TutorFlow's slide generation turns a topic prompt or an existing document into a structured teaching deck — organized, sequenced, and ready to edit. For educators and trainers who spend hours building slides from scratch, this shifts the work from assembly to refinement.
What you can create
TutorFlow slides are designed for teaching contexts where visual structure matters:
- lecture slides for in-person or live online sessions
- internal training decks for employee onboarding or compliance
- course introductions and topic summaries
- workshop facilitation materials
- printed handouts, exported as PDF
The output is always editable. TutorFlow gives you a starting structure; you adjust pacing, examples, wording, and visual emphasis from there.
How slide generation works
| Step | What happens |
|---|---|
| 1. Define the topic | Describe your audience, subject, and key learning goal |
| 2. Generate a first draft | TutorFlow creates a slide sequence from your prompt or uploaded content |
| 3. Review and edit | Adjust individual slides — reorder, rewrite, add or remove content |
| 4. Export | Download as PPTX to continue editing in PowerPoint or Google Slides, or as PDF for distribution |
The process is designed to handle the blank-slide problem — the most time-consuming part of deck creation is getting a coherent structure onto the page. TutorFlow does that part. You handle the decisions only you can make: the right example for this audience, the right level of detail, the right tone.
When to use slides vs. courses
Slides and courses serve different purposes in TutorFlow.
| Use slides when... | Use a course when... |
|---|---|
| You are presenting live to an audience | Learners work through content independently |
| You need a printable or shareable document | You want quizzes, practice tasks, and progress tracking |
| You are building a handout or reference material | You need interactive elements like coding exercises or AI activities |
| You want a quick deliverable | You are building a structured learning journey |
Both can be generated from the same prompt. It is common to create a course for interactive delivery and export slides from the same content for live classroom sessions.