What the Presentation Maker actually does
You describe a topic in a sentence or two — what the deck is about, who it is for, and the tone you want. PDFBEAR researches that topic on the web, drafts an outline, writes the key points for each slide, and lays everything out with titles, a readable bullet hierarchy and a consistent color theme. A minute or so later you get a finished 16:9 PDF you can present, email or print.
It is built for the part of the job everyone dreads: the blank first slide. Instead of staring at an empty file, you start from a structured, designed draft and spend your time refining rather than building.
How to write a brief that gets a good deck
The quality of the deck follows the quality of your brief. A vague prompt gives a generic deck; a specific one gives a focused, useful one. Three things make the biggest difference:
- Be specific about the topic. "A 10-minute pitch for a solar-powered home battery aimed at early-stage investors" beats "clean energy".
- Name the audience. The same topic is framed very differently for executives, students or new hires.
- Set the tone. Professional, friendly, academic, persuasive or technical — the wording shifts to match.
Choosing how many slides
A single slider sets the length, from a tight summary to a longer walkthrough. Pick the number that matches your speaking time rather than the maximum — a focused deck almost always lands better than a padded one. The AI structures the whole narrative to fit the count you choose, so a few slides get a clean arc and a longer deck gets room to breathe.
Where it fits with your other documents
The Presentation Maker pairs naturally with the rest of PDFBEAR. If your source material is a long report, Summarize PDF can distil it first so you know what the deck should cover, and Chat with PDF lets you interrogate a document for the points worth presenting. Finished decks are saved to your file manager, so they stay alongside the rest of your work.