Before And After Slide

Description
Leverage this sleek before-and-after comparison slide to clearly illustrate transformations, process improvements, or A/B test results in your presentations. Two angled panels—teal for “Before” and orange for “After”—sit side by side against a subtle light-gray backdrop with an oversized ampersand watermark. Each panel features a bold headline banner and bullet-style text placeholders, ensuring your key points stand out. Rounded corners, fine outline strokes, and gentle drop shadows create a modern, polished look that keeps audiences focused on your content, while the slight tilt adds visual energy without distraction.
Fully editable in PowerPoint and Google Slides, this template empowers you to tailor every element in seconds. Swap banner colors or adjust their position to match corporate branding, edit placeholder text or bullet styles, and change panel angles for a custom feel. Vector-based shapes guarantee crisp rendering at any resolution, and master-slide integration keeps fonts and spacing consistent across your deck. Duplicate or remove panels to scale from two to twelve states—useful for multi-step comparisons or progressive before-after sequences. Built-in animation presets let you fade or slide panels on cue, adding dynamic reveals without manual transition setup. This flexible layout accelerates slide creation, eliminates formatting headaches, and delivers a professional comparison tool that resonates in boardrooms, client demos, or training sessions.
Who is it for
Marketing teams, consultants, and project managers will leverage this slide when showcasing campaign performance changes, process optimizations, or design iterations. Trainers, UX designers, and business analysts can also use it to present A/B test outcomes, workflow refinements, or case-study results.
Other Uses
Repurpose this layout for product upgrade highlights, sales-before-and-after figures, cost-benefit analyses, or transformation case studies. The modular panels adapt easily to side-by-side feature comparisons, timeline shifts, or dual-scenario storytelling.