Narrative-first skill for building executive-quality strategy presentations. Operates in two modes: Narrative Mode for story structure, sequencing, and executive copy; and Elevation Mode for translating systems-level or technical content into C-Suite-ready business language using a structured workflow (value stream framing, naming conventions, time horizons, traceability). Hands off to metis-pptx for brand-compliant .pptx generation. Triggers on executive storytelling, narrative arc, strategic framing, or technical-to-executive translation requests.
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This skill governs how to construct the narrative, select slide structures,
and write executive-quality content. Actual .pptx file generation is
handled by the metis-pptx skill — once the story is locked, this skill
produces a structured build brief that metis-pptx can execute directly.
Scope boundary — read this first:
This skill produces narrative content and a build brief. It does NOT
produce .pptx files, Python scripts, or any slide-generation code.
The .pptx build is owned entirely by the metis-pptx skill. When
this skill's workflow is complete, stop and present the build brief to
the user. Do not write python-pptx code, do not import pptx, do
not create build_deck.py, and do not attempt to generate a
PowerPoint file. If the user asks for the actual deck, tell them to
invoke metis-pptx with the build brief — or offer to do so on their
behalf by calling that skill. The division is: this skill decides
what to say; metis-pptx decides how to render it.
What you get from this skill:
.pptx generationThe agent should not invent the story from scratch. It should:
Before drafting any slide, identify and review the relevant source materials. The user's ask is rarely self-contained — real guidance lives in:
If source material is referenced indirectly, look for it rather than defaulting to generic content.
A style guide does not override facts. Content sources do not invent new slide architectures when a reusable one already exists.
Every slide has a single job. Before drafting, name it explicitly. Anything that belongs to another section gets cut or moved — not squeezed in.
Always search the shared asset library for an existing layout before creating a new one. The library contains: slide skeletons, roadmap layouts, comparison pages, phased transformation pages, business-case structures, summary pages, KPI cards, and framework visuals.
Shared asset library:
G:\Shared drives\Knowledge Management\New Brand Assets\PPT Assets\Metis_Timesaver Slides.pptxhttps://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1KtfpTOi0CTdySmzN4usaiHJJhXF63KoS/editMap the user's outline onto the closest fitting structure from this deck before writing any slide copy.
Content exists at five layers. The goal in any executive-facing output is always to reach Layer 1. This model is the diagnostic for mode detection and the reference for naming, framing, and quality checks throughout the workflow.
| Layer | Description | Example | What to do with it |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 — Business Outcome | What it means for revenue, margin, or customers | "$X margin improvement" | Lead with this |
| 2 — Capability Name | What the capability does, in plain language | "Intelligent Operations" | Use as the primary label |
| 3 — Program / Solution | The named digital program or initiative | "Connected Manufacturing Program" | Supporting context only |
| 4 — Product / Tool | The named AI tool or product | "[Vendor product name]" | Internal reference; remove from exec slides |
| 5 — System / Technical | The underlying technology stack | "[Acronym], [Acronym], [Acronym]" | Never appears in C-Suite materials |
C-Suite audiences live at Layers 1 and 2. They do not need Layers 4 and 5. Layer 3 may appear as supporting context but should never lead.
The executive test for every piece of content: "Can the most senior leader in the room not know what [system name] means and still understand why this matters?" If the answer is no, the content is not yet at the right level.
After reading source materials (during the Context Retrieval Protocol), assess where the content sits on the Five-Layer Model:
Elevation Mode — activates when source material is dominated by system names, acronyms, product/vendor names, technical architecture language, or when capabilities are described by what they are rather than what they do for the business. If most content sits at Layers 3–5, elevation is needed. State this to the user:
"The source material is primarily at the systems and product level — I'll run the elevation workflow to translate it to executive language before building the narrative."
Narrative Mode — activates when the content is already at Layers 1–2 and the user's challenge is sequencing, emphasis, or story structure. State this to the user:
"This content is already at the business outcome level — I'll move straight to narrative structure and slide sequencing."
If the assessment is wrong, the user corrects and the agent adjusts. No extra decision point, no friction.
Elevation Mode flow: Client Setup (4 Anchors) → E1: Audit → E2: Separate → E3: Value Stream Map → E4: Name → E5: Time Horizons → E6: Headline → then into the Required Workflow (Steps 1–10) → Completeness Check → So What Test → Build Brief → metis-pptx
Narrative Mode flow (unchanged): Context Retrieval → Steps 1–10 → Quality Bar → Build Brief → metis-pptx
At the start of every session, actively locate the relevant context. Do not assume context from a previous session carries over.
Read any files the user has uploaded or referenced first — briefs, outlines, transcripts, models, decks. These are the most authoritative.
Before building any slide, confirm which template to use. Templates change per client and engagement.
Ask:
"Please share the PowerPoint template for this project — a file upload, Google Slides link, or file path. I'll use it to govern layout, colors, fonts, and slide density for everything I build."
If the user doesn't provide one, fall back to the shared asset library — but flag this rather than defaulting silently.
When a template is provided:
For slide structure and reusable frameworks, consult:
G:\Shared drives\Knowledge Management\New Brand Assets\PPT Assets\Metis_Timesaver Slides.pptx
This is the source of truth for layouts and visual structure. Use it before inventing a new slide architecture.
If no relevant context can be found, tell the user specifically what is missing and ask for it. Never silently proceed with assumed or cached context.
When the user invokes /executive-slide-builder or signals a narrative
or elevation challenge, start here (if not already provided):
Template: "Please share the PowerPoint template for this project (file, link, or path). If you don't have one, I'll use the shared asset library."
Project context: "What's the client or project name, and who is the audience for this section?"
Read source materials and detect mode. After receiving context, read all source documents and assess the Five-Layer Model to determine Narrative Mode or Elevation Mode. State the mode to the user.
Wait for context before building a content map or drafting any slide. The template governs everything visual; the audience governs everything about emphasis and tone.
This section runs only in Elevation Mode. In Narrative Mode, skip directly to the Required Workflow.
The purpose of elevation is to translate source material written at the systems or technical level into executive-ready content that leads with business value, not technology. It is client-agnostic — the four anchors make it specific to each organization.
Complete these before running any elevation step. Everything downstream depends on getting these right. Populate them from source documents, stakeholder interviews, or existing strategy materials.
For detailed templates and formats for each anchor, read
references/elevation-reference.md, Section 1.
Anchor 1 — The Value Stream Frame How the organization describes the journey from winning a customer to keeping one. Find their version — it is almost always in a strategy deck, annual operating plan, or investor presentation. Document the zones, what each covers, and the primary metric for each. Cross-cutting capabilities (platforms, data infrastructure, AI foundations) span all zones and sit as foundation, not inside any single column.
Anchor 2 — The Portfolio Proof Point The single most powerful number: the total return on the technology portfolio — not any one system. This is the headline that gives every capability claim credibility. Document as: [Total benefit] from [portfolio/program name] at [total investment]. If no proof point exists yet, identify the closest proxy.
Anchor 3 — The Naming Convention The implicit naming style for digital and AI capabilities. Pick one or two patterns that fit the client's voice and apply them consistently. Inconsistent naming across slides is the most visible signal that content is not yet executive-ready. See the reference file for common naming patterns.
Anchor 4 — The Time Horizon Labels The client's language for investment stages. Executives think in horizons, not quarters. Find these from their STRAP, AOP, or board materials. If the client already uses specific horizon language, use their words exactly. See the reference file for common formats.
Read all source documents and extract into a working inventory. Do not write anything yet.
What to collect:
Flag immediately:
The gaps are often as important as the content. An empty column on an executive slide asks a question the audience will ask out loud.
For every item in the inventory, write two sentences:
Only the business sentence will appear in C-Suite materials. The technical sentence is the internal reference for validating accuracy.
If the business sentence cannot be written, the capability is not yet ready for executive consumption. Return to source documents or flag for a stakeholder conversation.
Map every capability to a position in the client's value stream (Anchor 1).
For each capability ask:
Cross-cutting capabilities span all zones and sit below as a foundation layer, not inside any single column.
Apply the naming convention (Anchor 3) consistently.
Rules:
Using the client's horizon labels (Anchor 4), assign every capability to the correct time window.
Critical discipline: never conflate deployment with value realization. These are different events, often one year apart. Showing both — correctly labeled — demonstrates that the author understands the difference between activity and outcome.
Before arranging capability content on a slide, write two things:
The headline number (from Anchor 2) — the total portfolio return. A single aggregated figure contextualizes every individual capability below it. Without it, the slide is a list. With it, the slide is a business case.
The framing sentence — one sentence that tells the executive what the slide is arguing, not just what it contains.
Customize the framing sentence to the client's strategic priorities.
After completing E6, proceed to the Required Workflow (Step 1) with the elevated content as input.
Before drafting anything, answer:
If an outline exists, it governs section flow unless stakeholder feedback explicitly overrides it.
Actively find and review: brief, business case, outline, transcript or feedback notes, models or spreadsheets for numeric support, prior slides, reusable frameworks from the asset library.
If context is incomplete, look for it in connected files or referenced folders before asking the user.
In Elevation Mode, the translation table from pre-processing serves as the primary content input for this step.
Extract from the source material:
Use the content map to determine hierarchy and visual prominence before touching any slide structure.
In Elevation Mode, the content map should already be at Layers 1–2. If any Layer 3–5 content remains, send it back through Steps E2–E4 before proceeding.
Match the content map to a slide form from the asset library:
Never force all content into the same format. Pick the structure that serves the message.
Write concisely, quantitatively, in active voice, easy to skim.
Rules:
If a framework or chart carries the argument, reduce surrounding text. Bullets should clarify: what is in focus, why it matters, what changes from one phase or slide to the next.
Do not duplicate what the visual already shows.
All metrics, projections, and quantitative claims must trace back to source material — never invented. If a number is uncertain, flag it rather than guess.
When a final visual is not ready, create the slide shell with a clearly labeled placeholder and stable surrounding copy. This lets the deck move forward without waiting on the visual.
Before drafting individual slides, establish the narrative sequence:
Frame the issue → Explain the model → Show the roadmap → Show the economics → Summarize for executives
Each slide should build on the one before it. If the sequence doesn't hold up without a slide, that's a sign it shouldn't exist.
This is the final output of the executive-slide-builder skill. Once the narrative structure and content are confirmed, produce a structured build brief and present it to the user. This is where this skill's job ends.
Do not proceed to write Python code, generate .pptx files, or invoke
python-pptx. The build brief is the deliverable. If the user wants
the actual PowerPoint file, tell them:
"The narrative and build brief are ready. Want me to hand this off to metis-pptx to generate the deck?"
If they say yes, invoke the metis-pptx skill with the build brief.
Do not attempt to replicate what metis-pptx does — it owns brand
colors, fonts, layout grids, component code, template files, and the
Python build script.
Build brief format:
DECK TYPE: [proposal / in-project deliverable / other]
TEMPLATE: [file path or "shared asset library fallback"]
SLIDE 1
Title: [slide title]
Job: [one sentence — what this slide must do]
Layout: [layout name from asset library]
Component: [component name from metis-pptx design system, e.g., "Phased Approach", "KPI Summary"]
Content:
- [bullet 1]
- [bullet 2]
Placeholder: [describe any visual placeholder, or "none"]
SLIDE 2
...On revision passes: shorten, sharpen, simplify, improve emphasis, reduce clutter — but preserve the architecture if it is working.
Rebuild from scratch only if the existing structure is fundamentally wrong.
Good output:
Weak output:
Run these four checks before finalizing any elevated output:
Coverage: Does every zone in the client's value stream have at least one capability mapped? If a zone is empty, is that a genuine gap (name it, flag it) or a timing issue (label it "in roadmap")?
Outcome: Does every capability have a stated business outcome? Are outcomes attached to the realization year, not the deployment year? Do individual outcomes add up directionally to the headline number?
Naming: Are all capability names consistent across every slide? Does any name require technical knowledge to understand? Do all names follow the convention from Anchor 3?
Status: Can an executive tell, at a glance, what is live versus building versus aspirational? Is the organization's track record visible — not just its roadmap?
Read the final content as if you are the most senior leader in the room, seeing it for the first time. Ask for every element:
Any element that fails all four questions belongs in a backup or appendix slide, not the executive version.
Every claim in an executive-facing output must be traceable to a source. This protects the author when a number is challenged, establishes the difference between stated and inferred claims, and ensures source document updates can be reflected systematically.
Claim types — use precisely:
Traceability check (add to Completeness Check):
For detailed traceability formats (claim-level, translation-level,
gap-level), read references/elevation-reference.md, Section 3.
These appear regardless of client or industry. Watch for them in any mode, but they are especially prevalent when elevating technical content.
| Failure Mode | What It Looks Like | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| System-led narrative | Slide organized by tool or product name | Reorganize by business capability; systems become footnotes |
| Outcome-free capability | Named capability with no metric or result | Attach a target, even directional: "reduces cycle time" |
| Conflated timelines | Deployment labeled as value realization | Separate build year from realization year; show both |
| Inconsistent naming | Same capability called two different things | Pick one name; apply everywhere |
| Unexplained gaps | A value stream zone with nothing mapped | Flag explicitly or label "in roadmap" |
| Over-promising | End-state vision in a year only foundations exist | Name to what is actually delivering; save the vision |
| Buried proof point | Portfolio ROI in appendix or absent | The portfolio return belongs in the headline |
| Alphabet soup | Executive slide full of internal acronyms | Acceptable only in operational materials, never C-Suite |
| Technology as the hero | Narrative leads with system, not business gain | Outcome first, technology in support |
| Premature precision | Specific dollars on early-build capabilities | Use ranges or directional language until validated |
When the user says "make it punchier," "less salesy," "more executive," "keep the layout, change the wording," or "this belongs in another section":
Concise executive prose: short claims, active voice, low jargon, quantitative where possible, easy to skim. Prefer tight bullets over explanatory paragraphs. Let charts and frameworks carry the argument — use text only to clarify what matters, what changes, and why.