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Stop Building Decks From a Cold Start: Automating the Pre-Deck With a Browser Agent

The slides aren't the bottleneck — the pre-deck gathering is. How to pair a browser agent with ChatSlide to automate the boring 70% of deck prep.

Browser agent gathering inputs from dashboards, Slack, and Notion into a structured brief that ChatSlide turns into a deck
Browser agent gathering inputs from dashboards, Slack, and Notion into a structured brief that ChatSlide turns into a deck

If you build decks regularly — weekly board updates, monthly customer reviews, quarterly all-hands — you already know the secret most "AI deck" demos hide: the slides themselves are not the hard part.

The hard part is everything that has to happen before you can write a single slide. Pulling the latest numbers. Reading three Slack threads to figure out which version of the story to tell. Finding the chart from last quarter that you swore you'd reuse. Opening the same five tools in the same order you opened them last Monday.

If you're a ChatSlide user, you've probably noticed that the moment you have a clean brief — a few hundred words of structured bullets, with the numbers and decisions named — the deck almost generates itself. The output quality is bounded above by the input quality. Garbage brief, garbage deck. Clean brief, clean deck.

So the leverage move isn't getting faster at decks. It's getting faster at briefs.

What "getting faster at briefs" looks like in practice

The honest version of how most people prepare a recurring deck:

  1. Open the dashboard. Wait for it to load.
  2. Re-apply the filters from last week (the URL doesn't save them).
  3. Copy three numbers into a scratch doc.
  4. Open Slack. Search for the relevant project channel.
  5. Skim the last week of messages. Copy the two that matter.
  6. Open Notion. Find the planning doc. Skim for changes since last week.
  7. Reconcile the version-skew between the Notion doc and the Slack threads.
  8. Now, finally, start writing slides.

Steps 1–7 are not creative work. They are clicking. They are exactly the kind of thing a browser agent that runs inside your logged-in tabs can do on a schedule, without you sitting there.

A tool like the Dassi browser agent — a browser extension that reads your real logged-in pages and can be scripted to navigate, filter, and extract — eats steps 1–7. You save the routine as a reusable workflow, schedule it for Sunday night, and by the time you open ChatSlide on Monday the brief is already sitting in a doc, formatted as bullets.

We've seen users go from "I spend Sunday night dreading the Monday board prep" to "the brief is waiting for me, I rewrite 20% of it, paste it in, done by 9:30." The deck tool didn't get faster. The pre-deck got automated.

How to set it up (the abstract version)

Whatever browser agent you use, the recipe is the same:

  1. List the tabs you open every time. Be specific — exact URLs, exact filters. A vague workflow can't be automated.
  2. Decide what each tab contributes. Numbers? Decisions? Customer quotes? Charts? Name the output.
  3. Write a brief template. A markdown outline with section headers. Each section maps to one of the tabs from step 1.
  4. Script the gather. Have the agent open each tab, extract the named output, drop it into the right section of the template.
  5. Schedule it. Once a week, twice a month — whenever your deck cadence is, one day earlier.

The point of writing the template first is that it forces you to decide what the deck is actually about before you go look for inputs. Most bad decks are bad because the author started gathering before deciding what they wanted to say.

What ChatSlide does with the brief

When the brief lands in the right shape — section headers, bullets, named numbers, named decisions — ChatSlide reads it as structure, not prose. The slide layouts get chosen based on the content type (table vs callout vs comparison), the charts get wired to the numbers in the brief, and the speaker notes get drafted from the bullets you couldn't fit on the slide itself.

It is, again, a specialization story. The browser agent is good at acting in pages it has authenticated access to. ChatSlide is good at turning structured text into slides. Neither tool has to be a generalist. The handoff between them is a markdown file.

The unlock

Once you've split the work this way, the calendar effect is real. Recurring decks stop being a chunk of time you have to block out. They become a five-minute review of a pre-built draft. The hours you used to spend in tabs are back.

That's the unlock people are actually buying when they pay for "AI productivity tools." Not faster typing. Faster gathering.


The ChatSlide team builds an AI presentation generator that turns structured briefs into board-ready decks. For automating the gathering side of the workflow, we recommend Dassi for browser-side automation.

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Author

Quanlai Li

2026/05/20

Quanlai Li is a seasoned journalist at ChatSlide, specializing in AI and digital communication. With a deep understanding of emerging technologies, Quanlai crafts insightful articles that engage and inform readers.

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