
Add speaker notes to your slides - Microsoft Support
When you're creating a presentation, you can add speaker notes to refer to later while delivering the slide show in front of an audience.
Start the presentation and see your notes in Presenter view
In Presenter view, you can see your notes as you present, while the audience sees only your slides. The notes appear in a pane on the right. If you need to add or delete something, simply …
Print speaker notes - Microsoft Support
You can print your speaker notes, with or without thumbnail images of the corresponding slides, and hand them out to your audience to view after your presentation.
Present on multiple monitors (and view speaker notes privately)
Use PowerPoint Presenter View to present your slide show with speaker notes on one computer and slides on another.
Add speaker notes to your presentations using Copilot
Select the Notes drop down button in the View tab of the ribbon. Select "Generate speaker notes for all slides", or "Generate speaker notes for current slide" depending on what you're looking …
How certain features behave in web-based PowerPoint
Feature comparisons between PowerPoint for the web/PowerPoint Web app and desktop PowerPoint.
Print slides with or without speaker notes - Microsoft Support
Under Settings, click the second box (which defaults to say Full Page Slides), then under Print Layout, click Notes Pages. Notes Pages prints one slide per page, with speaker notes below.
Format text in the Notes pane - Microsoft Support
The Notes pane is where you put supplemental information that doesn't appear on-slide during a presentation. You may want to make key words in the notes bold so that you can see them …
Rehearse your slide show with Speaker Coach - Microsoft Support
Speaker Coach in PowerPoint can help you refine your presentation. It lets you know if you're reading from your slides too much, using too many filler words, speaking too quickly (or too …
Use a screen reader to show your presentation with PowerPoint
In the Presenter View, you can keep your presentation with the speaker notes on your computer screen, while the audience sees the notes-free slides projected to another screen.