Find a local presentation & pitch deck design in Sydney

Post a gig in 60 seconds, get bids from presentation & pitch deck designs nearby. You pick the one that fits.

Free to postStripe-secured payments300+local freelancersABN required
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Best presentation & pitch deck designs in Sydney

Ranked by verified rating, review volume, proximity and profile completeness. Every freelancer joins with an ABN and an Australian mobile.

Showing 5 of 8 freelancers.
KL

Katie L.

Just joined
Sydney, NSW 20+ yrs
Graphic Design (Signage, Posters, Digital & Print)Logo & Brand IdentityPresentation & Pitch Deck Design +4 more
MC

Maria Florencia C.

Just joined
Sydney, NSW 15+ yrs
Logo & Brand IdentityGraphic Design (Signage, Posters, Digital & Print)Presentation & Pitch Deck Design +11 more
BR

Bart R.

Just joined
Sydney, NSW 10+ yrs
Logo & Brand IdentityAdvertising & Marketing CreativePresentation & Pitch Deck Design +8 more
TS

Taha S.

Sydney, NSW 5+ yrs
Logo & Brand IdentityGraphic Design (Signage, Posters, Digital & Print)Website & UI/UX Design +13 more
JL

Jessica L.

Sydney, NSW 2+ yrs
Digital Growth & ConsultingWeb DevelopmentLogo & Brand Identity +2 more

What's the cost of a presentation & pitch deck design in Sydney?

$129/hr
Est. hourly rate $73$222/hr
presentation & pitch deck design Ave. hourly rate · Updated today
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Presentation & pitch deck design in Sydney, questions

It depends whether you need the story sorted or just the look. A design-only gig takes your existing content and makes it sharp and on-brand: layouts, type, charts, icons and a consistent template. A fuller gig also helps with the narrative, the order of the slides, what each one needs to say and what to cut, then designs it. Be clear up front which you want, because reworking the story is a bigger job than polishing slides you've already written.

Content is the story and the words: what each slide argues, in what order, and the numbers behind it. Design is how it looks and how clearly it reads: layout, hierarchy, charts and consistency. A great-looking deck with a muddled story still loses the room, and a sharp story in ugly slides undersells you. The best gigs handle both, but if your content's already locked, say so and you'll get bids scoped to design only.

One clear idea per slide, a story that builds, and visuals that do the talking. The strongest decks cut the wall of text, lead each slide with a single takeaway, and let charts and images carry the point so the audience listens to you instead of reading ahead. Investors and buyers decide fast, so the first few slides have to land the what and the why before attention drifts. Clear and confident beats crammed every time.

An investor deck makes the case for backing the business: the problem, the market, the model, traction and the team, built to raise money. A sales deck makes the case for buying: your customer's problem, your solution, proof it works, and the next step. They share a polished look but the story and the goal differ, so tell the freelancer which one you need. A good freelancer shapes the narrative around that audience, not a generic template.

A design polish of an existing deck can turn around in a few days to a week. A full build, where you shape the story, design every slide and run a couple of revision rounds, usually takes 2 to 4 weeks. The biggest delay is almost always your content: a freelancer can't design slides that aren't written yet. Have your key numbers and rough points ready before the gig starts and it moves much faster.

For an internal update or an early draft, Canva templates and AI slide generators will get you moving, and that's fine. Where a freelancer earns their keep is the stuff that wins a raise or a contract: a tight narrative, custom charts that make your numbers obvious, and design polish that signals you're serious. AI can fill slides quickly, but it tends to pad rather than sharpen, and it won't make the hard call about what to cut. For a high-stakes pitch, that judgement is the value.

Whichever you'll actually present and edit from, so tell the freelancer at the start. PowerPoint and Google Slides are the safe defaults for sharing and co-editing; Keynote suits Mac-only presenters. Most freelancers design in their own tool then hand over in your format, but fully editable charts and text don't always survive a conversion cleanly, so confirm the deliverable up front. Ask for the fonts or web-safe substitutes too, so it doesn't reflow on someone else's machine.

The finished deck in your chosen format (PowerPoint, Google Slides or Keynote), fully editable so you can update a number before a meeting. Ask for a reusable template, the master slides and layouts, so future decks stay on-brand without a redesign. A PDF export is handy for sending. If custom charts or icons were built, make sure those are editable too, not flattened into images you can't change.

In Sydney, a design polish of an existing deck often runs $400 to $1,200. A full investor or sales deck with narrative help, custom charts and a reusable template typically lands between $1,500 and $5,000, and a high-stakes raise deck can go higher. Price tracks the number of slides, how much story and chart work is involved, and how many revision rounds you need.

Look for a portfolio of real decks, ideally investor or sales decks close to yours, and judge whether their slides are clear and persuasive, not just pretty. Check they'll hand over an editable file in your format with a reusable template, read their verified reviews on Unjumble, and confirm whether narrative help is included or design only. A quick chat about your audience and goal tells you fast whether they get the brief.

Post a pitch deck design gig in under five minutes. Describe the work, set your budget and timeframe, and choose whether it's time-based or outcome-based. Local freelancers send a bid with a quote, you compare their profiles, portfolios and verified reviews, then pick the one that fits. Posting is free, so you only pay for the work.

Every gig is split into stages you both agree on up front, often the structure and then the designed slides. You fund each stage before the work starts and it's held securely through Stripe, then released once you sign off. No chasing invoices, and no paying for work that's not done.