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A split slide pairing two condensed statements and participant quotes on the left with a large 80% stat and purple chevron on the right.
Summary
A two-part argument slide: condensed statements and supporting quotes on the left, a headline 80% statistic with a purple chevron on the right.
Visual description
Near-black grunge field with corner brackets. The left column stacks two condensed all-caps statements ("INFLUENCE does not equal POPULARITY." and "POPULARITY RISKS OVEREXPOSURE.") each followed by a short participant quote in small sans with teal quote marks and an attribution (ALEX, 26, CA; and Rebecca Witt, Talent Booker, with a small grayscale headshot). The right half centers a large purple chevron pointing into the heavy condensed "80%" set on a dark scanned-tape band, with bold sub-copy beneath: "THINK BEING INFLUENTIAL IS DIFFERENT FROM BEING POPULAR." The COMPLEX | COLLECTIVE lockup is bottom-right.
Key takeaway
Pairing qualitative quotes with one oversized quantitative stat on the same slide lets voice and data reinforce each other. The purple chevron acts as a literal pointer driving the eye from argument to proof.
Reuse notes
A strong template for a finding that has both a number and human color behind it. The left-quotes / right-stat split with a chevron pointer is reusable across a report's data slides. Needs real attributed quotes to feel credible.








































