Gamma turns presentations into web pages
Jon Noronha, co-founder of Gamma, on building AI-powered slides
Gamma is trying to escape the commodity trap of AI slide generation by turning presentations into lightweight web pages. That means the product is optimized less for 16,9 pages and more for responsive cards, embeds, and interactions that work live in a meeting, as a link in email, or as a page on mobile. The strategic bet is that Microsoft and Google can copy prompt to deck faster than they can redefine the artifact itself.
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This direction was built into Gamma early. Its core unit is the card, not the slide, and cards can expand, collapse, hold video, embeds, tables, and live web content. That makes Gamma closer to a document and webpage system than a traditional deck editor.
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The clearest comparable is Pitch Rooms, where a deck becomes a branded microsite with links, forms, videos, and CRM data attached. The difference is that Pitch layers microsites onto a slide workflow, while Gamma is reshaping the base creation format itself around web native content.
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This move also widens the market. Instead of competing only for presentation budgets, Gamma can sell into landing pages, sales leave behinds, internal docs, investor updates, and simple websites. That expansion is part of why Gamma scaled to an estimated $50M ARR in April 2025, while pure presentation peers stayed narrower.
Going forward, the winners in this category are likely to look less like better PowerPoint and more like prompt driven publishing tools for business content. Gamma is already moving in that direction, from deck maker to system for shipping interactive business artifacts that can be created once, presented live, and reused anywhere on the web.