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We need to kill the bloated 100 slide ‘Frankendeck’

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A silent productivity killer is operating in every enterprise without detection, causing harm unnoticed: the 100-page slide deck, which I call the “Frankendeck.” It is a bloated, decentralized collection of charts, bullet points, and appendices emailed to the C-suite 48 hours before a critical meeting.

As a presentation strategist working with Fortune 500s and scaling startups to improve executive communication, I see this pattern everywhere. Corporate teams tirelessly gather data, create graphs, charts, and tables, only to paste them into slides and call it a board meeting deck. But we confuse “data-dumping” with “strategic storytelling.” In doing so, we impose a massive “cognitive tax” on our leadership teams.

The Anxiety Dump

To fix the 100-page slide deck, we first have to understand why it exists. If we dig a little into the surface, we can figure out that it is rarely born out of malice or a genuine desire to be thorough. It is born out of anxiety.

When middle managers or startup founders present to a high-level buying committee or a board of directors, they are terrified of being asked a question they cannot answer. To insulate themselves from criticism, they pack every conceivable metric, background detail, and edge-case scenario into the presentation.

The deck ceases to be a tool for driving a decision. Instead, it becomes a defensive shield for the team and burdensome for leadership. It is an “anxiety dump” that effectively says to the executive: “I don’t know exactly what you care about, so I am going to give you everything and force you to figure it out.”

Our research shows over the past decade, executives’ review time for decks has remained stable at 3-4 hours, but the number of slides has increased 40%.

The Cognitive Tax

The problem with this defensive strategy is that more information does not equal better decision-making. In fact, it actively degrades it.

When an executive is forced to hunt for the core insight across 40 slides of raw data, their cognitive load spikes. By the time the presenter actually gets to the “ask”—the budget approval, the strategic pivot, the new hire—the executive is fatigued, frustrated, and out of time.

The most common result of a 100-page deck isn’t a “yes” or a “no.” It is a delay. It is the dreaded phrase: “Let’s take this offline and circle back next week.” That delay is the cognitive tax, and it is costing enterprise companies millions in lost momentum.

Zero-Based Reporting

If we want to reclaim our decision-making velocity, we have to refactor how we present information to leadership. This requires a ruthless framework I call “Zero-Based Reporting.”

Like zero-based budgeting requires a manager to justify every dollar from scratch, zero-based reporting requires a presenter to justify every single slide.

You do not start with last month’s 50-page template and update the numbers. You start with zero slides. You only add a slide if its removal would fundamentally break the logic of the decision you are asking the executive to make.

So if a slide is just “good to know,” it gets cut. If a slide is there to prove how hard your team worked, it gets cut.

Insight First Architecture

Once you have stripped the presentation down to its absolute essentials, you must restructure the narrative. Why is it important?  Most corporate presentations are built like a mystery novel: they start with the background, outline the methodology, present the data, and finally reveal the conclusion on slide 45.

Executives hate mystery novels. They want the spoiler on page one. Yes, you start with conclusion and provide its data to go through if required.

The first slide of any executive presentation should explicitly state the insight, the stakes, and the requested action. Every subsequent slide exists solely to provide the targeted evidence necessary to validate that opening claim.

When you flip the architecture, a profound shift happens in the boardroom. The presenter is no longer a tour guide dragging the audience through a maze of data; they become a strategic advisor, facilitating a high-level conversation. Meetings that used to take 60 minutes are routinely condensed into 15 minutes of presentation and 10 minutes of targeted Q&A.

The Fear of the Unanswered Question

But what happens when an executive asks a question you don’t have the answer for? And what if the board thinks you are barking up the wrong tree entirely?

These are valid fears, but a 100-page deck is the wrong cure.

First, the 85 pages of secondary data do not have to disappear—they belong in appendix slides.The granular data is there if a highly technical question arises, but it never sees the projector screen unless explicitly requested.

Second, if an executive fundamentally disagrees with your premise, an insight-led deck exposes that misalignment in the first five minutes. This is a feature, not a bug. It allows the room to “fail faster.” Instead of forcing stakeholders to sit through 40 more slides of defensive data while they quietly disagree, you spend the remaining 25 minutes pivoting and debating the actual business problem.

Ultimately, addressing deck anxiety necessitates a cultural transformation. We should promote the practice of confidently stating, “All supporting data has been included in the appendix slides and can be provided to the board upon request, should there be interest in reviewing the underlying information for these conclusions.”  

Banning the Frankendeck

Corporate agility isn’t just about shipping code faster or flattening management structures. It is about how quickly a group of intelligent people can align on a complex truth and execute a decision.

As long as we allow anxiety-driven Frankendecks to dominate our meeting culture, true agility will remain out of reach. It is time for leadership to set a new boundary: ban the bloat, demand the insight, and stop taxing the cognition of the room.

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