All repurpose workflowsVideo → Slide Deck

A great talk shouldn't be a one-time event. Let it become the presentation you give again.

You built the argument once — in a webinar, a talk, or a team session. Ghostpen extracts the structure and creates a slide deck with speaker notes, so you can present the same ideas in a new context without starting from zero.

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Illustrative workflow example

Input

"45-minute webinar recording: 'How we built our content engine from zero to 20,000 subscribers.' Structured naturally into three phases: strategy, production, and distribution. Conversational, specific, example-heavy."

Output — Slide Deck Structure

22-slide deck with speaker notes

Title · 3-section structure · one clear point per slide · anchoring bullets · speaker notes written in conversational register · closing CTA slide

Illustrative example. Actual output varies based on video content and Voice DNA™ profile.

How the transformation works

1

Upload your video or paste the URL

Upload a recording — webinar, talk, Loom, interview — or paste a URL. Ghostpen transcribes and analyses the structure: the setup, the argument progression, the examples, the conclusion.

2

Specify the presentation context

Tell Ghostpen where this deck is going: a webinar, a sales call, an internal team talk, a conference presentation, or a LinkedIn carousel. The structure, density, and slide length all differ by context. A sales deck runs lean. A webinar deck breathes.

3

Voice DNA™ writes the speaker notes

Slide bullets anchor the visual. Speaker notes are where your talk lives. Voice DNA™ writes speaker notes in your spoken register — the way you'd actually explain each slide if you picked up from memory, not the way a transcript editor would reconstruct it. The notes are cues, not scripts, but they sound like you.

4

Review with Content Score™

Decks are scored for structure and clarity. A good deck has a clear spine: one clear point per slide, a visible argument arc, and a conclusion that earns the follow-up action. Content Score™ tells you if yours does.

Will the speaker notes actually sound like me — or like an AI that watched my video?

Speaker notes are the most personal part of any deck. Voice DNA™ is what makes them land correctly — it writes in the way you'd actually explain each slide if you were presenting from memory. Not verbatim transcript quotes. Not formal third-person summaries. Cues, the way you'd write them to yourself. The goal is that when you open the deck the day before the talk, the notes feel like they were already yours.

How Voice DNA™ works →
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Content Score™ checks whether the deck has a clear spine

A well-structured slide deck has a visible argument arc: a clear setup, development, and payoff. Structure and Clarity are the primary Content Score™ dimensions for slide decks — if the deck meanders or has too many ideas per slide, you'll catch it before the presentation, not during.

About Content Score™ →

Every great talk you've given is a deck someone else could benefit from next month.

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