Webinar Presentation Template
Webinars compete with email, Slack, and every other tab open on your attendee's screen. Your slides need to earn attention every 30 seconds. This template is built for that reality.
The attention problem
In-person, people stay because leaving is awkward. On a webinar, they just close the tab. No sound, no one notices.
That means every slide needs to justify staying. Value up front. Visual variety. Engagement breaks. And content chunked so people feel like they're making progress.
Webinar-specific structure
- Hook — value proposition in the first 60 seconds
- Agenda with promise — what they'll learn and be able to do
- Housekeeping — quick logistics (Q&A, recording, handouts)
- Core content — 3-5 distinct sections with clear transitions
- Interactive breaks — polls, questions, every 10-15 minutes
- Case study — concrete application of the concepts
- Key takeaways — summarize the value delivered
- Call to action — one clear next step
- Q&A slide — designed to leave up during discussion
Screen-share ready
HTML presentations look crisp at any resolution. No worrying about aspect ratios or font rendering. Works on Zoom, Teams, Meet, or any webinar platform.
The replay is where the value lives
Most webinar views come from the replay, not live. This template works as a standalone resource — attendees can review without the live presentation. Great for gated content libraries.
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Create your webinar deck →Frequently Asked Questions
How long should a webinar be?
45-60 minutes including Q&A. Engagement drops hard after an hour. For more content, do a series instead of one marathon session.
Should I show my face?
Yes — for intro, transitions, and Q&A at minimum. Human presence builds trust. But let slides carry the content during teaching sections.
How many slides for a 45-minute webinar?
30-50. Webinars move faster than in-person — roughly one slide per minute. Visual variety keeps people watching.
What makes webinars engaging?
Value in the first 2 minutes. Frequent visual changes. Interactive elements. Real examples and stories. A clear CTA so people know what to do next.