Templates are the base presentations tagged with Dynamic Content and downloaded by users. Templates are created by uploading/connecting a Google Slides or PowerPoint presentation. To create or edit a template, go to the "Templates" tab in the navbar. Click on "+ New Template" and input a name and description for the template. Then, upload the PowerPoint file or connect to the Google Slide document. Check out the video below to learn more about uploading a template.
Once you click "Add template," Matik will scan the slides for any tags that you’ve already added and will match them with a piece of dynamic content (the name in alt text is matched to the name of dynamic content). To learn more about how to add tags, navigate to the section on Tags.
Click on the template you just added and the page below will appear.
On this page, you will see all the dynamic content and associated Inputs incorporated in the slides. A banner will appear above the dynamic content and input table indicating whether any discrepancies need to be fixed. If Matik was not able to match a tag with a piece of dynamic content, there will be a red (!) icon on the slide and the dynamic content.
Reasons for the red (!) include:
- Dynamic content not created: The dynamic content of the tag in the slide does not exist. Create dynamic content to match the tag.
- Dynamic content typo: The name of the dynamic content in the alt-text of the slide's tag does not match the name of the dynamic content in the Matik platform.
When you click on the “Test Presentation” button, a form will appear with all the inputs associated with the template. Populate each input and click on “Apply Inputs." Check out the video below to learn more about prepping and testing your template.
Additional Template Features
See the support articles below for additional features of dynamic content.
- Conditional Slides: Dynamically keep or remove slides based on specified criteria
- Slide Looping: Bulk generate slides within templates
- Slide Libraries: Enable slides to be added to other templates when generating a presentation
- Default File Naming for Generated Presentations: How to set a default file name for generated presentations
- Sub-Templates: Save modified templates with added or deleted slides for future use
- Scheduling Presentations: Create a recurring schedule to generate presentations
Template Best Practices
Best Practices for Creating Templates
We recommend having the design and narrative of the templates completed before uploading to Matik. Future dynamic content should contain mock data or placeholder text to be later replaced with tags. By having the template near complete before onboarding, minimal design changes will need to be done after tagging. The producers will also have a clear understanding of what data sources need to be connected and what dynamic content needs to be created.
We also recommend speaker notes, which can contain dynamic content, so the end users can easily understand how to best present each slide. To insert dynamic content in speaker notes insert the dynamic content name in curly brackets {{}}, e.g. {{account_name}}.
It’s also important that users have read access to the template’s location. If you’re using Google Slides, we recommend following these steps:
- Create a Matik Templates folder
- Create Production and Staging sub-folders
- Give all end users “View” access
Best Practices for Testing and Releasing Templates
Stress Test
- Stress test and evaluate dynamic content performance.
- Review presentation output for formatting.
- Ensure Inputs are end-user friendly.
Pilot with Champions
- Start with a select few end users available for testing and feedback (1+ week).
- Evaluate qualitative and quantitative (what they like, how often they are using).
Train End Users
- Setup End User trainings or documentation on how to use Matik and present the presentations.
Establish Feedback Channels
- Establish standard feedback channels (e-mail, JIRA, office hours) which will create a better end user experience and improve the feedback loop.
Set SLAs and Expectations
- Set expectations on what they can and cannot expect using your Matik template (i.e., what’s automated and not, how should certain slides be presented).
- Set SLAs on when to respond to data-related bugs.
Experiment and Continually Improve
- Continually improve pieces (dynamic content, narrative, template design) based on end user feedback.
- Continue to use Matik to scale known high-impact narratives, analyses or metrics to more people in your organization.
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