Financial Decks

Financial Decks

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Transport routes of USA: Path from point A to B
from deck Map of Canada and US, North America, Mexico, Population and GDP

Usage example: Paths from Point A to B and C

Slide Content

The PowerPoint slide titled "Usage example: Paths from Point A to B and C" illustrates potential routes or connections between different locations across the United States map. Point A is marked with a red pin and appears to serve as the origin, while Points B and C, marked with green and orange pins respectively, are shown as destinations. Dashed lines trace the paths from Point A to Point B and Point A to Point C, suggesting movement or a transfer of something, possibly data, goods, or people, across these points.

Graphical Look

  • The background is white which gives a clean look to the slide.
  • At the top left corner, there is a dark teal ribbon overlapping a lighter teal ribbon with the phrase "Fully Editable."
  • The slide depicts a stylized blue map of the United States with state boundaries indicated by lighter lines.
  • Three pins, labeled A, B, and C, are placed on the map, with pin A in purple, pin B in green, and pin C in orange.
  • Pins B and C are tilted slightly to signify action or direction.
  • There are dashed black lines indicating the paths from point A to B and from A to C, with arrows at the end showing direction.
  • Point A is located on the western side, point B is on the eastern side and point C is towards the southern side of the map.
  • The map occupies the majority of the slide, suggesting it's the main focus.

The overall look of the slide is clean and business-like, with a color scheme that is professional yet visually engaging. The map serves as the focal point, drawing attention to the paths between points A, B, and C.

Use Cases

  • Presenting logistics routes or distribution channels in a business meeting.
  • Showing strategic expansion plans for a company across different regions within staff or stakeholder presentations.
  • Illustrating travel itineraries or tour paths for tourism purposes in marketing material.
  • Demonstrating data flow or communication networks in a technical or infrastructure-related presentation.

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