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300+ Matrix Presentation Templates

You're evaluating multiple options against multiple criteria, but without a visual framework, it's all opinion and debate. Teams get stuck. Progress halts. A matrix shows how each option scores objectively across criteria, making decisions clear and defensible.

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Creative Matrix Organization Chart Template Design
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Matrix with existing and new markets products in red, purple, blue, and orange squares, with icons and text on the side.
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Business diagram with four squares in red, green, blue, and yellow frames, featuring icons and aligned black arrows.
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A horizontal competitive matrix with six rows of color-coded segments, featuring placeholders text and circle indicators.
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Risk Reward Matrix is a colorcoded chart showing investment risks, rewards, and decision-making with red, yellow, and green.
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Leadership PPT slide with a 2x2 grid, showing four leadership levels with captions and a scale from low to high.
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Ansoff matrix with nine colored blocks in a grid layout, displaying industry attractiveness versus market position.
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3x3 matrix showing potential versus performance, with red, teal, and orange squares representing various categories.
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Infographic displaying a 2x2 blue-bordered matrix with icons unit structure, percentage, shopping cart, and radar chart.
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BCG matrix design slide with four quadrants labeled by market growth and relative market share, featuring icons.
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Blue themed slide with four sections in rectangular shapes and a central gray area, featuring white circular icons.
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Myers Briggs grid with purple, green, blue, and orange sections, divided by personal and logical traits.
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Slide featuring a cow graphic on the right and text on the left defining the term cash cow in a business context.
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Blue grid based Hoshin Kanri matrix with various columns and rows, showing black and white dots indicating impact levels.
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Ansoff matrix with color-coded squares, ranging from 1A to 3C, indicating performance with placeholder text.
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Colorful RACI matrix slide displaying responsibilities for Team 1, Team 2, and Team 3 in a structured format.
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Matrix structure diagram with vertical positions and horizontal product lines intersecting under a president.
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Priority matrix featuring tasks to do, decide, delegate, or delete, with caption areas on the right.
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Four quadrant matrix with high and low labels, featuring red, purple, blue, and yellow boxes filled with placeholder text.
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A slide showing a project escalation matrix with four colored arrows labeled 01 to 04, each with caption areas.
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Pricing strategy matrix slide displays four colored quadrants based on price and quality.

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Frequently Asked Questions

1. Why do teams get stuck when evaluating options without a matrix?

Because without a structured framework, evaluation becomes opinion-based. Each person has a preference but no objective way to compare. Debate goes in circles. A matrix forces you to name criteria upfront and score each option against them. Suddenly there's a shared language and people can see why one option scores higher than another.

2. What's the difference between subjective debate and objective matrix evaluation?

Subjective: "I think this option is better because..." Objective: "This option scores 8/10 on cost, 7/10 on speed, 9/10 on quality — totaling 24 points. That option scores 6/10, 9/10, 5/10 — totaling 20 points." The matrix makes it visible. Numbers replace opinions. Teams see the reasoning, not just the conclusion.

3. How do I set up criteria that the team actually agrees on?

Start with what matters for YOUR decision. Cost? Timeline? Quality? Team fit? Risk? List 4-6 criteria maximum. Ask the team: "Are these the things that matter most?" If everyone nods, you have buy-in. If someone disagrees, that's when the real discussion happens — BEFORE scoring. Once criteria are agreed, scoring becomes much easier because everyone knows what you're measuring.

4. How do I prevent the matrix from becoming another opinion tool?

Define your scoring scale first: What does a "7" mean vs a "9"? Be specific. "Cost: 10 = under $10K, 7 = $10-20K, 4 = over $20K." Without definitions, scoring stays subjective. With them, scoring becomes almost mechanical. Different people will score differently, but the spread is visible. That's actually useful — it shows where disagreement lives.

5. What if the team strongly disagrees on which option should win?

That's valuable information. The matrix didn't fail — it revealed that you're optimizing for different things. Maybe some people weight cost heavily, others weight speed. The matrix makes that visible. Now you can have the REAL conversation: "Do we want the cheapest option or the fastest?" Not hidden behind opinions, but explicit and discussable.

6. How do I use a matrix to justify a decision to stakeholders?

Show them the framework and scoring. "We evaluated three options against these criteria: cost, timeline, quality, and team fit. Here's how each scored. This option won because it balanced all factors best." Stakeholders see the logic, not just the choice. They might disagree with the criteria or weights, but they understand your reasoning. That's defensible.

7. What if I'm the only one who thinks an option is good but the matrix says it's not?

The matrix is showing you something. Either your criteria are wrong, your scoring is off, or you're optimizing for something the criteria don't capture. Don't ignore the matrix — question it. "I still like this option. What am I weighing that the matrix isn't capturing?" Maybe you need a new criterion. Maybe you need to rescore. The matrix isn't the final word — it's a conversation tool.