Gamma unifies research and presentations
Gamma
Web search with citations pushes Gamma from a fast drafting tool into a workflow where the draft can also serve as the evidence trail. That matters because finance, consulting, and strategy work usually breaks when facts live in one tab, notes in another, and slides in a third. Gamma is folding those steps together, so the same product can gather information, shape the argument, and format the final deck or memo.
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The product direction has been consistent for years. Gamma started by removing the rigid slide canvas and making content act more like responsive web blocks. That structure makes it easier for AI to rewrite a paragraph into a table, timeline, or chart, and now to pull in researched facts with citations inside the same workflow.
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This is also a move upmarket. Gamma 3.0 added an agent for web research with citations, deck feedback, and restyling, while the company expanded team controls and automation. Those features fit buyers who need repeatable work products, not just prettier slides, and they help explain Gamma scaling from about $30.5M ARR at the end of 2024 to about $101.9M by October 2025.
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The competitive wedge is not simply AI slide generation, because that gets copied by PowerPoint, Google Slides, and Canva. Gamma is trying to own the middle ground between document, presentation, and lightweight website, where research, structure, layout, and publishing happen in one place. That makes it closer to a communications workbench than a presentation app.
The next step is turning cited research into live, data connected business artifacts. As Gamma adds spreadsheet and file integrations, the strongest version of the product is a system where a team can pull facts from the web, import internal numbers, generate charts, and publish a board update or investor pitch without leaving the editor.