Business Transformation
Visualize your strategy with ease
Light outline onion graphics with 5 layers with core
from deck
Onion Layers Diagrams (PPT Template)
Light Outline Onion Diagram with 5 Layers including Core
Slide Content
The slide is focused on a conceptual "Onion Diagram" with five concentric layers to represent information hierarchy or complexity. Each layer, numbered from the core (1) to the outermost layer (5), has a designated space for text, allowing the presenter to explain the relevance or details of each level. The core is at the center, emphasizing its importance, and each successive layer builds around the core to represent a growing or expanding concept. This layered approach is useful for visualizing nested or hierarchical structures in topics such as organizational frameworks, systems analysis, or product design.
Graphical Look
- A light blue color scheme with a splash of green accent.
- Central graphic is an "onion" comprised of five concentric circles representing layers.
- Each layer has a corresponding numbered circle label (1-5) in a gradient of blue shades.
- There are text placeholders adjacent to each layer, paired with flat design icons to symbolize different concepts:
- Layer 1: Icon of a person's silhouette in grey.
- Layer 2: Icon of two individuals in dialogue in green.
- Layer 3: Icon of three individuals in blue.
- Layer 4: Icon of four individuals in a meeting in dark blue.
- Core layer: Also known as Layer 1, highlighted with a brighter green and a central icon resembling a molecular or network structure.
- The overall slide layout is balanced, with text areas on the left and right side of the onion graphic.
The slide is visually clean and carefully organized, providing an aesthetically pleasing and easily understandable display of layered information. The use of icons and colored layers effectively draws the viewer's attention to the key elements of the diagram.
Use Cases
- To present the structure of an organization, showing the core mission and expanding to various departments or teams.
- For systems analysis, illustrating layers of a system from the most fundamental level to peripheral elements.
- In product design, to delineate different aspects of a product from the core functionality to additional features.
- When providing an overview of a strategic plan, highlighting the central goal and the supporting initiatives or priorities.