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Show Me the Money (slide)

Not ten ideas.
Not a long list of takeaways.

One.

The slide.
The insight.
The shift in perspective.
The moment where the audience leans in and thinks, “Ah. That’s it.”

And yet… most presenters hide it.

They bury it halfway through.
They rush past it in 30 seconds.
Or they surround it with so much context, data, and explanation that it never actually lands.

So the audience leaves with… everything.
Which means they remember nothing.

Find the Moment

Before you touch your slides, ask yourself:

  • What’s the one idea worth the entire presentation?
  • If they remember only one thing, what should it be?
  • What decision should this idea help them make?

If you can’t answer that clearly, the audience won’t find it either.

When Should You Reveal It?

This is where most people get it wrong.

There isn’t one right answer—but there is a right choice for your situation.

1. Early (within the first few minutes)

Use this when:

  • You’re speaking to senior leaders
  • Time is tight
  • The audience wants clarity fast

Lead with it.

“Here’s the decision in front of you…”
“Here’s what this means for your business…”

Then spend the rest of the presentation reinforcing and proving it.

2. Midway (after context builds tension)

Use this when:

  • You need buy-in
  • The idea challenges assumptions
  • The audience needs to feel the problem first

Build the case. Create tension. Then release it.

“So given all of this… here’s the shift we need to make.”

3. Late (as a reveal)

Use this when:

  • You’re telling a story
  • You want surprise or emotional impact
  • The journey matters as much as the answer

In this case, the idea is the payoff.

But be careful—if you wait too long without direction, you lose them.

Give It Space to Land

This is the part almost no one does.

They finally get to the big idea…
…and then immediately move to the next slide.

Don’t.

When you hit your moment:

  • Pause
  • Let the silence do some work
  • Repeat it in simpler language
  • Show it visually
  • Anchor it with a story or example

If it matters, it deserves time.

Add Drama (Yes, Really)

Not theatrics. Not performance for the sake of it.

But intentional emphasis.

Because if everything is delivered the same way, nothing stands out.

You can create drama through:

  • Contrast
    “We thought this was the problem. It’s not.”
  • Pacing
    Slow down at the moment that matters most
  • Visual simplicity
    One clean slide instead of five busy ones
  • Physical presence
    Step forward. Stop moving. Make eye contact.
  • Voice
    Lower. Slower. More deliberate.

This is the moment your audience has been waiting for.
Treat it like it matters.

Build Around It

Once you know your “one thing,” everything else becomes easier.

Keep what supports it.
Cut what doesn’t.

You don’t need more content.
You need more intention.

A Final Test

Before you present, ask:

  • How long does it take me to get to the idea?
  • Do I make it unmistakably clear?
  • Do I give it enough space?
  • Do I deliver it in a way people can feel?

Because that one moment?

That’s the part they’ll remember.
That’s the part they’ll repeat.
That’s the part that drives action.

Everything else is just support.

You’ll improve. You’ll feel
different. You’ll enjoy it.

And you’ll finally enjoy presenting in a way
that feels natural, confident, and true to you.

vineta Ready to feel
confident on stage?

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