PPT to Video AI — Turn Slide Decks into Demonstration Clips
Slide decks are where training content goes to die. The procedure buried on slide 14 deserves to be a clip people actually watch.
Paste your slide outline and Pellucida plans it into a scene-by-scene storyboard — real hands and equipment, not bullet points on a screen. Review every scene, then render a finished MP4 with AI narration and subtitles.
See it on a real example
Slides 3-5 of 'X2 Earbuds — Getting Started': open the charging case near your phone; hold the case button for 3 seconds until the LED blinks white; select 'X2 Buds' in your phone's Bluetooth list.
How it works
Paste your slide content
Copy the outline or speaker notes from the slides that carry the actual procedure. The AI plans one storyboard segment per step — not one per slide.
Review the storyboard
Each segment gets a keyframe image and an editable scene prompt. Fix wording, reorder steps, or cut a scene before any render time is spent.
Render and download
Video segments are generated, AI narration and subtitles are added, and you download a finished 15s or 30s MP4 — horizontal or vertical.
What can a PPT to video AI do?
A PPT to video AI does something different from PowerPoint's built-in File → Export → Create a Video, which just records your slides as a timed slideshow — the bullets stay bullets. Pellucida reads the procedure inside your deck and re-plans it as demonstration footage: paste the outline of a pairing guide and the storyboard shows a hand opening the charging case, a finger holding the button, an LED blinking white. Most training decks are 40 slides of context wrapped around 5 slides of actual procedure; this tool is built for those 5 slides. Each step becomes a segment with its own keyframe and editable prompt, and the output is a 15 or 30 second MP4 with narration and subtitles — short enough for an LMS microlearning slot or a looping lobby screen, instead of a 20-minute deck recording nobody finishes.
Why convert PowerPoint to video?
- Decks get skimmed once and archived; a 15-second clip gets replayed until the step sticks.
- PowerPoint's own export keeps your bullets on screen — it's still a deck, just harder to skip through.
- New hires watch a demonstration of the task instead of paging through the quarterly all-hands deck it was buried in.
- One deck usually hides several procedures; each converts to its own clip and slots into the right LMS module.
- When a step changes, you edit one storyboard segment and re-render — no re-recording a narrated slideshow.
How to get the best results
Don't paste the whole deck. Find the slides that describe an actual procedure — setup steps, a safety sequence, a product walkthrough — and paste just that outline plus any speaker notes, which usually contain the detail the bullets left out. Number the steps in the order they must happen, and state anything that must never happen ('never force the hinge'). Name things precisely: 'hold the case button 3 seconds' generates a better scene than 'activate pairing mode'. If a deck covers three procedures, make three clips; a 15-30 second video holds one procedure well and two badly. At the storyboard step, check each scene against the original slide — that review is where you catch the AI turning 'LED blinks white' into a generic close-up. Choose horizontal for LMS embeds, vertical for clips shared to a phone.
What makes a good PPT-to-video conversion
- One procedure per clip — the deck's other 35 slides don't come along.
- Every step is shown as a physical action, not read as a bullet.
- Narration matches what is on screen at that second.
- Subtitles included, because lobby and break-room screens play muted.
- The same product and setting appear in every segment, so it reads as one demonstration.
- A visible end state — the LED confirms pairing — so viewers know what success looks like.
Frequently asked questions
More ways to make training videos
URL to Video
Paste a link to a help article, product page, or wiki and get a short training clip.
SOP to Training Video
Every SOP step becomes a reviewed storyboard segment, then a short demonstration clip.
HIPAA Training Videos
Scenario-based HIPAA awareness clips that supplement your certified compliance course.
Rescue the procedure from the deck
Paste the slides that matter and get a demonstration clip people will actually watch — reviewed by you before a single frame renders.