How to Create and Use Design Templates

In this epic PowerPoint tutorial, you'll learn how to create a PowerPoint template from scratch.

What is a PowerPoint template and why do you need one?

In short, a template is a set of pre-built slide layouts and set formatting to quickly create brand consistent and professional PowerPoint presentations.

Below is an example of the properly built template you'll learn how to build in this tutorial.

Example of a custom PowerPoint template in the Slide Master View.

Time Saving Tip:You can save yourself a bunch of time by first buying a Professional PowerPoint template and then tweaking it to meet your needs.

To see the 4 best places I recommend finding professional PowerPoint templates online (and why I like them), read my guide here.

If you and your team make lots of PowerPoint presentations, a properly built template can save you THOUSANDS of hours building and editing your slides (no joke).

On the flip side, if your template is broken (which many are), it can make working in PowerPoint a nightmare.

Chances are that if your current PowerPoint template is difficult to work with, you are using a broken template. This tutorial will help you fix it (fast).

To learn how to create your own custom PowerPoint theme (that you can use with your template), read my guide here.

Part #1. Creating your PowerPoint template slide backgrounds

  • In this first part of this how to create a PowerPoint template tutorial, you'll discover how to create your own slide backgrounds including how to:
  • Build the overall frame for your template
  • Use and navigate the PowerPoint Slide Master (and how the Parent and Child
  • Slides work together).
  • Use the different paste special options.
  • Add a pattern background to your slide.
  • Crop images to fit your entire slide background.
  • Add a radial gradient fill to a shape with transparency.
  • Add new guides and move them around on your Slide Master.
  • And more!

Additional Template Resources

If you're not 100% clear on what exactly a PowerPoint template is, read my guide here.

For a list of questions, I recommend asking yourself before you build your template, read my guide here.

1. Set the colors for your PowerPoint template

The first step is to select a color scheme for your template. You can easily select that in the Design tab, under Variants.

Selecting the custom colors you want to use in your PowerPoint template

To choose a color scheme for your PowerPoint template, simply:

  1. Navigate to the Design tab.
  2. Open the More variants options.
  3. Select the Colors options.
  4. Click the color scheme you want to use.

If you want to use a color scheme that isn't listed here, you can create your own. To learn how to create your own custom PowerPoint theme, including colors, font combinations, and shape effects, read my guide here.

Selecting a new PowerPoint theme changes all the default colors you have to work with inside your presentation (allowing you to maintain consistent formatting throughout).

Your theme colors will be reflected in all of your color dropdowns as pictured below (with pre-populated variants for those colors).

The default Office PowerPoint theme colors vs. a custom PowerPoint theme colors you can use for your PowerPoint template

Note:Selecting your own custom theme colors will not replace the standard colors at the bottom of your formatting dropdowns. You cannot change these Standard Colors

2. Set the fonts for your template

To navigate to your PowerPoint Slide Master, simply:

  1. Navigate to the View tab.
  2. Select the Slide Master command in your ribbon.

The next step is to select a font pairing for your template, which you can also do in the Design tab, under Variants.

NOTE: This is one of my top PowerPoint template tips and tricks and one you don't want to mess up. To see my 9 other top tips and tricks for your PowerPoint templates, read my guide here.

To choose a new font combination for your PowerPoint template, simply:

  1. Navigate to the Design tab.
  2. Open the More variants options.
  3. Select the Fonts options.
  4. Click the font combination you want to use.

After selecting your new font combination, all the placeholders throughout your presentation will automatically update to your new font styles.

This kind of macro level formatting is one of the major benefits of creating a PowerPoint template. You set your formatting in one place, and it updates throughout your entire presentation (amazing!)

Once you have your colors and fonts selected, you are ready to create the framework. This includes your slide backgrounds and other common design elements you will want in your presentation.

3. Navigate to the Slide Master View

In order to properly create the slide backgrounds for your template, you'll need to create your presentation framework on your Slide Master.

Going from the Normal View to the Slide Master View of your template.

To choose a new font combination for your PowerPoint template, simply:

  1. Navigate to the View tab.
  2. Select the Slide Master command in your ribbon.
    Inside your Slide Master, you'll see two sets of slides on the left as pictured below:

#1. The Parent Slide (the bigger slide) is where you want to make the macro-level edits that you want to see reflected on the majority of your slides. For example, this is likely where you will want to see things like your company logo or any corporate branding design element.

#2. The Child Slides (the smaller slides) are where you want to customize the individual layouts away from your Parent Slide. For example, your title slides and divider slides may look quite different from the majority of your slides, which is why they'll have their own Child Slides.

Picture of the Parent slide vs the child slides in your slide master

Warning: Although you can delete the Child Slide layouts within a presentation, I don't recommend it.

As Julie Terberg and Echo Swinford point out in their book on templates, "Building PowerPoint Templates Step by Step with the Experts", if you delete these Child Slide layouts, you are likely to encounter formatting issues and errors when copying and pasting between your templates down the road.

So unless you are 300% sure you are never going to use these layouts (and nobody on the planet is ever going to send you a slide deck with one of these layouts), I don't recommend deleting them.

4. Customize your Parent Slide background

Now that you are on your Slide Master, you'll want to start by formatting your Parent Slide.

That's because the formatting that you set on your Parent Slide will affect all of the other slide backgrounds within your template.

So unless you are 300% sure you are never going to use these layouts (and nobody on the planet is ever going to send you a slide deck with one of these layouts), I don't recommend deleting them.

A. Choose your PowerPoint template's background

Next, you are going to format your slide background with the various design elements you want for all your slides.

In the example below, I've chosen a pattern for my template that is minimalist and modern. You can download and insert any picture or pattern you want to use as your slide background image.

To learn more about creating your own PowerPoint backgrounds, see our guide here.

Here is the pasted in image to use as a slide background for your template

B. Crop to aspect ratio

To crop an image to the 16:9 Aspect Ratio, follow the steps listed above.

If you are using a picture for your slide background, the fastest way to make it fit on your slide is to crop it using the Aspect Ratio Crop tool. To do that, simply:

  1. Select the background image you have pasted on the slide
  2. Navigate to the Format tab.
  3. Open the Crop dropdown.
  4. Open the Aspect Ratio options.
  5. Choose your aspect ratio. In the picture above I chose 16:9 for widescreen to match my slide dimensions (another common aspect ratio is 4:3 for printed slides).
  6. Adjust your photo within the frame.
  7. Hit the Crop command again or hit Esc on your keyboard.
  8. This will make resizing the image to fit your template much easier without having to worry about warping the image.

To learn more about the different cropping options in PowerPoint, see our guide here.

C. Fill out your slide background

To make the image fit your entire slide space, there are two options.

You can simply drag the image manually to fit the entire slide. Just make sure you hold the Shift key while you enlarge your image so you don't accidentally warp your picture.

In the Picture Tools format tab shape width input box, type 13.33

You can alternatively resize your image as such:

  1. In the Shape Width box, enter 13.33 and hit Enter on your keyboard.
  2. Drag the image in the center to fit the entire slide.

NOTE: In my example in the video above, I actually duplicate the background image so that I have 2 smaller images that I place next to each other, in order to make the pattern smaller.

And then I make sure to group the two images together so that they function as a unit. To learn all about grouping in PowerPoint, check out our guide here.

The final example of the background shown below is the result of that.

And because the image is set on the Parent Slide like this, by default it will show up as all of the slide backgrounds within my PowerPoint template.

Example of the Parent slide background showing up on all of the child slide layouts in the slide master view

After resizing your background image, you will want to send it back behind the other Parent Slide elements.

To send the image backward, simply:

  1. Select your background image.
  2. Navigate to the Picture Tools Format tab.
  3. Click on the Send Backward dropdown.
  4. From the dropdown menu, select Send to Back.

This will send the background behind the text as shown in the picture below. This makes all the Parent Slide content placeholders visible again on your slide.

Example of text not clearly visible against the slide background image for my template

D. Create a semi-transparent gradient layer

With the slide background set for my PowerPoint template, I'm additionally going to make the slide background less visible by adding a semi-transparent layer.

That's because as you can see in the picture below, the text is not crystal clear against the background image I used. This will make it hard for people to read my slides during a presentation.

In the steps below, I will use the old method (non-Office 365 subscription) for creating a transparent background in PowerPoint. If you have an Office 365 subscription, you can see the brand new way to create a transparent image, see our guide here for details.

Step #1: Insert and format a rectangle

Inserting a rectangle to cover the entirety of the image you want to make transparent.

To insert and format a rectangle in PowerPoint, simply:

  1. From the Insert Tab, click on the Shapes gallery, and select a rectangle (mine is on my QAT).
  2. Draw in the rectangle so that it covers your entire background image (for this to work, your rectangle needs to be the same exact size as the image you want to make transparent).
  3. Remove its outline by going to the Shape Outline dropdown and selecting No Outline.

Step #2: Add a gradient fill

Right-click your rectangle and select Format Shape to get at your gradient options

With the rectangle still selected, make the following adjustments:

  1. Select your Rectangle and click Format Shape to open the Format Shape dialog box. Opening the Format Shape dialog box gives you a wide variety of formatting options you can use to format your shape backgrounds for your template.
  2. Select the Gradient fill.
  3. In the Type dropdown, select Radial.
  4. For the Direction, select the "from center" option (in the middle).
  5. In the Gradient stops bar, select the first gradient stop, and from the fill Color dropdown, select white. Under Transparency, enter 5 %. So that it almost looks 100% white in the middle.
  6. Next, select the second gradient bar and drag it to the right. From the fill Color dropdown, select white. For Transparency, enter 10%.
  7. Then, select the third gradient bar and drag it to the right. From the fill Color dropdown, select white. For Transparency, enter 10%.
  8. Finally, select the last gradient bar and drag it to the right. From the fill Color dropdown, select white. For Transparency, enter 60%.

Using the gradient fill options described above, your rectangle should look like the one above, with some of your text bleeding through the rectangle.

Adjusting the gradient settings for our shape.

For each gradient stop of your shape, adjust the color, position and transparency.

Close the Format Shape pane and you're all set with your gradient formatting.

As a final step, right-click your gradient rectangle and select Send to Back and then Send Backward enough times (5 times) so that it sits behind your placeholders but on top of your pattern background image.

Example of the gradient rectangle on top of the slide background image, making the text easier to read

5. Add a slide background design element

Inserting a white shape with no outline over the slide.

As a next step, I'm going to add a colored rectangle down the right-side of my slide as a nice design element. To do that, simply:

  1. Navigate to theInsert tab and select theShapes dropdown.
  2. Select aRectangle and draw it on the right-hand side of your slide. Make sure to place it on the edge of your slide.
  3. Select No Outline (also make sure you are adding this to your Parent Slide and not a Child Slide).

At this stage, notice that because we properly added these design elements to our Parent Slide, they automatically populate on all the Child Slides.

Example of the slide background images populating to all the child slide layouts within the PowerPoint template

This shows you the power of creating a PowerPoint template – you add a design element in one place, and it shows up throughout your presentation.

6. Add and edit your guides

In PowerPoint, guides help with formatting, positioning, and slide-to-slide consistency.

Consider guides as the grid on your slide that is used to consistently align your objects. This is an optional step, but here I'm going to recommend adding guides to your template.

From the view tab, select Guides and then adjust the guides on your slide master to set the guides for your presentation

To add guides to your PowerPoint template, simply:

  1. Click on the View tab and select Guides.
  2. Notice that there are two guides: one vertical and one horizontal. These guides can give you a sense of how much space you have on the slide so that bits of presentations don't get cut off.
  3. To move a guide, place your mouse over it, and when your cursor becomes a double-headed arrow, drag the guide to where you want it on your slide.

For now, I will simply place my guides on the periphery of the slide, so as to create a "bleed area" in case part of the presentation gets cut off in print.

We will look at adding more guides in part #2 of this series.

To add a new guide, simply start dragging an existing one, and then hit the Ctrl key on your keyboard before you let go.

Depending on how you set up your guides, they will tell users where they should and shouldn't be placing content on your slides.

Part #2. Setting up your template placeholders and footers

With your slide background now setup, in the second part of this how to create a PowerPoint tutorial, you'll be nailing down the following three placeholders on your Parent Slide:

  1. Title placeholder
    Content placeholder
    Date and time, Footer, and Slide Number placeholders

Example of a PowerPoint template's default placeholders on the Parent slide

And even if you don't want to use these placeholders on all of your slides, it's still important to set and format them on your Parent Slide.

Why? Because if you don't, you run the risk of letting default formatting slip through the cracks and ruin an otherwise perfect template.

Later in this tutorial, you'll learn how to tweak your slide layouts away from the Parent Slide if that's what you want to do.

1. Format the Title placeholder

There are a number of ways in which you can format your placeholders and there is no right or wrong formatting.

But before we dive into that, let's talk about what placeholders are.

Placeholders are blank spaces that you've designated for certain types of content to be placed on each slide.

You set these on your Slide Master so that they are locked when people fill them in when building their PowerPoint slides using your template.

Three keys to remember about your content placeholders are:

  1. They can only be set and edited (for real) on your Slide Master.
  2. Only text typed into your placeholders will show in the Outline View of your presentation.
  3. Only text that has been typed into your placeholders will change fonts automatically when you change your theme's fonts.

To learn all about the Outline View in PowerPoint and how to use it, read our article here.

You can change the font size, alignment, size, position, etc. of your placeholders to meet your requirements. Below I'll run you through the most common formatting elements.

A. Change the font size

Before you start formatting your placeholders, make sure you are on your Parent Slide. We will focus on formatting your Child Slide layouts later.

Changing the Title placeholder's font size up in the Ribbon's Home tab

As a first step, let's change the font size of the title placeholder:

  1. Select your title placeholder.
  2. In the Font Size dialog box, enter 40 (or whatever size you want).

B. Resize and position the placeholder

Resizing and positioning your Title placeholder on your Parent Slide

Next, adjust the size and position of your title placeholder. To do that, simply select the placeholder and:

  1. Use the four-headed arrow cursor to move the placeholder to where you want it on your slide.
  2. With the placeholder still selected, drag the resizing handles (the 8 little white circles) in or out to resize the placeholder.

There is no right size and position for your title. You'll simply want to make sure that it fits your slide.

You'll also want to think about how much text you're expecting people to type into the placeholder for their slides. Make sure the placeholder is big enough to fit the typical scenario.

C. Set your vertical text alignment

Opening the Align Text dropdown and selecting Bottom for your text alignment

Next, set the vertical text alignment for your title. To do that:

  1. Select your title placeholder.
  2. From the Home tab, select the Align Text dropdown menu.
  3. Choose your desired vertical text alignment (I'll choose Bottom for mine).

Unless you have a specific reason to do otherwise, I recommend that you choose Bottom for your vertical text alignment. That way your title text will always stay perfectly aligned at the bottom, from slide to slide.

This helps avoid jumping titles for any slides that have more than one line of text.
On the flip side, if you plan on having short titles for all your slides (no more than one line), I recommend using the Middle text alignment instead.

Regardless of what you decide, make sure you test different title lengths to see what will work best for your PowerPoint template.

D. Align your guides to your title

Since we added our guides in the first part of this series, now we'll set them to align with our title.

  1. Drag your Horizontal Guides to match the top and the bottom of your title placeholder (add more guides if necessary).
  2. Drag your Vertical Guidesto match the left and right-hand sides of the title placeholder (add more guides if necessary).

To add a new guide, simply start dragging an existing one, and then hit the Ctrl key on your keyboard before you let go.

Adjusting your guides like this will make aligning objects on your slides much easier as your Smart Guides will automatically snap them together.

Aligning your vertical and horizontal guides around your Title placeholder

Note: If your Guides are not visible, simply right-click your slide space and select Grid & Guides, and then Guides. That will turn them on. Alternatively, you can go up to the View tab in the Ribbon and select Guides inside the Show area.

2. Format the Text placeholder

The Text placeholder on your Parent Slide is special in that it will dictate the default formatting of all the other content placeholders in your presentation (except for the Title placeholder and the Footer placeholders).

Demonstration of how the Content placeholder on the Parent Slide affects the text placeholder on Child Slides.

Setting the default here on the Parent Slide is important because it makes it a lot easier to make fast and consistent changes to swathes of content down the road.

Later in this template series, I will show you how to format away from this default behavior on the Child Slides. But first you want to set its default formatting.

A. Resize and position the Text placeholder

can give me resignation,

The first thing to do with your text placeholder is change its position and/or size on your slide so that it's exactly aligned with the Title and Footer placeholders. To do that:

  1. Select the Text placeholder and when the cursor becomes a four-headed arrow, drag the placeholder to the top and left side so that it is aligned with the Title placeholder.
  2. With the placeholder still selected, use its sizing handles to adjust its size until it is just right (factoring the amount of text that you predict you'll type in, as well as the alignment with the other placeholders).

B. Align the guides

Dragging the Guides to fit around your Text placeholder on your Parent Slide.

In this step, you need to align the horizontal and the vertical guides to that they align with the Text placeholder. To do that:

  1. Drag the horizontal guides to match the top and the bottom of the Text placeholder.
  2. Similarly, drag the vertical guides to match the left and right-hand sides of the Text placeholder.

C. Change the font size

Adjust the font size for each level of text in the Text placeholder.

The next step is to change the font size of the different levels of text inside the placeholder. To do that:

  1. Select the first level of text.
  2. In the Font Size box, type in 20 and hit Enter.
  3. Select the second, third, fourth, and fifth levels of bulleted text and change their font sizes to 18,16, 14, and 14 respectively.

D. Adjust and align the bullet points

Adjusting and aligning the bullet points for each level of text in the placeholder.

Once you have set the font size, it is important to adjust the bullets.

  1. Select all the text styles in the content placeholder.
  2. In the Paragraph group, click on the Bullets and Numbering dropdown.
  3. Select the square style bullets.

Select all the text styles in the content placeholder. In the Paragraph group, click on the Bullets and Numbering dropdown. Select the square style bullets.

Next, you have to adjust the indent of the bulleted lists so that it appears in all your slide layouts. To do that:

  1. Select the bulleted list you want to adjust.
  2. Click, hold, and drag the desired indent marker. In our example, we'll drag the hanging indent marker.
  3. Repeat this for each text level.

You can adjust the bullets as per your personal preference. Based on your knowledge of how someone is going to be using this template, you might decide to add more or less space as required.

In case someone happens to delete some of the bulleted lists and goes to the next level, it's going to default back to the original Office formatting, which will not work for your template.

Note: My recommendation as per Julie Terberg and Echo Swinford's book, "Building PowerPoint Templates Step by Step with the Experts," is to always make sure that you format every single item you have available. You can see their book on templates here.

That way, you have everything set in case someone decides to break the rules or do their own thing, you'll be covered. This inevitably happens with templates and you want to be prepared for it!

3. Format your footers

Example of the footer placeholders on the Parent Slide of your template.

The footer section of the Slide Master has 3 types of placeholders:

  1. Slide number
  2. Footer text
  3. Date and time

A. Set the font size for all your footers

The first step is to change the font size of the footer placeholders. To do that:

  1. Select all your footer placeholders holding theShiftkey.
  2. In theFont Sizedialog box, type 10 (of whatever your desired font size is) and hitEnter.

B. Resize and position the placeholders

The next thing to do with the footer placeholders is to change their position and/or size on your slide so that they're aligned with the rest of the placeholders. To do that:

  1. Select each placeholder and when the cursor becomes a four-headed arrow, drag the placeholder to its desired location (use the guides for assistance).
  2. With the placeholder still selected, use its sizing handles to adjust its size until it is just right (factoring the amount of text that you predict you'll type in, as well as the alignment with the other placeholders).

Repeat this for each placeholder.

If you want to be 100% certain that all the Footer placeholders are the same, select them one at a time and go to the Shape Format tab in the Ribbon. In the Size section, verify that the height of the placeholders is the same.

In this example, note that I am swapping the positions of the Date & Time and the Footer text placeholders.

Example of the footer swapped with the date and time placeholder.

Remember to also add new guides around these placeholders to help keep them in place. Here, I'm only going to add the top and bottom guides, so as to avoid confusion and overkill.

Adding guides to fit around the footer placeholders on your slide.

C. Format the slide number placeholder

Adjusting the margins of the slide number placeholder.

Next, we'll need to adjust the formatting of the text inside the slide number placeholder. To do that:

  1. Right-click on the placeholder and click onFormat Shape.
    Select Text Options.
  2. Open the Text box tab.
  3. Type 0 for the Left margin and hit Tab or Enter on your keyboard.

Note: For the slide number placeholder, you can also add symbols as I have here (such as a bar and two spaces), in order to create a visual break from the other placeholders.

Example of the Slide Number placeholder adjusted with a line break.

D. Format the date and time placeholder

The next thing is to format the date and time footer placeholder. You can choose any kind of formatting you like. Below you'll find the steps that I took in the video tutorial at the top of this page.

First, select the placeholder and hit Ctrl + R on your keyboard to right-align the text to the right (so that it's flush with the slide number to the right).

Adjusting the date and time formatting for your placeholder, to match your desired format.

Then, you'll want to choose what kind of date formatting you want. To do that, simply:

  1. Select the Date and time placeholder and hit Ctrl + R on your keyboard to align the text to the right.
  2. Go up to the Insert tab.
    In the Text group, select Header & Footer.
  3. Click on Date and time so that there is a checkmark next to it.
  4. Click on the Date dropdown and select the option as required. In this example, we are going to select December 30th, 2017.
  5. Click Apply to All to save the changes. You can see that the date and time text has changed accordingly.

The final default placeholder to format on the Parent Slide here is the footer text placeholder. This placeholder is designed for text, a tagline, an author's name, or maybe cited sources.

All you need to do here is to select the placeholder and hitCtrl + L on your keyboard to left-align the text. This way, it is next to the logo and the text inserted will extend out towards the right.

Example of the footer text placeholder with its text left-aligned.

While all the default placeholders have now been set up and formatted correctly, there is still one element that you can add on the Parent Slide of your Slide Master; and that is a logo.

This is optional, so don't feel obligated to add one.

Example of a logo inserted in the footer area of the Parent Slide.

To add and format a logo placeholder, simply:

  1. Copy the logo and hit Ctrl + V to paste it on the slide. Make sure you paste it as a PNG because it will not lose its quality over time, whereas a JPEG will.
  2. Resize and reposition the logo to make it fit nicely in its desired position. Alternatively, you can click on the Picture Format tab in the Ribbon and set the height to 0.35 to make it even with the other placeholders.

You can also use this same technique to add a watermark to your PowerPoint slides. To see the different ways to do this, read our guide here.

Part #3. Creating custom PowerPoint template slides

In the last part of this guide, you'll finalize the slide layouts that you want to use in your PowerPoint presentation by formatting the Child Slides.

TheChild Slides represent the blueprints for each type of slide included in your template. By default, your Child Slide layouts will inherit your Parent Slide formatting, but as you will see, you can tweak these layouts to meet your individual needs.

Example of how the Child Layouts are used in the Normal View of your template.

The key to designing good Child Slide layouts is to keep in mind how the end-user is likely going to insert content on each type of slide. You want to make it easy for everyone to quickly fill them in when using your template.

In this section you'll learn how to:

  • Remove background graphics on the Slide Master so that they're hidden on your Child Slide layouts.
  • Make the slide background an existing picture on your Slide Master.
  • Rename your custom Child Slide in your Slide Master.
  • Add prompt text to help the template user properly fill in each layout.
    and more!

1. Format the Title Slide layout

The first step is to edit the Title slide layout. This layout is designed to be filled in with the title and general information about your presentation.

Typically, its looks slightly different than the rest of the layouts. It typically has less text and fewer images/objects, and it stands apart.

That being said, it still needs to match the other layouts in its look and feel, so as to make sure it's clearly a part of the same template.

Example of the final design of the Title Child Layout of our template.

The first thing we need to do when formatting our Title slide layout is to think about the background. Typically, a Title slide will have a slightly different background from the regular Content slides.

However, because the background has been set on the Parent Slide, this means that you will have to deviate from it. There are 2 ways to approach this – let's go over each one.

A. Hide the background graphics on a Child Slide – Method #1

The first method for hiding anything on the background (graphics such as the logo, background patterns, design elements, etc.) is to insert a blank rectangle to cover it up.

Inserting a rectangle, drawing it on the slide and the making it white with no outline.

To cover up your slide background with a white rectangle, simply:

  1. Go to the Insert tab on the Ribbon, click on the Shapes dropdown, select a rectangle.
  2. Draw in the rectangle so that it fills out the entire slide.
  3. Change the rectangle's fill color to White.
  4. Remove the rectangle's outline.

Next, we'll need to make sure the placeholders are visible on the slide, in front of the newly inserted rectangle.

To do that, with the rectangle still selected, go to the Shape Format tab on the Ribbon, click on the Send Backward dropdown and select Send to Back.

Sending the rectangle to the back of the slide.

Note: Keep in mind that covering up the background elements like this means that the logo (and any other image you've pasted onto the Parent Slide background) will be hidden. If you want that element to be visible on this Child Layout, you'll have to copy/paste it in.

B. Hide the background graphics on a Child Slide – Method #2

Selecting the Hide Background Graphics option in the Slide Master View for this Child Layout.

The "technically better" way to do this is to use the default PowerPoint feature set up to do this for you. Simply:

  1. Go to the Slide Master tab in the Ribbon.
  2. Click on Hide Background Graphics to add a checkmark next to it.

This hides anything from the Parent Slide that isn't a placeholder. This includes and background images or patterns, logos, and other design elements

You can easily make them visible again by unchecking the Hide Background Graphics checkbox.

C. Add in a new background for this layout

Now that we've removed the background inherited from the Parent Layout, we'll need to add in any background elements we want on this particular Child Slide.

While the background image can be different, we want to keep the theme consistent across all our slides. So let's go back up and take some elements we can reuse.

First, navigate back to the Parent Slide and select the pattern image (without the gradient). Then hit Ctrl + C on your keyboard to copy it.

Pasting the pattern image into the Child Layout's background directly.

Then, go back to your Title slide layout and:

  1. Right-click the slide space and select Format Background.
  2. In the Format Background tab, select Picture or texture fill.
  3. Select Clipboard.

This pastes whatever is currently copied on your clipboard into your slide background.

Note: Pasting an object directly into your slide background like this means that it can no longer be edited in your PowerPoint template.

If instead you paste it onto the slide as an image, you can always go back in and make adjustments to the image, and therefore the background too.

It's up to you whether you want your template's users to be able to edit the background image or not.
So if you're putting the image directly into the slide background, I recommended that you only do so when you are sure that this is the final background image you want to use.

D. Add in an extra design element

Inserting a rectangle onto the Child Layout and then formatting it.

The next step is to add in a design element that matches the general theme and style of the template. To do that:

  1. Go to the Insert tab on the Ribbon, click on the Shapes dropdown and select a rectangle.
  2. Draw in the rectangle (it should be filled with the first accent color of your theme) so that it fills about 80% of your slide.
  3. Make sure the rectangle is centered and in the middle of the slide.

Next, let's send the rectangle behind the placeholders.

To do that, right-click the rectangle, open the Send Backward dropdown and select Send to Back.

Sending the rectangle to the back of the Child Layout.

E. Adjust the placeholders

Adjusting the formatting and placement of the placeholders on this Child Layout.

First, adjust your Title and Subtitle placeholders. To do that, simply select the two placeholders and:

  1. Change their Font color to white.
  2. Adjust their position and size on the slide, keeping in mind how much room you need to leave for the text.

Next, let's address the Footer placeholders.

Even if you don't want footers visible on the Title slide of your template, I don't recommend deleting them here in the Slide Master View.

Why? Because if someone decides to use them despite your instructions, you still want them to appear correctly and match the rest of the template.

Formatting and adjusting the footer placeholders of this Child Layout.

To format and hide your footer placeholders, simply:

  1. Format the footer placeholders the way you'd like them to appear if they were used.
  2. Go up to the Slide Master tab in the Ribbon and deselect the Footerscheckbox.

Note: Even if your footers stay selected in this Title layout on the Slide Master View, they typically don't appear on that Title slide in the Normal View.

To turn them on, you have to go to the Insert tab in the Ribbon and select Header & Footer. There, you can turn them on.

So unless you truly want someone to NEVER be able to add a page number, date and time, and footer text to the Title layout, then I recommend leaving them on the Child Slide, in order to keep that option open.

If you deselect the Footers checkbox in the Slide Master View as we did above, then when someone tries to insert footers in the Normal View, they will not appear.

To learn all about how to add slide numbers in PowerPoint (and troubleshoot ones that won't show up), read our guide here.

One more thing you might notice is that the guides are not visible on the Title slide. Since this is a Child Slide, you can't edit the guides here.

Unfortunately, the guides you set on the Parent Slide will likely not match the content you have on the Title slide (and any Child Slide whose content deviates from it).

Example of how the Guides don't match this Child Layout.

2. Format your Title and Content layout

The next step is to edit the most commonly used PowerPoint slide in any presentation, the Title and Content layout.

Example of the Title and Content Child Layout for the template.

This specific slide layout will look almost identical to to the Parent Slide layout that we've already set up at this point. This means that there isn't much we have to do to change it.

Inserting a line and drawing it onto the Child Layout.

However, in this example, we are going to add one more design element to the layout, which is a straight line. To do that simply:

  1. On the Inserttab on the Ribbon, click on theShapes dropdown and select the straight line. To make sure it's 100% straight, hold the Shift key as you draw in the line.
  2. Drag the straight line and place it underneath the title. It should perfectly fit in thanks to the Smart Guides. Make sure that it's long enough to go past the text in the Title placeholder.

The reason you don't add this line to the Parent Slide is that the layout has to be formatted to work for the majority of the layouts in your template.

That means that the Parent Slide has to be relatively bare-bones. You can always add extra elements in the Child Slides.

Example of the final version of this Child Layout.

3. Format the other Child Slides

From here onward, you will need to format each of the Child Slides to match the content that goes in it.

You will want to follow the same procedure as in Step #2 above, keeping in mind what each Child Slide is designed for and how the content should be placed.

Some layouts will require more custom formatting and design elements.
For example, for the Divider slide (the first slide in the examples below,) I have added a rectangle that matches the design elements on the Title slide layout.

Examples of the rest of the default Child Layouts, finalized.

4. Optional Step: Create your own Child Layouts

In addition to the default Child Slides that PowerPoint gives you, you have the option to create your own.

You can choose to create your own if you have a very specific type of slide that you'll need to create over and over in your presentation.

If you make the slide under 10 times, it may not be worth clogging up your Slide Master area. But if you use it frequently, creating a layout template for that type of slide will save you countless hours.

Here are the kinds of custom slides you may want to create a custom layout for:

  • Table of Contents / Agenda
  • Quote page
  • Team bios / Team headshots
  • Case studies
  • Thank you / Learn more
  • About us
  • Data dashboard
  • and more

Keep in mind that the blank layout (and other blank variations) can always be used to create more one-off slides.

Creating a Custom Agenda Slide

Example of a custom Child Layout, in this case for the agenda.

In this example, we're going to add a custom Agenda Child Slide. To add this custom layout:

  1. Go to the Slide Master tab in the Ribbon and click Insert Layout. You'll see that a new Child Slide gets added in with just a Title placeholder and the Footer placeholders.
  2. Add any additional placeholders you need (Slide Master tab > Insert Placeholder) and format them as per your requirements. In this example, I've added 20 text placeholders that I've resized and formatted.
  3. Adjust the prompt text in the placeholders to fit the respective content need. For example, in the image below you can write "Type in item" so that the user knows to type in the right text into each placeholder.

Note:You can change the shape of a placeholder, along with all other properties of a typical shape. That means that you can also add fill, outline, effects, etc.

This is how I was able to create the circular TOC numbers in this layout:

Example of placeholders that have been made into a circle and have a grey fill.

You can also rename the custom Child Layout by:

  1. Right-clicking it in the Thumbnail View on the left-hand side and selecting Rename Layout.
  2. Type in a helpful name and click Rename.

Renaming the custom Child Layout.

Note:You can perform these steps for all custom Child Slides. You can also create custom layouts for a lot of slides such as sport slides, case studies, contact us, etc.
However, try not to go overboard because you don't want to have a layout area packed full of slides as it will confuse the user.

But for very frequently occurring slides, I highly recommend making your own custom layout.

There are also other slides in the template such as the content slide with subtitles, a blank slide with a title. You can format them per your requirements.

They are not very different from one another, however, the only different ones are the title slide and the divider slide.

5. Finalize your PowerPoint template

To turn them on, you have to go to the Insert tab in the Ribbon and select Header & Footer. There, you can turn them on.

A. Set animations and transitions

The first thing is to set the animations and transitions for your slides. For all placeholders that you want to automatically animate in your template, simply select it and apply your animation.

Note: Keep in mind that animations should be used in your template VERY sparingly. That's not only because animations can be overly distracting, but it's also because the user of your template may not want to have animations set automatically for them.

In short, make sure you create the template in a way that makes your users' life easier, rather than hard.

Setting the default transitions for all the layouts in your template.

Once that's done, let's set the slide transitions. To do that, simply:

  1. Select all of the slides in your template (in the Slide Master View).
  2. Click into the Transitions tab in the Ribbon and select your preferred slide transition.

Next, let's make sure we close the Slide Master View since we are done with it. From the Slide Master tab in the Ribbon, clickClose Master View.

Closing the Slide Master View to go back to the Normal View of PowerPoint.

Note: There is also a Notes Master and Handout Master in PowerPoint that you can setup and format. These masters determine the look and feel of your PowerPoint handouts when you print them.

To learn how to format these elements in regards to printing multiple slides per page in PowerPoint, read our guide here.

B. Stress test your template

It is highly recommended that you test your template before you distribute it. That way you catch any errors before your users do.

A couple of ways you can stress test your template are by:

  • Trying to use it in a variety of different ways to see if it breaks
  • Typing in all kinds of dummy text
  • Deleting things and then having them reappear again
  • Pasting slides in from other templates to see what happens in your template

Final Template Thoughts

And that's how to create a PowerPoint template that works the way it is supposed to.

You now have the foundational skills to start creating your own PowerPoint templates and use them to build beautiful and tailor-made PowerPoint presentations in the future.

If you want to learn more about building and deploying your template in professional settings, I recommend checking out my step-by-step training course, see details here.

As a quick recap of everything you learned, you learned how to:

  • Navigate the Slide Master View.
  • Add slide backgrounds to your template, as well as how to hide background graphics.
  • Format each of the elements on the Parent Slide layout.
  • Format each Child Layout and how to create your own custom Child Slide layouts.
  • Add and adjust the Guides on your Parent Slide layout.
  • And more!

If you enjoyed this in-depth tutorial, you'll love our PowerPoint training courses and tutorials that you can learn more about here.

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How to Create and Use Design Templates

Source: https://nutsandboltsspeedtraining.com/powerpoint-tutorials/how-to-create-a-powerpoint-template/

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