
It's the same deck as last quarter. Same slides, same layout, same chart types. Only the numbers moved. And still, you lose the afternoon to it — pulling the latest figures out of the warehouse, dropping them into a model, reconciling why data sources disagree, then pasting the clean version into PowerPoint one textbox at a time.
You've tried handing it to Claude or ChatGPT. The template comes back wrong: your fonts, format, slide order, all gone. And the numbers you can't trust enough to send without checking. So you check them.
Every slide. Every cycle.
The work is never the thinking. It's the assembly.
The refresh isn't analysis. It's data entry with a template on top. Extract, reformat, reconcile, paste — the same manual assembly every cycle, before anyone enters the room. The deck barely changes, but the hours to produce it remain the same.
A deck should build itself from your data — not from copy-paste.
Let Addison, your AI analyst, handle the assembly for you. Connect your data, attach a deck you've already built, and Summation reads your structure and template, pulls the latest numbers, and generates the updated deck. Your layout. Your format. Updated.
Every number is backed by governed data and traceable to where it came from. Before the deck reaches your team, every slide is verified for accuracy against your business and data context — so you're not the one auditing it line by line.
Have a question? Ask Addison, and get an instant answer. Need to make an edit? Leave a comment, and Addison takes care of it.
If you need to make final touches, export to PowerPoint. If it’s ready, turn it into a Playbook that runs on a schedule and drops the updated deck straight into your inbox. Need something that doesn't exist yet? Describe it, and Addison builds the deck from scratch.
A number you copy-paste is a number you have to defend. Automate the assembly, and the only thing left in the room is the decision.
The question worth asking
Your next recurring deck can build itself—same template, traceable numbers, and charts, tables, and insights already in place. The question isn’t whether you can make the deck—you’ve made it every week. It’s whether you’re getting to the insight the data is exposing—or just spending another cycle preparing the deck.
See Addison update your next deck: summation.com/ai-analyst.