — outcomes, stories, what's working
- Volunteer orientations — mission, programs, how to help
- Annual reports — year in review, financials, donor recognition
Mission-first, always
The best nonprofit presentations lead with impact, not with the organization. What changed because you exist? Who was helped? Start there.
Professional on a budget
Nonprofits often can't afford design agencies or premium software. These templates give you professional quality at a price that respects your budget. One-time purchase, use forever.
Build Presentations That Win
17 professionally designed templates. No design skills required. Just fill in your content and present.
Get nonprofit templates →Frequently Asked Questions
Are these affordable for nonprofits?
Yes. One-time purchase of $29, use forever. No subscriptions, no per-seat licensing. Most nonprofit budgets can handle that.
Can I use these for grant proposals?
Yes. The customer proposal template adapts well for grants — program overview, outcomes, budget, organizational capacity.
How do I present impact effectively?
Lead with stories, support with data. "Maria got her GED because of your support" lands harder than "We served 500 clients." Our case study template is built for impact storytelling.
Do you have templates for board presentations?
Yes. The board meeting template covers everything nonprofit boards expect — financials, program updates, development progress, governance matters.