PointWellStated gives your message the clarity it needs to be persuasive, without the mental meltdowns.
You open PowerPoint, create a slide, and discover your thinking as you fill it in. By slide 8, the argument isn't the argument you wanted to make. Sound familiar?
PointWellStated reverses the sequence. You build in thinking mode first. Your organized message emerges naturally.
Start with the argument the whole presentation makes. Write it early as a hypothesis, refine it as you build. When you're done, it should be the thing a room member could repeat back the next day.
Each node is one point. "Our close rate dropped 18% after we changed the proposal format" is a node. Make it text, image, or talk-track-only.
Start by generating without worrying about order. Then group, collapse, and find the gaps. Then rewrite every node title as a clear sentence — if you can't write the point as a sentence, you don't know the point yet.