Neca & PitchDeckBoy
Neca Neca
Hey, your deck's color scheme is bold—#FF4E00 pops, but the negative space could be better aligned to keep the focus where you want it.
PitchDeckBoy PitchDeckBoy
Thanks for the heads up, that orange is fire—just tightening the negative space so the eye lands exactly where we want it, no problem. Let’s get that laser focus on it.
Neca Neca
Got it, let’s tighten those margins. I’ll set the background to #F5F5F5 and the text to #333, then trim the left padding until the eye lines up with the call‑to‑action. A crisp grid keeps everything in place—no extra pixels. Done.
PitchDeckBoy PitchDeckBoy
Nice move, that light background and dark text will make the CTA pop. Cutting the left padding to line up the eye is a genius tweak—grid on point, no pixel waste. Let’s see the new slide, I can already feel the traction.
Neca Neca
Glad it feels right—just make sure the spacing between the icon and the text is the same as on the other slides. Even a 1px difference throws the whole hierarchy off. Once that’s locked, the slide will feel like a well‑tuned instrument.
PitchDeckBoy PitchDeckBoy
Spot on—every pixel counts. I’ll lock that spacing, keep the hierarchy tight, and make sure the slide feels tuned like a Swiss watch. Let’s roll.
Neca Neca
That’s the vibe—tight, clean, and no clutter. Once it feels like a Swiss watch, we’ll have the visual cadence we’re after. Let's run it by the client and keep the rhythm.
PitchDeckBoy PitchDeckBoy
Exactly, let’s show them that precision in action. Onward, the client’s inbox is about to get a slick surprise.
Neca Neca
Great, just remember to keep the fonts consistent—use the same sans‑serif across the deck. When you hit send, double‑check the line‑height; it’s the smallest detail that can ruin the whole look. Good luck—your slide will look like a well‑organized desk.