If you’ve already learned how to make a vertical lollipop chart, you might think, “Cool. I’ll just rotate it 90 degrees.” Nope. You can’t rotate charts in PowerPoint. (I know,
If you’ve already learned how to make a vertical lollipop chart, you might think, “Cool. I’ll just rotate it 90 degrees.” Nope. You can’t rotate charts in PowerPoint. (I know,
The “liquid glass” effect is everywhere right now — frosted panels, soft blur, subtle highlights that look like light is hitting curved glass. PowerPoint doesn’t have a “blur background” button
So you’ve got a PowerPoint file… but you need it in Google Slides. Maybe your team lives in Google Workspace. Maybe you need real-time collaboration. Maybe you’re just trying to
PowerPoint isn’t just for rectangles and sad little circles. Hidden inside it is a set of tools that lets you build completely custom shapes by combining two (or more) shapes
If your first instinct when you have data is to insert a pie chart…don’t worry. You’re not alone. But pie charts are almost never the best choice, especially when you






