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McKinsey-style storyline framework for building presentation decks. Use when users need to structure presentations, pitch decks, or strategic communications. Creates logical flow where each storyline becomes a slide title, progressing from problem to solution.

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SKILL.md

name storyline-builder
description McKinsey-style storyline framework for building presentation decks. Use when users need to structure presentations, pitch decks, or strategic communications. Creates logical flow where each storyline becomes a slide title, progressing from problem to solution.

Storyline Builder

A structured approach to building presentation storylines where each line becomes one slide title, creating a logical narrative flow.

What is a Storyline?

A storyline is the backbone of a presentation - a sequence of messages that tells a complete story. Each line in the storyline becomes one slide title in the final deck.

Key characteristics:

  • Each line = one slide title (action-oriented message)
  • Logical flow from problem → context → analysis → solution
  • Slide titles are the message, not topics
  • Reader should understand the story from titles alone

Core Principles

Action Titles

  • Titles state the finding, not the topic
  • Good: "Market grew 40% while revenue declined 5%"
  • Bad: "Market Analysis"

Logical Progression

  • Paint the problem or opportunity
  • Provide context (market, competitive landscape)
  • Show data to prove/disprove hypotheses
  • Present solution and next steps

Story Flow

  • Problem → Context → Analysis → Solution → Roadmap
  • Each slide builds on the previous
  • Clear beginning, middle, end

Storyline Templates by Situation

1. Market Strategy / Pitch Deck

Flow: Market opportunity → Competitive position → Product strategy → Go-forward plan

Storyline:
1. [Market name] represents $XXB opportunity growing at XX% CAGR
2. We operate in [specific segment] worth $XXB with XX% growth
3. Top 3 competitors generate $XXM-XXB revenue growing XX-XX% annually
4. Our revenue of $XXM positions us as [rank/position] with XX% growth
5. [Product name] addresses [use case] for [target customer segment]
6. Top 10 customers span [industries/sectors], XX% enterprise vs XX% SMB split
7. Pricing structured as [model type] with $XX average contract value
8. Product differentiation built on [technology/approach] vs competitors
9. Key competitive advantages: [advantage 1], [advantage 2], [advantage 3]
10. Three growth opportunities identified: [opp 1], [opp 2], [opp 3]
11. Focus on [priority opportunity] based on market size and competitive position
12. 18-month roadmap prioritizes [capability 1], [capability 2], [capability 3]

2. Internal Problem-Solving (Issue Tree Format)

Flow: Problem framing → Root cause analysis → Solution options → Prioritization → Next steps

Storyline:
1. [Problem statement] - current state at XX vs target of XX
2. Problem driven by three factors: [factor 1], [factor 2], [factor 3]
3. [Factor 1] contributes $XXM impact (XX% of total problem)
4. [Factor 2] contributes $XXM impact (XX% of total problem)
5. [Factor 3] contributes $XXM impact (XX% of total problem)
6. Root cause analysis reveals [key insight from data]
7. Three solution approaches identified to address root causes
8. Solution 1: [approach] - XX% impact, $XXM investment, XX weeks
9. Solution 2: [approach] - XX% impact, $XXM investment, XX weeks
10. Solution 3: [approach] - XX% impact, $XXM investment, XX weeks
11. Prioritize [solution X] based on impact/effort analysis
12. Implementation roadmap: [Phase 1 by date], [Phase 2 by date], [Phase 3 by date]
13. Success metrics: [metric 1], [metric 2], [metric 3] tracked [frequency]

3. Project Roadmap / Implementation Plan

Flow: Approach → Phases → Activities → Timeline → Success criteria

Storyline:
1. Project objective: [goal statement with measurable outcome]
2. Four-phase approach over XX weeks: Discovery → Design → Build → Launch
3. Project roadmap spans XX weeks with clear owners and milestones:
   - Phase 1 (Weeks 1-X): User research - XX interviews across [segments] | Owner: [role]
   - Phase 2 (Weeks X-X): Solution design - Define stories, sprint planning | Owner: [role]
   - Phase 3 (Weeks X-X): MVP build - [features] across XX sprints | Owner: [role]
   - Phase 4 (Weeks X-X): Launch - Onboard XX customers | Owner: [role]
4. Core team of XX across [# domains]: PM, Design, Engineering, [other] - Gap: Need [X more roles] and $XXK investment
5. Success criteria: [metric 1] = XX, [metric 2] = XX by [date]
6. ROI measurement: Track [business metric] over XX months

How to Build a Storyline

Step 1: Identify the situation type

  • Market/strategy deck?
  • Problem-solving presentation?
  • Project roadmap?
  • Choose appropriate template

Step 2: Customize the flow

  • Replace placeholders with specific content
  • Add or remove slides based on story needs
  • Maintain logical progression

Step 3: Write action titles

  • Each line should be a complete message
  • Include data points and specifics
  • Test: Can someone understand your story from titles alone?

Step 4: Verify flow

  • Does it progress logically?
  • Are there gaps in the logic?
  • Does it lead to clear next steps?

Step 5: Build slides

  • Each storyline becomes one slide
  • Slide title = storyline
  • Slide body supports the title message

Common Storyline Patterns

Problem-to-Solution Arc

Problem statement → Problem sizing → Root causes → 
Solution options → Recommendation → Implementation plan

Market-to-Strategy Arc

Market opportunity → Competitive landscape → Our position → 
Product strategy → Roadmap → Expected outcomes

Analysis-to-Action Arc

Key question → Hypotheses → Data analysis → 
Insights → Recommendations → Next steps

Usage Guidelines

When creating storyline:

  • Start with the end in mind (what decision/action needed?)
  • Use MECE principles to organize sections
  • Include quantitative support where possible
  • Make the "so what" clear at each step

When reviewing storyline:

  • Can you understand the full story from titles alone?
  • Is the logical flow clear?
  • Are titles action-oriented (not topics)?
  • Does it lead to clear conclusion/next steps?
  • Are data points specific (not vague)?

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Topic titles: "Market Analysis" instead of "Market growing 40% CAGR"
  • Missing the "so what": Data without interpretation
  • Illogical jumps: Skipping steps in reasoning
  • Too granular: 50 slides when 15 would tell the story
  • No ending: Storyline trails off without clear next steps
  • Vague language: "Good performance" instead of "Revenue grew 25%"

Tips for Effective Storylines

Start with structure

  • Outline major sections first
  • Fill in detailed slides within each section
  • Typical deck: 15-25 slides for exec presentation

Consider executive summary upfront

  • Optional first slide summarizing key message
  • Useful for: Problem statement, recommendation, expected impact
  • Allows execs to get punchline immediately
  • Rest of deck provides supporting detail

Use parallel structure

  • Keep similar sections in similar format
  • Makes story easier to follow
  • Example: If slide 5 is "Factor 1: $XXM impact", slide 6 should be "Factor 2: $XXM impact"

Include signposts

  • Use section breaks or agenda slides
  • Help audience know where they are in story
  • Example: "Three drivers of the problem" followed by three slides

Build to the punchline

  • Lead audience through your thinking
  • Don't jump to recommendations without proof
  • But don't bury the lede - executive summary upfront often works

Iterate

  • First draft won't be perfect
  • Review logical flow
  • Get feedback before building full slides
  • Much easier to reorganize storyline than finished slides