PowerPoint Handouts Made Simple

Conference pack - notebook, handouts and pens

Have you ever wondered how people create PowerPoint slide handouts so quickly and easily? I’m going to show you PowerPoint’s brilliant built-in feature that makes this incredibly straightforward.

Today, I want to share one of my favourite PowerPoint features that many people don’t even know exists.

The Magic of PowerPoint’s Export Feature

I know printed handouts aren’t exactly the modern way of doing things, but sometimes they can be quite useful. The really nice thing is that PowerPoint has this option completely built in. All I need to do is navigate to File > Export, and you’ll see “Create Handouts” at the bottom of the menu.

Export to create PowerPoint slide handouts

What’s particularly brilliant about this feature is that it creates a proper Word document, not just a basic printout. This means you can edit, customise, and format your handouts exactly how you need them.

Choosing Your Handout Style

When I click “Create Handouts,” I get several options to choose from:

You can choose the type of handout, size of slides and additional content.

Notes next to slides – This assumes you’ve added speaker notes to your presentation (which can be useful). It’s perfect if you want comprehensive handouts for yourself or detailed materials for your audience.

Blank lines next to slides – This is actually my preferred option. It gives your attendees space to write their own notes, with helpful lines already formatted for them. Much more engaging than passive handouts!

Notes below slides or blank lines below slides – The key difference here is slide size. When notes appear below slides, you get larger slide images with one per page. When they’re positioned next to slides, you fit about three slides per page.

Finally, there’s the outline option, which provides just the text content. I’d only recommend this if your audience already knows the material quite well.

Paste vs Paste Link: A Critical Decision

Once you’ve selected your preferred layout, PowerPoint asks whether you want to paste or paste link and it’s talking about the slide images. I generally choose Paste if my presentation is finalised, as it creates a static document that won’t change. However, if you’re still tweaking your slides, Paste Link is brilliant – it will allow you to update your handout when you modify the presentation.

The Results Speak for Themselves

Within moments, Word opens and your handout is automatically created in front of you. I get three slides per page with neat lines for notes, and everything is already organised across multiple pages. I can now save this Word document, make any additional edits I need, or print it straight away.

Your new handouts are in Word where you can edit, save and print them.

Tip: It’s always useful to add in your name and the title of the presentation into the header, and add page numbers to the footer. 

The whole process takes less than a minute and produces professional-looking handouts every time. It’s one of those PowerPoint features that, once you discover it, you’ll wonder how you ever managed without it.

Written with the help of Claude AI from an original transcription.

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