Prepare a Conference Talk or Keynote with AI
Stop spending days building conference slides. Build your conference presentation builder deck by speaking through the talk. Slides appear as you talk.
How It Works for Conference Talks
Step 01
Run a rough cut session
2-3 weeks out, talk through the entire talk in Talkpitch without scripting it. You'll get a messy first deck — that's the goal. Now you can see what the structure looks like when externalized.
Step 02
Edit and build v1
Spend 20 minutes in the deck. What's clear? What's confusing? What sections ran too long? Delete, reorder, clean up copy. You now have a v1 deck.
Step 03
Tighten the narrative
Re-run the talk against your v1 deck with more structure. Compare session 2 output to v1 and merge the improvements.
Step 04
Rehearse from the finalized deck
Use the saved deck for run-through practice. Each session reveals where you're spending too many words and where slides don't match what you're saying.
Features for Conference Talks
Talk-building as rehearsal
Every Talkpitch session is simultaneously a deck-building session and a practice run. By the time you have a final deck, you've run the talk 4+ times.
Tagline slides for key arguments
When you say something memorable, Talkpitch captures it as a bold statement slide. These become your visual anchors.
Framework and list slides
'Three reasons X doesn't work' produces a clean bullet slide automatically — no manual formatting.
Steps slides for processes
'Here's how we approached this in four steps' generates a steps layout automatically.
Metrics slides for data points
Reference a number that supports your argument and the AI builds a callout slide around it.
Multi-session iteration
Each run-through sharpens both the deck and your delivery. The workflow builds the talk and the confidence to deliver it.
Why Speakers Choose Talkpitch for Conference Prep
Stop procrastinating on slides
Instead of waiting until you're 'ready to build slides,' talk through the talk in a Talkpitch session whenever you have 20 minutes. The deck is a byproduct of rehearsal.
Deck reflects your actual talk
Because slides come from your speech, the deck matches how you present — not a template structure you forced your ideas into.
6-8 practice runs before the event
With Talkpitch, your first 3-4 run-throughs are also deck-building sessions. By the time the deck is final, you've already practiced extensively.
Catch problems before the real talk
Where does the energy drop? Where do you rush? Where does the transition feel abrupt? You find these in Talkpitch at 9pm, not on stage.
Better result than building in a rush
A workflow that starts 2 weeks out with Talkpitch produces a stronger deck than one built in 4 hours the day before.
Stop procrastinating on your conference slides
Talk through the session once and you'll have a working deck plus your first practice run done.
Frequently Asked Questions
Got questions? We have answers.
Yes. A 45-minute talk might produce 30-40 slides depending on how you structure the material. Run it in sections: introduction, section 1, section 2, section 3, close. Edit each section separately. Long sessions work fine.
Talkpitch generates text-based slides from speech. For a talk that relies heavily on custom visuals, use Talkpitch to build the narrative skeleton and add your custom visuals during the editing pass. The text structure plus your visuals gives you a complete deck.
Export to PowerPoint/Google Slides is on the roadmap. For submission purposes, the most practical current path is to build your structure in Talkpitch, then recreate the polished final version in Google Slides or Keynote. Talkpitch's output is your working draft.
The tool is optimized for pre-built presentations, not live workshop facilitation. Build your workshop structure slides in Talkpitch before the session, then present from the saved deck during the workshop.
Six to eight full run-throughs is the standard advice from professional speakers. With Talkpitch, your first 3-4 run-throughs are also deck-building sessions. By the time you have a finalized deck, you've already run the talk 4 times. The remaining reps are pure delivery practice.
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