Use when creating, reviewing, or revising a Carleton University Technology Innovation Management (TIM) Gate 1 slide deck - provides slide structure, content expectations, formatting guidance, and the six official G1 guidelines.
Use this skill when you are building or reviewing a Carleton University Technology Innovation Management (TIM) Gate 1 presentation and need help with slide order, required content, formatting, pathway alignment, or presentation expectations.
Ask for this skill with prompts like
Use $g1-slide-deck-guide to review whether my Gate 1 deck has the right slide order.
Use $g1-slide-deck-guide to turn this TIM project outline into a G1 slide plan.
Use $g1-slide-deck-guide to check whether my deliverables and novelty slides match the guideline.
Use $g1-slide-deck-guide to compare my draft deck against the expected G1 structure.
Source and Scope
This skill summarizes TIM Gate 1 guideline materials, the official slide template, and example decks. Use it as a working guide for G1 slide support, then confirm any final submission details against the latest supervisor or program instructions.
Source documents synthesized:
Guidelines/G1 Slide Deck/Guide for G1 Slide Decks.txt
Guidelines/G1 Slide Deck/Veronica Ihem G1 deck Aug 26.pdf
- example (MDTE, Agrifood Trade, 36 pages)
1. G1 Presentation Objectives
The Gate 1 project presentation emphasizes:
Research method, data acquisition, and data analysis
Preliminary results achieved to date of presentation
How the TIM project meets pathway-specific requirements
Reasons the project is novel and the expected project contribution to the client
G1 Deliverables
A Gate 1 slide deck using the TIM project template - due the day before the G1 presentations
A ten-minute presentation of the Gate 1 slide deck to the Supervisor and the audience (e.g., client, other TIM faculty)
Answers to questions. On average the Q&A session lasts 15 minutes
2. Slide-by-Slide Structure
The following structure is derived from the official template and validated against both example decks. Slide numbers are approximate; some slides may span multiple pages depending on content volume.
Slide 1: Title Slide
Content:
Project title (bold, large font)
Author name (regular or italic)
"Gate 1 ([Pathway]) Project presentation" in italics (e.g., "Gate 1 (MEng.) Project presentation" or "Gate 1 (MDTE) project presentation")
"Technology Innovation Management"
Date of presentation
Visual elements: Carleton University logo (top right), red/blue header bar below logo, brown footer bar at bottom
Footer: May or may not appear on the title slide (Breck omits footer on Slide 1; Veronica includes it)
Slide 2: Objectives and Deliverables
Objective: A single paragraph stating the project objective. Must be SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound) and achievable within 13 weeks.
Deliverables: A numbered list of deliverables (typically 2-7 items). Each deliverable should be a concrete output.
Slide 3: Relevance to the Client Company
Required subsections:
Client: Name and brief description of the client organization
Client Contact: (optional but recommended) Name(s) of client contacts
Evidence of Interest: Why the client needs this research; specific challenges they face
Potential Value to Client: Bulleted list of benefits the research provides
Relationship to Client: (optional) How the project was initiated
Slide 4: Problem and Gap
Client problem: A clearly structured problem statement that is solvable within 13 weeks and directly addressed by the research. Must include three elements:
Client: Who benefits from the research
Subject: The specific challenge the research addresses
Measurement: How the challenge's impact is measured
What is Known: Bullet points with citations describing the current state of knowledge
What is Not Known: Bullet points phrased as questions, each explicitly mapped to one or more deliverable numbers (e.g., "What is known about X? (Deliverable 1)")
Slide 5: Literature Review
Format: Table with three columns:
Stream - the literature theme/topic
Key highlights of the stream - bullet points summarizing key findings
Citations to key sources - author-date citations
Typically 4-7 streams are presented
Each stream should connect to a deliverable or client need
Slide 5 (alternate position): Project Novelty
Note: Some presenters (e.g., Veronica) place a "Project Novelty" slide before the Literature Review (as Slide 5), pushing Literature Review to Slide 6. This is an acceptable variation. Breck places Novelty near the end (after results).
Slide 6: Research Method
Introductory sentence describing the overall method approach
Table with three columns:
Step - numbered step (typically 5-10 steps)
Activity - description of what was done at each step
Outcome - what was produced at each step
If the method table is long, it may span two slides (e.g., "Research Method 1/2" and "Research Method 2/2")
Slide 7: Data Acquisition
Content varies by project but typically includes:
Type of data collected
Variables collected / measured
Data sources and retrieval methods
May use a table format (columns: Data type, Source of data, Acquisition method)
May use bullet-point format (Type of Data, Variables Collected, Data Sources & Retrieval)
Slide 8: Data Acquisition Process / Data Analysis
This slide (or pair of slides) describes:
How data was collected (search strategies, screening, validation)
How data was analyzed (thematic coding, statistical methods, tools used)
May include workflow diagrams or step-by-step descriptions
If content is substantial, Data Acquisition and Data Analysis may each get their own slide
Slides 9+: Results / Deliverable Slides
One section per deliverable, each with its own heading: "Deliverable 1. [Name]", "Deliverable 2. [Name]", etc.
Each deliverable section may span 1-4 slides depending on complexity
Include tables, charts, diagrams, flowcharts, and visual summaries as appropriate
Results must directly correspond to the deliverables listed on Slide 2
Content should show preliminary results achieved to the date of presentation
Discussion of Results
Summarize key findings across all deliverables
Highlight the most important insights
Connect findings back to the client problem (Slide 4)
Bullet-point format is typical
Pathway Requirements Slide
Title: "Why your project meets your pathway requirements"
Explain how the project satisfies the specific pathway requirements (MEng, MDTE, etc.)
Typically 4-5 bullet points
Content should reference the pathway's emphasis (e.g., applied research, engineering analysis, interdisciplinary integration, commercialization focus, professional communication for MEng)
Novelty Slide
Title: "Novelty of The Project" or "Project Novelty"
Explain what makes the project new or unique
Typically 4-5 bullet points covering:
Underexplored area or novel application
Tailored approach for the specific context
Practical/actionable outputs
Reusable method or framework
Placement: Can appear early (after Problem and Gap, before Literature Review) or late (after results, before Limitations). Both placements are observed in examples.
Limitations Slide
Bullet-point list of project limitations (typically 4-6 items)
Common limitations: limited data, time constraints, scope restrictions, transferability concerns, cost/integration uncertainty, data quality risks
Suggestions for Future Research / Recommendations
Bullet-point list of future research directions or recommendations (typically 4-6 items)
Should address how future researchers can overcome the identified limitations
Conclusion (optional, observed in Veronica's deck)
Summary of key accomplishments and results
May include a "Results Now, Mechanism to Scale" framing
References
Numbered reference list
May span multiple slides if the reference list is long (1-6 slides observed)
Follow a consistent citation style throughout
3. The Six Official Guidelines
These are the six guidelines from the official "Guide for G1 Slide Decks":
Guideline 1: Define the Client Problem (Slide 4)
Structure your problem statement clearly, ensuring it is solvable within 13 weeks and directly addressed by your research. Include:
The Client: Identify who benefits from the research
The Subject: Describe the specific challenge faced
The Measurement: Detail how the impact is measured by the client and stakeholders
Guideline 2: Highlight Research Benefits
Explicitly detail how your research will benefit the client and stakeholders.
Guideline 3: Connect "Not Known" to "Literature Review" and "Deliverables"
Address unknown aspects (Slide 4) with findings from your literature review (Slide 5)
Align deliverables (Slide 2) with these unknowns to provide solutions
Guideline 4: Clarify Your Objective (Slide 2)
Your objective should be SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound) and achievable within 13 weeks.
Guideline 5: Enhance Your Slides
Aim for clear, precise communication and a professional appearance to positively influence audience perception
Eliminate errors in spelling, grammar, and formatting
Adhere to the "Guidelines to Write a TIM Project Report" for content consistency
Ensure your deliverables (Slide 2) directly match the results presented after Slide 8. Avoid proposing deliverables A, B, C, and then presenting unrelated results W, X, Y, Z.
4. Footer and Formatting
Footer Format
The footer appears on a brown/dark bar at the bottom of each slide. It contains three elements:
Left: Author's email address (italic, e.g.,
onwonaagyekum@cmail.carleton.ca
or
veronicaamadiihem@gmail.com
)
Center: Date (e.g., "July 29th, 2025" or "August 26th 2025")
Right: Slide number (italic, e.g., "Slide 2", "Slide 3")
Header Format
Carleton University logo in the top-right corner of every slide
A thin red/blue horizontal line below the logo area, spanning the slide width
Slide Title Format
Bold, large font
Left-aligned
No period at the end of slide titles
General Formatting Rules
Use the official TIM project template (TIM_gate1_project_template_2025)
Professional appearance with consistent fonts and spacing
Tables should have clear column headers and consistent formatting
Charts and figures should be properly labeled
Succinct text preferred over lengthy descriptions
Eliminate spelling, grammar, and formatting errors
The title slide may be Slide 1 (with or without footer)
Footer numbering should be consistent throughout the deck
Known issue in examples: Some decks have numbering inconsistencies in later slides (e.g., multiple slides labeled "Slide 24"). Avoid this.
5. Critical Alignment Rules
These alignment requirements are essential for a well-structured G1 deck:
Rule
Details
Gap-to-Deliverable mapping
Each "Not Known" item on Slide 4 must explicitly reference which deliverable(s) address it
Deliverable-to-Results alignment
Deliverables listed on Slide 2 must directly match the results presented after Slide 8
Not Known to Literature Review
Unknown aspects on Slide 4 should be addressed by findings from the Literature Review (Slide 5)
Literature Review to Deliverables
Literature review streams should inform and support the deliverables
Method produces Deliverables
The research method steps (Slide 6) must produce the deliverables listed on Slide 2
13-week feasibility
The objective and all deliverables must be achievable within 13 weeks
SMART objective
The objective on Slide 2 must be Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound
Consistency across slides
Client name, deliverable names, and terminology must be consistent throughout
The Alignment Chain
Gap (Slide 4 "Not Known")
--> Literature Review (Slide 5) addresses the gap
--> Deliverable (Slide 2) provides the solution
--> Method (Slide 6) produces the deliverable
--> Result (Slides 9+) presents the deliverable output
Every "Not Known" item should trace through this chain. Every deliverable should trace back to a gap.
6. Connecting "Not Known" to Deliverables
The Gap-to-Solution Pipeline
On Slide 4, each "Not Known" item should:
Be phrased as a question or knowledge gap
Include a parenthetical reference to the deliverable(s) that address it
Connect logically to one or more literature review streams on Slide 5
Example pattern from Breck's deck:
"What is known about AI logistic tools in the grey literature? (Deliverables 1)"
"Which AI tools can satisfy ATD's need to support small teams? (Deliverables 2)"
"Which tools are cost-effective, scalable, and usable by small teams? (Deliverables 3)"
Example pattern from Veronica's deck:
"How can TOC tools like Current Reality Trees and Strategy & Tactic Trees be adapted for use across ATD's multi-country agri-food supply chains? (Deliverables 1, 3, 5)"
"What diagnostic framework can ATD use to continuously identify and address supply chain constraints across different countries and supplier types? (Deliverables 2, 4)"
Key Principles
Each deliverable should be referenced by at least one "Not Known" item
Each "Not Known" item should reference at least one deliverable
The "Known" section should establish context with citations
The "Not Known" section should identify specific gaps that the project fills
A single "Not Known" item may reference multiple deliverables if they work together to address the gap
7. Quick Reference Checklist
Structure Checks
Title slide has: project title, author name, pathway designation, "Technology Innovation Management", date
Slide 2 has both Objective (SMART, 13-week feasible) and numbered Deliverables
Slide 3 has: Client, Evidence of Interest, Potential Value
Slide 4 has: Client problem statement, "What is Known" (with citations), "What is Not Known" (mapped to deliverables)
Literature Review slide uses a table with Stream / Key Highlights / Citations columns
Research Method slide uses a table with Step / Activity / Outcome columns
Data Acquisition slide describes data types, sources, and retrieval methods
Data Analysis slide describes analytical methods used
Each deliverable from Slide 2 has corresponding result slide(s) after Slide 8
Pathway requirements slide explains how the project meets the specific pathway
Novelty slide explains what makes the project unique
Limitations slide lists project limitations
Future Research / Recommendations slide is included
References slide(s) at the end
Alignment Checks
Every "Not Known" item on Slide 4 references at least one deliverable number
Every deliverable on Slide 2 is referenced by at least one "Not Known" item
Every deliverable on Slide 2 has corresponding results shown after Slide 8
Literature review streams on Slide 5 connect to the gaps on Slide 4
Method steps on Slide 6 produce the deliverables on Slide 2
Client problem on Slide 4 is consistent with relevance on Slide 3
Objective on Slide 2 addresses the client problem on Slide 4
Formatting Checks
Using the official TIM G1 project template
Carleton University logo on every slide (top right)
Footer on every slide (or every slide after title): email | date | Slide N
Red/blue header bar present on every slide
Brown footer bar present on every slide
Slide numbers are sequential and consistent
No spelling, grammar, or formatting errors
Text is succinct (not overly long descriptions)
Tables and figures are properly labeled
Citations are consistent throughout
Professional appearance overall
Presentation Checks
Presentation fits within 10-minute time limit
Content supports answering questions during 15-minute Q&A
Preliminary results are shown (not just planned work)
Pathway-specific requirements are addressed
Project novelty is clearly explained
8. Presentation and Q&A Tips
Time Management
Practice the full presentation to fit within 10 minutes. A common pitfall is spending too long on early slides (problem, literature) and rushing through results.
Rough allocation for 10 minutes:
1 min: Title, objective, deliverables
1 min: Relevance to client
1 min: Problem and gap
1-2 min: Literature review
2 min: Research method, data acquisition, data analysis
3-4 min: Results (deliverables)
1 min: Novelty, limitations, future research
The results slides are the most important — allocate the most time to them.
Common Q&A Topics
Prepare answers for these frequently asked questions:
Method justification: "Why did you choose this method over alternatives?"
Data validity: "How do you know your data is reliable?" or "What are the limitations of your data sources?"
Feasibility: "Can you complete all deliverables in 13 weeks?"
Scope: "Is this too ambitious/too narrow?" or "How will you handle it if X doesn't work?"
Literature gaps: "What does the literature say about Y?" (where Y is tangentially related to your topic)
Client value: "How specifically will the client use your deliverables?"
Pathway alignment: "How does this meet the [MEng/MDTE/etc.] requirements?"
Backup Slides
Consider preparing 2-3 backup slides (placed after the References slide) for anticipated tough questions:
Detailed methodology breakdown (if the main deck only has the summary table)
Additional literature review sources (if questioned about coverage)
Risk mitigation plan (if asked about feasibility concerns)
Detailed data acquisition or analysis steps (if questioned about rigor)