Turn Your Notes Into a Presentation

Your best ideas start as messy notes, not a template. Eazy is a content-first editor: write or paste your notes in a real document, shape them into a clear argument, then design a deck — no blank slide grid, no template pressure.

ET
Eazy Team
Quick Summary
Eazy turns notes into a presentation by putting the writing first. Paste your meeting notes, a rough outline, or bullet fragments into a real document editor — or drop in a PDF, Word doc, or link and Eazy reads it into editable content. You shape the argument as a document, and only when the content is right does Eazy design the deck for you, on-brand by default. Refine by talking to it in plain language, change one line and only that slide rebuilds, then export to PDF or PPTX. Free early access, no watermark.
0
Blank slides to fill — you write in a document, not a grid
Eazy, 2026
6+
File & link types Eazy reads into editable content
Eazy, 2026
1 doc
Single source of truth — edit it, the deck follows
Eazy, 2026
$0
Early access price
Eazy, 2026

How It Works

1

Paste your notes — or start writing

Drop your raw material straight into the editor: meeting notes, a rough outline, bullet fragments, or a half-formed argument. Bring a PDF, Word doc, or a web link and Eazy reads it into editable content — no copy-paste. Or open a blank document and start typing your thinking as it comes.

2

Shape the notes into an argument

Work in a real block editor — headings, bullets, toggles, slide dividers, notes. Reorder fragments, group related points, cut what does not belong, and turn a pile of notes into a clear line of reasoning. Your document is the source of truth, and there is no slide grid pushing you to fill boxes before you have thought it through.

3

Design the deck

When the content reads right, Eazy builds the slides from your document — designed for you by default, on-brand out of the box. Want a different look? Apply a theme to restyle the whole deck in one click. The design happens after the thinking, not instead of it.

4

Refine by talking, then export

Ask for changes in plain language — "split this dense slide in two," "add a summary at the end." It already knows your whole document. Change one line and only that slide rebuilds. Export to PDF or PPTX with the layout intact.

Why Eazy for This

Write first, no blank-slide pressure

Notes belong in a document, not a slide grid. In Eazy you draft and reorder your thinking as text, so you are never staring at empty slides trying to design and reason at the same time.

No template to fight

You are not forced to pick a layout before you know what you are saying. You shape the argument as a document first; Eazy designs the slides from it afterward, so the structure follows your content, not a template.

Bring the notes you already have

Meeting notes in a doc, a research PDF, an outline in Word, a link you keep referencing — drop them in and Eazy reads them into editable content. Your scattered material becomes one working document.

One document, one deck

Your notes are the single source of truth. Tighten a point or fix a fact in the document and the deck follows — no reconciling changes across a dozen slides.

Change one line, not the deck

Edit a sentence and only the affected slide rebuilds. The slides you already liked stay exactly as they were, so late cleanup never risks the whole presentation.

On-brand slides, clean exports

Slides are designed for you by default and stay on-brand out of the box. Export high-fidelity PDF for sharing or PPTX for a meeting, with the design preserved.

Why Notes Should Become a Document Before They Become Slides

Notes are unfinished thinking, and slides are the wrong place to finish it. Eazy is content-first: you paste or write your notes in a real document editor, shape them into a clear argument, and only then design the deck. Reasoning in a document — instead of on a slide grid — is what turns scattered notes into a presentation that actually lands.

Notes are how ideas arrive: fast, fragmented, out of order. The work of a presentation is turning that raw material into a line of reasoning someone can follow. That work is writing, and it belongs in a document — where you can reorder, group, and cut freely — not on a slide grid where every idea is trapped in its own box before you know if it belongs.

Eazy puts that step first. Paste your notes into a real block editor with headings, bullets, slide dividers, and toggles, and shape them into an argument you can read top to bottom. Only when the content holds together does Eazy design the deck from it — on-brand by default. The slides reflect thinking you finished, not thinking you rushed to fit a layout.

Turning Meeting Notes and Outlines Into a Deck

Most decks start from something you already wrote: meeting notes, an outline, a doc full of bullets. Eazy reads PDFs, Word, PowerPoint, Excel/CSV, and web links into editable content, and you can paste plain notes straight in — so your existing material becomes one working document you shape into a presentation, with no copy-paste and no rebuild.

You rarely start a presentation from nothing. There are notes from the meeting, an outline you sketched, a research doc you have been adding to for weeks. In Eazy you drop those in — or paste them directly — and everything lands as editable content inside one document you can restructure, not a stack of static attachments.

From there the notes stop being a list and start being a narrative. Merge two overlapping points, promote a buried insight to a headline, add a section by asking for it in plain language. Because it is all one document, the deck Eazy designs stays coherent from the first slide to the last — even when the source was a mess of fragments.

Design Only When the Content Is Right

Design is a distraction while you are still thinking. Eazy keeps writing and design separate: you shape the argument in the document first, and design happens on demand when the content is right. Then you refine by talking to it — change one line and only that slide rebuilds — so polishing never means starting over.

The trap with slide-first tools is that they make you design before you have decided what to say. You end up nudging boxes and picking layouts while the argument is still half-formed. Eazy removes that pressure by keeping the editor as the place where the thinking happens and treating design as the step that comes after — not a gate you pass through first.

When the notes have become a real argument, Eazy designs the deck for you, on-brand out of the box, and you can apply a theme to change the whole look in one click. Refinements happen by talking to it — "make this slide simpler," "combine these two" — and because it knows your whole document, it edits with full context. Change one line and only that slide rebuilds, so the slides you already liked stay put.

Recommended Designer Styles

EditorialClean, typographic, and content-forward — ideal when your notes are text-heavy and you want the argument to lead without visual noise.
Mono BoldHigh-contrast and confident, it turns key points and takeaways from your notes into slides that read clearly across a room.
Nordic CalmA quiet, spacious theme that gives dense meeting notes room to breathe, keeping a working session or internal review easy to follow.

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Professional slides, surprisingly simple. Free early access with credits included.

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Paste your notes into Eazy's real document editor — meeting notes, an outline, or loose bullets — and shape them into a clear argument using headings and slide dividers. When the content reads right, Eazy designs the deck for you, on-brand by default. You refine by talking to it and export to PDF or PPTX. The writing happens first; the design follows.