Peer compare
This tool vs close alternatives
Overall
Review
Capability
Team readiness
Workflow fit
Articulate
Presenter 360 lets instructional designers create presentation-based courses in PowerPoint, adding narration, quizzes, interactions, web objects, and publishing workflows.
This profile evaluates the Articulate Presenter 360 PowerPoint add-in across feature breadth, workflow fit, pricing context, and source-backed public evidence.
Quick take
An important e-learning market entry for teams that use PowerPoint as the starting point for formal training content.
Review
Editorial
Price
Requires Articulate 360 subscription
Platform
PowerPoint-based authoring tool inside Articulate Studio 360
Best fit
Instructional designers using PowerPoint as a course base
Peer compare
Overall
Review
Capability
Team readiness
Workflow fit
Profile pulse
Create presentation-based courses inside PowerPoint
90Add narration, videos, annotations, quizzes, and interactions
86Publish PowerPoint-based learning content through Articulate workflows
82This visual block highlights the strongest powerpoint add-ins themes without relying on product screenshots, keeping the page faster and more readable on mobile.
Standout features
Watch-outs
Score breakdown
Editorial depth
82No verified review dataset in the current guide.
Capability breadth
82How broad the feature set is for real slide-production work.
Team readiness
82Fit for rollout, governance, repeatability, and multi-user use.
Workflow fit
76How well the tool maps to recurring PowerPoint jobs.
Source coverage
79How much public, attributable source coverage backs the profile.
Sources
Official Articulate community guide
Official Articulate guide describing Presenter 360 for PowerPoint-based course creation.
Presenter interaction guide
Official guide for adding interactions through the PowerPoint ribbon.
Closest alternatives
Miro Smart Screenshots for Microsoft Office
Teams presenting workshop outputs from Miro
MLC PowerPoint Add-in
Consulting-style slide production
PPT Productivity
Consultants and analysts who live in PowerPoint all day