Turn a Spreadsheet Into a Presentation That Tells a Story
Rows and columns are not a narrative. Eazy is a content-first editor: drop in your Excel or CSV file, Eazy reads the data into editable content, and you write the story around the numbers — then design a deck and refine it by talking to it.
How It Works
Drop in your spreadsheet
Bring an Excel workbook or a CSV export straight from your analytics tool, CRM, or finance system. Eazy reads the data into editable content — tables, figures, and headings you can restructure — no copy-paste and no manual retyping of numbers.
Write the story around the numbers
Work in a real block editor — headings, bullets, toggles, slide dividers, notes. The spreadsheet gives you the data; you write what it means: what changed, why it matters, and what you want the audience to do. Your document is the source of truth.
Design the deck and generate a chart inline
When the narrative is right, Eazy builds the slides from your document — designed for you by default, on-brand out of the box. Ask for a chart or an image right where the data lives, and generate it inline. Prefer a different look? Apply a theme in one click.
Refine by talking, then export
Ask for changes in plain language — "turn the Q3 table into a bar chart," "lead with the growth number." It 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
Your numbers become editable content, not an attachment
Drop in an Excel or CSV file and Eazy reads the data into your document as text and tables you can restructure — not a static file bolted onto a slide. The figures live where you write the story.
The story leads, the data supports
A spreadsheet answers "what"; your audience needs "so what." Writing in a real editor keeps you focused on the argument the numbers make before a single slide is designed.
One document keeps every figure consistent
Your document is the single source of truth. Correct a number or reframe a trend in the doc and the deck follows — no hunting across slides to fix a figure you already updated in the data.
Charts and images where they belong
Generate a chart or an image inline, right next to the data it explains. Turn a dense table into a clean visual so the point lands without making the audience read a grid.
Change one line, not the deck
Refresh a quarter of data or reword a takeaway and only the affected slide rebuilds. The slides you already liked stay exactly as they were, so a last-minute update never risks the whole deck.
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 email or PPTX for a meeting, with the design and any charts preserved.
Why a Spreadsheet Is Not Yet a Presentation
Rows and columns are precise, but they do not persuade on their own. An audience does not want to read a grid of figures; they want to know what the numbers mean and what to do about them. The work of turning data into a decision lives in the narrative, and that narrative has to exist in the content long before it becomes slides. Tools that turn a single prompt into finished slides skip the step that matters most — deciding which numbers carry the story.
Eazy puts that step first. You drop in the spreadsheet, Eazy reads it into editable content, and you write in a real block editor with headings, bullets, slide dividers, and notes. You choose which figures lead, frame the trend, and add the "so what" the raw data can never supply. Once the argument holds together, Eazy designs the deck from it — on-brand by default — so the result reflects your thinking, not a template wrapped around a table.
From Excel and CSV to Editable Content
Most data decks start with a file someone already exported: a monthly report in Excel, a CSV pull from an analytics dashboard, a finance model, a survey export. In Eazy you drop that file in and it is read into editable content inside your document — headings, tables, and figures you can rearrange and write around, not a spreadsheet frozen onto a slide.
That means the numbers and the story live together as you work. Pull the three figures that matter into a headline, leave the rest as a supporting table, and write the takeaway right beside them. Because everything is one document, the deck Eazy designs from it stays coherent — every figure on a slide traces back to the content you shaped, so nothing drifts out of sync.
Turn Tables Into Charts That Make the Point
Some numbers belong in a table; most belong in a chart. A growth curve, a share breakdown, or a before-and-after comparison lands far faster as a visual than as a grid of cells an audience has to decode from their seats. In Eazy you generate a chart inline, right in the document next to the data it explains, so the point is visible instead of buried.
You do it by asking — "make this a bar chart," "chart revenue by quarter," "add a pie of the category split" — and because Eazy already knows your whole document, it works from the figures you brought in. Change one line and only that slide rebuilds, so refining a chart never disturbs the slides you already liked. The visual and the narrative stay anchored to the same source of truth.
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