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Free Corporate Presentation Cover Page Deck Template for PowerPoint & Google Slides

Free Cover Page PowerPoint Template
Free Cover Page PowerPoint Presentation Template
Free Cover Page PPT Template
Free Cover Page PowerPoint Template
Free Cover Page PowerPoint Presentation Template
Free Cover Page PPT Template

Description

Three cover slides, three completely different moods. That’s what this free PowerPoint cover page template gives you, so you can pick the one that matches your presentation topic without having to redesign anything.

The first slide is your classic corporate opener. A nighttime city skyline fills the background with bold red diagonal panels layered on top, pushing the eye toward the title on the left. It feels serious, boardroom-ready, the kind of slide you’d put on screen while people are still finding their seats.

The second one leans more modern. Deep blue-purple gradient with a circular image frame sitting on the left and your title on the right. There’s a logo placeholder in the top corner and social media icons along the bottom. It has more of a startup or tech company feel – polished but not stiff.

The third goes full futuristic. A robotic hand reaches across the right side of a clean white background, and a flowing purple wave runs along the bottom carrying your description text. Social icons sit in the lower right. If your presentation is about technology, AI, innovation, or anything forward-looking, this one sets the tone right away.

All three slides have space for your title, a short description or tagline, and image placeholders you can swap with your own photos. They work in both PowerPoint and Google Slides, available in 16:9 and 4:3, and everything – the shapes, gradients, colors, images – is editable.

Where to Use It

Cover pages get skipped over a lot. People spend hours on the content slides and then throw a blank title slide at the front. But the cover page is what’s on screen when your audience walks in, when they’re deciding how seriously to take what comes next. These slides give you three ready-made options so you don’t have to start from scratch.

Company profile and about-us presentations – The red cityscape slide works well here. It says “established” and “professional” without you having to type those words. Drop your company name in the title, a one-liner about what you do in the description, and you have an opening slide that sets up the rest of the deck.

Investor and pitch decks – First impressions matter when you’re asking people for money. The circular layout on the blue-purple slide looks clean and modern. Swap in your product photo or a team shot inside that circle frame, put your company logo in the top corner, and it reads like you put effort into the presentation before you even get to slide two.

Tech and innovation presentations – The robotic hand slide is pretty much made for this. AI presentations, digital transformation decks, SaaS product demos, R&D updates. The imagery does the heavy lifting of saying “this is about the future” so your title text can focus on the actual topic.

Client proposals and project kickoffs – Any time you’re presenting to an external audience and need to look put-together. The cover page is the handshake before the conversation starts.

Conference talks and webinars – That cover slide is usually up on screen for 5-10 minutes before you start talking. Having something that looks intentional instead of a default template makes a difference in how the audience perceives what’s coming.

Internal decks that need to not look internal – Quarterly reviews, department updates, strategy presentations that are going up to leadership. When you want your deck to look like you cared, a solid cover page is the easiest upgrade.

Who is it For

Anyone who presents and is tired of starting every deck with a blank white slide and a centered title in Calibri. Marketing teams, business development, consultants, startup founders, project managers, corporate communications – if you put together slide decks regularly, having a few good cover page templates saved and ready to go saves more time than you’d think.

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