Vesa Nopanen – My Metaverse Day

Mr. Metaverse welcomes you to my Metaverse day to explore the Future Work.

The Ultimate How To Guide for Presenting Content in Microsoft Teams

sharing presentation via teams

Sharing / presenting content in Teams meeting is at the same time simple but is also has some options available that may not be known enough by everyone. This guide lets you get started and dive deeper what happens when you share your window, document or desktop in Microsoft Teams.

This article will be updated when there are new features or based on feedback.

Updated 22.3.2021 Presenter View section.

Community: I am happy to add Mac and iOS screenshots into the article as well if someone is willing to collaborate & provide them. 😎💪

Teams Desktop: sharing a screen (Windows)

Opening the sharing with Microsoft Teams Desktop (in the New Meeting experience mode).

sharing presentation via teams

This opens the Share Tray. From it you can choose to start sharing

  • Your Desktop (Screen share)
  • Specific application (Window)
  • Whiteboard application: either Microsoft Whiteboard (natively with Microsoft 365) or available 3rd party Whiteboards
  • PowerPoint document

sharing presentation via teams

TIP: When you choose to share something using Teams Desktop you can choose to include your computer sounds to meeting. This is a must-have option if you are playing music or video to your participants. You can not toggle this on later – you need to choose this when you start sharing.

When you choose to include computer sound included with the sharing you need to have configured the speaker for computer and Teams meeting to be the same one.

If you have multiple monitors available for your Microsoft Teams you can choose any of those displays.

sharing presentation via teams

And you have the sharing open. Shared area is marked with red rectangle around it. You will find the more smaller Teams meeting control window in one of your desktops – and if you have the camera on it will show the video.

sharing presentation via teams

But more importantly you can use that small window to control camera, audio or sharing (ending it with one press). Or you can click on the small window (not on meeting toolbar) and it will expand back to the full size.

sharing presentation via teams

You can use that same icon to stop sharing in the expanded window.

sharing presentation via teams

Tip: If you have two screens available you should consider presenting your PowerPoint presentation so that you share the external screen and project your presentation there (PowerPoint – Slide Show – Monitor). Share that external screen to Teams meeting so you can be sure that whatever you show in that screen it is shown to attendees. Just check that your second screen is not a ultra-wide display or 8k (or preferably even 4k) because the content is going to be tough to read and view by attendees. FullHD screen works the best here.

Tip2: when you are presenting PowerPoint in external screen (and sharing that to Teams meeting) do they advantage of inking and pen if you are using a device with touch screen (like Surface)!

Tip3: if you have an embedded video in your PowerPoint and you use screen/display sharing to present it to the audience: Don’t forget include computer sound with your share!

Teams Desktop: sharing a PowerPoint

You can choose from your recent PowerPoint documents in the list

  • A PowerPoint document you opened or edited in Microsoft Teams (in a team you belong to) or in your OneDrive
  • Browse for more

sharing presentation via teams

This list of sharing PowerPoints is causing often some big questions. PowerPoints will appear in the list once you edit or open the PowerPoint presentation in Teams or OneDrive (there may be some short delay). Generally it applies to the next meeting you join. Make sure you prepare for the meeting by opening the document in advance. Simply uploading a presentation to OneDrive or Teams does not bring it to the list – you need to open/edit it as well.

Browse-option lets you choose a PowerPoint from your OneDrive or from your computer.

sharing presentation via teams

What this one lacks is the ability to choose a file from a team you belong to.

TIP: Use OneDrive syncing to have an easy access to files in the most relevant teams you belong to .

Once you are sharing the PowerPoint you can see it in the presenter view mode! This feature is generally available ! This makes it easy to do presentations using Teams – without having to have a PowerPoint desktop app open at the same time. Seems to work only on Teams Desktop with new meeting experience mode at the moment.

The presented area (PowerPoint) is shown surrounded with a red rectangle.

sharing presentation via teams

Updated 22.3.2021. There are other controls in this as well for jumping between slides and accessibility controls.

sharing presentation via teams

I have a another article diving deeper to Presenter view in here !

sharing presentation via teams

NEW: PowerPoint Live has now laser pointer and inking capabilities. Read about them here !

Once the presentation is shared you can move back and forth easily with arrows in the screen.

sharing presentation via teams

Note: there is the “eye” icon. If you press that one it locks the PowerPoint for the participants so that they see the same slide as you do: they can not browse the deck on their own. This is called private viewing disable (arrows for other participants will be disabled). Private viewing is enabled on default.

sharing presentation via teams

Note: if you are a presenter in the meeting where a PowerPoint is shared to you can take control of the shared PowerPoint to advance slides. This does not ask for any confirmation and the feature is really useful when you have multiple presenters who use the same slide deck. Just be careful that everyone else are not presenters – or they know not to touch it.

sharing presentation via teams

You will get a warning that someone has taken the control and can easily take it back.

sharing presentation via teams

Whoever is in control of the presentation has also the control to disable/enable private viewing mode. As can be seen in the picture above (with Take control) the eye is missing and arrows are greyed out: this means someone else than you have the control and they have disable the private viewing.

Note: When you share PowerPoint to a meeting this way participants can click links you have in your presentation. Thank you Joe for this reminder!

sharing presentation via teams

If you add a online video to your presentation your participants can activate that on their own as well. It is good also to note that if you hit “play” it doesn’t reflect to attendees (=they need to play the video themselves)

sharing presentation via teams

Teams Desktop: sharing a Whiteboard

When you choose Microsoft Whiteboard from the Share Tray you are taken directly to the Whiteboard view. Everyone who is in the same organization as you are (the situation in January 2021) can co-author the Whiteboard with you. Once you are done you can Stop presenting (middle top screen) or share something else.

sharing presentation via teams

Teams web client: sharing a screen (Microsoft Edge)

Sharing looks a bit different when you are using Teams web client. Sharing is available in (new) Microsoft Edge and Google Chrome browsers. The toolbar is hovering on top of the meeting. From the toolbar you can open the share tray.

sharing presentation via teams

When you have the share tray open you can choose to share something of following

  • Desktop (Screenshare)
  • A specific PowerPoint document
  • Whiteboard: either Microsoft Whiteboard or Freehand (3rd party).

sharing presentation via teams

  • Entire screen
  • Application window (a specific application only)
  • With Microsoft Edge you have option to choose a selected, specific, tab

sharing presentation via teams

When(if) you have multiple monitors it is easiest to just share a one of them: it makes the sharing really simple and easy to manage: anything on that display is shared.

If you don’t have multiple monitors then you might want to just share a single application.

sharing presentation via teams

This is useful when you want to show something specific that runs in it’s own application but you can not share anything else on your screen.

Note: Teams is not in the list (not even on blurred ones) and nor is Spotify or ToDo. Not every application can be shared with this.

Note2: you can not share desktop audio to the meeting using Teams web client.

And the last option is to share a selected Edge tab – and if you have multiple Edge profiles open you can share from any of those by clicking the desired Edge active and choosing the tab.

sharing presentation via teams

In my example I chose to share one of my screens. You don’t get much feedback – you just click on the screen and hit Share. In one of your screens you will have this toolbar:

sharing presentation via teams

You can end sharing using either that toolbar or you can navigate to your web Teams meeting and choose Stop sharing from the toolbar there.

sharing presentation via teams

Teams web client: sharing a PowerPoint

This list of sharing PowerPoints is causing often some big questions. PowerPoint presentations will be in the list once you edit or open the PowerPoint presentation in Teams or OneDrive (there may be some short delay). Generally it applies to the next meeting you join. Make sure you prepare for the meeting by opening the document in advance. Simply uploading a presentation to OneDrive or Teams does not bring it to the list – you need to open/edit it as well.

sharing presentation via teams

Note: there is the “eye” icon. If you press that one it locks the PowerPoint for the participants so that they see the same slide as you do: they can not browse the deck on their own. This is called private viewing disable. Private viewing is enabled on default.

sharing presentation via teams

Whoever is in control of the presentation has also the control to disable/enable private viewing mode.

Teams web client: sharing a Whiteboard

Sharing a Whiteboard is initiated simply by choosing Microsoft Whiteboard (or Freehand or other available 3rd party application) from the share tray.

sharing presentation via teams

I have found out that sometimes when you start sharing Microsoft Whiteboard to the meeting using Teams web client it doesn’t do anything. The solution is to try again.

Once the Whiteboard opens you can work on it normally – or choose to open it in the Whiteboard app to have a broader set of tools available.

sharing presentation via teams

When you are done you can choose the “Stop presenting” that is hovering on the left bottom area (left of meeting toolbar).

sharing presentation via teams

Teams mobile: sharing a screen

Were you aware that you can also share content using your mobile device? I have examples and screenshots using a Android device but these also work with iOS – the user interface might be slightly different.

You initiate the sharing via … menu selection in the mobile to open the list of options

sharing presentation via teams

You choose Share and you get to choose what to share

sharing presentation via teams

Yes – you can share your mobile device screen to the meeting. This is really useful if you have a application you want to show or train to others.

You may have to adjust settings to turn on allowing Teams to display over other apps.

sharing presentation via teams

After that one you may have reshare the screen. And you get the next warning.

sharing presentation via teams

And your screen is now shared. You can see the red block that lets you know what are of your mobile device screen has been shared.

sharing presentation via teams

And if you pull down notifications area you have option to return to Teams meeting (if you have been using some other app) and there is also the notification that you are sharing your screen.

sharing presentation via teams

When you are done sharing you can return to Teams meeting and then choose to Stop presenting.

sharing presentation via teams

Teams mobile: sharing a PowerPoint

Sharing a PowerPoint works really well on Teams mobile! It is in fact even better than the version in other clients.

You start by imitating the sharing (as with screen share) and choosing the PowerPoint instead. You get a screen:

sharing presentation via teams

From this screen you can choose to browser thought

  • A PowerPoint presentation from any Team and channel you belong to!
  • Choose a PowerPoint presentation you opened or edited most recently (as you notice compared to other examples that this isn’t 1:1 in sync.. There are differences so that is why I am really happy that you can browse through Teams for sharing)

Once you have selected the PowerPoint to present it is very straight forward from that moment.

sharing presentation via teams

Using Teams mobile you can also take control of a PowerPoint someone else is presenting (if you are a presenter in the meeting). This means that you can participate in a multi-presenter meeting quite easily by using just your mobile device and Teams!

sharing presentation via teams

You will get a warning before you take the control – in case you pressed Take Control accidentally.

sharing presentation via teams

Teams mobile: sharing a photo or video

Follow the steps laid out earlier and instead of screen or PowerPoint you select this time a picture (from device’s picture gallery) or a video (using device’s video camera). Since sharing a picture is very straight forward I use the video instead as example.

sharing presentation via teams

You get to see a preview of video first. You can switch to other camera (front/back usually) & position the device properly and once you are ready you just hit Start presenting .

And when you are done you can press on “Stop presenting” to end your video feed.

sharing presentation via teams

This video is different from showing your own video using Camera icon the meeting toolbar. Instead of being a attendee video this one is shown in the shared area for every participant in the meeting. This is useful when you have something in the same room/space that you want to share to others in the meeting. Possible use cases: a model on table, physical whiteboard, view from the window, interviewing someone, view in the outside, …

Best practices from my experience

The way I use to share content when in Microsoft Teams meetings is

  • I share one of my screens (I have three screens so this is a natural choice for me). This way I know what is being shared all the time since I always share the same screen (the one in the middle, my camera is on top of that screen). Be careful what you drag to the shared screen. This is the way I share my PowerPoint presentations (projecting the presentation to the shared screen)
  • If you have a touch-screen device (like Surface-laptop) you should use pen/inking to enhance the presentation experience. This also works when you are sharing the external screen & presenting from touch-screen device: make your presentation stand out!
  • Prepare the content you share in advance. Open PowerPoints, apps, browsers etc so you don’t have to spend any time with them when you are live.
  • Share your screen early rather than later. This will give you time to reshare.
  • When doing a presentation with multiple persons using just the PowerPoint deck share it directly to Teams meeting so you can switch between speakers easily. With the new Presenter view -support this is now a good option.
  • Make use of Teams features: Put everyone but real presenters else as attendee so they can’t start sharing their screen accidentally – and you can hard mute them as well. Use meeting options -setting before they join in.
  • When people complain they don’t see the share: check that you are actually sharing your screen. If someone is seeing your share and some others not: those who can’t see your share need to leave and rejoin the meeting. Sometimes restarting your sharing can fix that issue too but usually the issue is in the participant end.
  • I rarely use application / window -sharing.
  • Sharing a video in Teams meeting (or in Live event) is usually ok but you can expect some quality drop – especially if you have a lower bandwidth. Have a backup link to the video available. People seem to struggle more with videos embedded inside a PowerPoint.
  • Use Windows Focus Assist and Teams Do Not Disturb mode so you don’t get any unwanted popups on your shared screen. Microsoft Teams will also have a upcoming feature (currently usable in public preview) that let’s users to choose if Teams notifications do their own “toast” (pop-up banner) or do they go directly to Windows notification area (honoring the Focust Assist setting).
  • Use Teams Desktop version + new meeting experience when possible. Check that you have the latest version.

More information or different view into this?

Check out Microsoft Support article about Sharing content in Microsoft Teams meetings .

I hope you have enjoyed this guide and it has provided to be useful. Please do drop a comment from below if you have any questions or you want to send me greetings!

Sharing is Caring! #CommunityRocks

Aiheeseen liittyy.

' src=

Published by Vesa Nopanen "Mr. Metaverse"

Vesa "Vesku" Nopanen, Principal Consultant and Microsoft MVP (M365 Apps & Services and Mixed Reality) working on Metaverse, AI and Future Work at Sulava. I work, blog and speak about Metaverse, AI, Microsoft Mesh, Virtual & Mixed Reality, The Future of Work, Digital Twins, and other services & platforms in the cloud connecting digital and physical worlds and people together. I am extremely passionate about Metaverse, AI, natural language understanding, Mixed & Virtual Reality and how these technologies, with Microsoft Teams and Microsoft Azure & Cloud, enable to change how people work together. Azure OpenAI Services - yes, I build AI solutions using those and other Azure AI services. I have 30 years of experience in IT business on multiple industries, domains, and roles. View all posts by Vesa Nopanen "Mr. Metaverse"

5 thoughts on “ The Ultimate How To Guide for Presenting Content in Microsoft Teams ”

  • Pingback: Dew Drop – January 18, 2021 (#3361) – Morning Dew by Alvin Ashcraft
  • Pingback: [m365weekly] #19 – M365 Weekly Newsletter
  • Pingback: PowerPoint Live / Presenter View in Microsoft Teams – Vesa Nopanen – My Teams & Microsoft 365 Day
  • Pingback: PowerPoint Live / Presenter View in Microsoft Teams - Tech Daily Chronicle
  • Pingback: Microsoft Tech News and Product Updates: 4/26/2021 – Mr. Wombat

Leave a comment Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed .

' src=

  • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
  • Subscribe Subscribed
  • Copy shortlink
  • Report this content
  • View post in Reader
  • Manage subscriptions
  • Collapse this bar

How to Present PowerPoint Slides in Microsoft Teams

Ready to elevate your virtual presentations in Microsoft Teams? Discover three distinct methods to deliver flawless PowerPoint presentations.

A successful PowerPoint presentation extends beyond just the content—its delivery is just as important, especially in a virtual space like Microsoft Teams.

In Microsoft Teams, you can choose to present your slide deck by sharing your entire screen, PowerPoint window, or using the Microsoft Teams' PowerPoint Live feature. Let's explore how you can use each of these three methods and discuss their pros and cons.

Method 1: Share Screen

Sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams is pretty easy and straightforward. It's best to minimize or close unnecessary tabs before joining the Microsoft Teams meeting to avoid exposing sensitive information. Once you're confident in your screen's content, follow the steps below:

Click Share in Microsoft Teams

  • A red border appears around your desktop, indicating you're sharing your screen.

Launch PowerPoint slideshow while screen sharing in Microsoft Teams

  • Present your PowerPoint slideshow.

Stop screen sharing PowerPoint presentation in Teams

Sharing your screen is a straightforward method, especially when you want to present other documents besides your PowerPoint slideshow. However, the downside is that you may accidentally reveal sensitive information.

Method 2: Share PowerPoint Window

If you want only to present your PowerPoint slide deck, it's best to share just that window. Here's how:

Click Share and Window and Microsoft Teams

  • A red border will appear around your PowerPoint window, indicating you're sharing just that window.
  • Launch your slides in slideshow mode and start presenting.
  • Open the Microsoft Teams window and click Stop sharing when you're done presenting.

Sharing just your PowerPoint window prevents accidental display of sensitive desktop content. Even if you switch windows, viewers only see the PowerPoint presentation.

However, this method also has its limitations. One of the main limits is that you can't view your PowerPoint speaker notes without the audience seeing them as well. You also can't access Microsoft Teams features like the chat and reactions during your presentation.

Additionally, If your network connection has low bandwidth or slow upload speed , sharing your screen can result in a blurry and stuttering presentation for the audience. Thankfully, the PowerPoint Live feature provides the solution to these issues.

Method 3: Use PowerPoint Live

Presenting with the PowerPoint Live feature is easy and provides additional benefits. Your audience only sees the slides, while you get to see all the extra controls that come with the presenter view. When using the presenter view in your presentation, you have a few helpful tools at your disposal:

  • You can easily adjust the font size of your slide notes to make them more readable.
  • To navigate between slides, simply click on the corresponding thumbnail.
  • You can use the laser pointer, pen, or highlighter tools to draw attention to specific areas of a slide.
  • Use the Standout layout to place your camera feed on the slide without the background.
  • Use the Cameo layout to insert yourself into the slide, provided you've set up Cameo to record customized camera feeds .

Here's how you can use PowerPoint Live to share your presentation:

  • When it's your turn to present, click Share .

Open PowerPoint Live in Microsoft Teams

  • When you're done presenting, click Stop sharing in the top toolbar.

The PowerPoint Live feature tackles the limitations of sharing your entire screen or PowerPoint window. It also comes with really cool features like co-presenting and allowing attendees to click on links in the presentation.

Your Audience's View When Using PowerPoint Live

In addition to the main slide view, your audience also has access to the slide navigation, grid, and more options controls (the three dots icon below the slides).

PowerPoint Live Audience view

This means they can navigate the slides at their own pace and change specific slide settings to suit their preference without affecting your view and that of others. If you find this non-ideal for delivering an engaging presentation , you can disable the audience's navigation control. To do so, enable Private view in the top toolbar.

By default, each meeting attendee joins as a presenter. This means they can share their own content or control someone else's presentation. If that's not what you want, you can change each person's meeting roles in Microsoft Teams to prevent it.

Deliver a Seamless Presentation Experience in Microsoft Teams

Presenting your PowerPoint slides in Microsoft Teams might seem tricky at first, but once you get the hang of it, it's a piece of cake. Practice makes perfect. So before your next Teams presentation, familiarize yourself with your chosen method to ensure an effective delivery.

Home Blog PowerPoint Tutorials How to Share a PowerPoint Presentation on Microsoft Teams

How to Share a PowerPoint Presentation on Microsoft Teams

How to Share a PowerPoint Presentation on Microsoft Teams

In recent years many remote meeting tools like Microsoft Teams and Zoom have become the norm for regular remote meetings. If you’re new to Microsoft Teams, the chances are you are still finding your way around various options. One of the most common questions a Microsoft Teams newbie might ask is how to share PowerPoint on Teams.

What is Microsoft Teams?

Microsoft Teams is a messaging app by Microsoft for online collaboration and remote meetings that comes integrated with Microsoft 365. It provides a real-time workspace where end users can collaborate via chat, Teams Channels, Live calls, etc. Microsoft Teams also integrates with other Microsoft products like PowerPoint and OneDrive, enabling instant file sharing via the cloud.

Why use Microsoft Teams to Present Your PowerPoint Presentations?

Many organizations use Microsoft Teams for online collaboration and remote meetings. Organizations with integrated Microsoft products like its Windows operating system, Microsoft Office, and Azure Active Directory prefer Teams as the primary internal and external communication app. Organizations use Microsoft Teams to provide secure accounts to employees, with two-factor authentication and data encryption. These accounts are integrated into the Active Directory, providing scalability and control for IT administrators to offer people within an organization an online collaboration platform that can be securely used within the limits of the organization’s data protection policies.

While there are many alternatives to Microsoft teams, such as Zoom and Google Meet, the integration of teams with other Microsoft products, such as Azure, Microsoft Office apps, and OneDrive, makes it attractive within a secure enterprise environment.

How to Present PowerPoint in Teams?

How to present your PowerPoint slides on Microsoft Teams, let us tell you there are at least two methods for sharing presentations. This includes sharing a PowerPoint file directly and presenting your slide deck before one or more meeting participants, or perhaps PowerPoint templates or Google Slides templates to help a colleague design a slide deck.

How to Attach and Share Your PowerPoint Slides on Teams

To share a PowerPoint file on teams, go to an ongoing conversation or meeting window and click Attach files . This will provide you with the option to either fetch a file via OneDrive or from your device. This option can be used for sharing PowerPoint files and other types of files, such as documents, spreadsheets, videos, compressed files, etc.

Upload a PowerPoint file to a Microsoft Teams chat

When sharing a file, you can add a message optionally before hitting Send .

Sharing a PowerPoint presentation to Microsoft Teams via chat

The recipient and the sender can download the file, open it in a browser, or copy the file link for further sharing.

Opening a shared PowerPoint file via Microsoft Teams chat

How to Present Your PowerPoint Slides on Teams

Method #1: use the share button in powerpoint.

You can also directly present your slide deck via Microsoft Teams by sharing your screen to start a Live presentation during a remote meeting instantly. Suppose your organization uses Microsoft Teams regularly. In that case, the chances are you will be using it for presentations during remote meetings; therefore, it’s essential to know how to use the screen-sharing option to present online.

Locating the share screen button for Microsoft Teams videocalls

Method #2: Share Screen to Present a PowerPoint Presentation

Another way to present a PowerPoint presentation on Teams is by sharing the screen with your audience. If you share your screen, this will show the audience whatever is visible on the entire screen on your device.

Sharing a Screen in Microsoft Teams call to show a PowerPoint presentation

Pros of sharing your screen with the audience to present a presentation:

  • It is easier to activate
  • You can easily switch to other windows besides the PowerPoint presentation and also share them with the audience

Cons of sharing your entire screen on Teams for presenting:

  • If you have confidential data in other windows, you may want to avoid switching the windows and keep only the Slideshow window in front.
  • You may accidentally switch to other windows, and your audience can lose focus of the presentation.

Method #3: Share PowerPoint Window to Present Your Slides

If you intend to hide parts of your screen, you can simply share the relevant PowerPoint window so that your audience can only view the presentation. During a Live call, click the Share button and select your screen or window to share.

Selecting window to share in Microsoft Teams

5 Features to Make the Most from Your Microsoft PowerPoint Presentation Sharing in Teams

Microsoft Teams offers a wide array of features that make it a robust remote meeting and online collaboration app since it leverages the full force of Microsoft 365 and other Microsoft products.

1. Translate Slides into a Different Language

This is a private feature that individuals can use to translate slides in their language instantly. As a presenter, you can ask your audience to use this feature if they deem it convenient to help bridge a gap that might exist due to a language barrier.

Slides can be viewed in a different language via More actions > Translate Slides . From the drop-down list, you can pick a preferred language.

Translating PowerPoint slides from English to Spanish during a Microsoft Teams call

2. Use Live Captions

Microsoft Teams supports Live Captions / Closed Captions (CC) to help persons with disabilities, including those suffering from hearing impairment. Closed Captions can also be helpful for people to translate or view text in a preferred language.

Turn on Live Captions: To enable Live Captions on Teams, go to More options > Turn on live captions . Translate Spoken Language: To translate Live Captions, go to Captions settings > Change spoken language .

Turning on Live Captions in Microsoft Teams call

Turn Off Live Captions: You can turn off Live captions anytime via More actions > Turn off live captions .

Turning off Live Captions during Microsoft Teams call

3. View Slides in High Contrast

Viewing slides in high contrast on Teams can have several benefits. For example, it helps you focus on the content and is also helpful for people with visual impairment. To configure your slides to appear in high contrast, follow the steps below:

1. Launch your PowerPoint presentation.

2. Click on the Present tab at the top of the window.3. Go to More action > View slides in high contrast .

High Contrast mode in Microsoft Teams

4. Annotate your Slides in Real Time

Like any standard remote meeting app, Microsoft Teams also provides a number of handy annotation options to help you make the most out of your PowerPoint presentations. You can click on Start annotation when sharing your full screen during presentations to start annotating slides.

Powered by Microsoft Whiteboard, this powerful feature enables one or more meeting participants or the presenter to annotate presentations. It can also be a helpful feature when you’re looking to collaborate online during a Live presentation.

5. Pop Out the Window

You can separate the presentation window from the Teams window to make it easier to work with the two. This feature can be handy when working with multiple monitors or separating the two windows from uncluttering your screen. You can use this option by clicking on the Pop-out option from the toolbar during a screen-sharing session.

Pop-out windows mode in Microsoft Teams

How to Stop Presenting on Teams

When presenting your slide deck, you can also present your PowerPoint presentation using any view, be it as a SlideShow or in Normal view. Once you’re done presenting, click Stop Presenting to conclude your session. Furthermore, you can also choose to enable or disable your camera and computer sound when presenting your slides.

How to share a PowerPoint presentation in Microsoft Teams using PowerPoint web edition

To turn off screen sharing during a remote meeting, you can click Stop Sharing .

Locating the Stop Sharing button in Microsoft Teams

Present in Teams Button in PowerPoint is Missing. How to Fix it?

Some users might have used the Present in Teams option to share a PowerPoint presentation during a meeting. Suppose you are wondering why the Present in Teams button in PowerPoint Presentations is missing. In that case, this option isn’t available for anyone using the free version of Teams, as only users with a paid subscription, such as a Business Standard or Business Premium Plan. Furthermore, you must share your PowerPoint presentation with OneDrive to use this option. To use the Present in Teams option, upload your PowerPoint presentation to OneDrive. You can do this via File > Save As > OneDrive .

Upload a presentation to OneDrive via PowerPoint

Once done, the Present in Teams button will become available to instantly launch your presentation for sharing during a Teams call.

Present in Teams button available in PowerPoint

5 Tips to Make your Presentation a Success on Microsoft Teams

Presenting PowerPoint in Teams can require being mindful of a number of things. This includes accounting for brevity to ensure your presentation does not take more than its designated time, using slides that are suitable for remote meetings. Below is a list of 5 tips to make your presentation successful using Microsoft Teams.

1. Check Your Audio and Video Settings

One of the most annoying problems faced during remote meetings is technical failures such as no or low audio quality. This becomes even more annoying when the meeting organizer or a presenter during their session faces the issue, wasting precious time. This is why you must check your audio and video settings beforehand to ensure everything works correctly. If you need to play a video during your session, make a test call with a colleague and get feedback if the sound and video quality are up to the mark.

2. Make Sure Your Slides are Clear and Concise

Presentations delivered via Microsoft Teams will often take place during scheduled remote meetings. This means that you will have to account for the designated time given for your session, which is why you must ensure that your slides are clear and concise.

3. Use Animations and Transitions Sparingly

Since remote meetings will be attended by participants using different types of computers and mobile devices, some animations and transitions might not be suitable. This is because they can cause Teams to slow down, or the slides might not display appropriately via screen sharing. For example, 3D animations , GIF animations , and objects with elaborate PowerPoint animated sequences might cause issues when displayed via Teams. 

4. Keep Your Slides on Topic

One of the banes of remote meetings is how a discussion can go off-topic very quickly. This is why it’s best to ensure that your slides remain focused on the topic and additional discussions are discouraged during the presentation session.

5. Use Team Members’ Names Sparingly to Call Out Specific Points

Calling out team members for their opinion or advice during a remote meeting can quickly lead to a very lengthy and off-topic discussion. This is why it’s best to call out team members’ sparingly. If you have been using Teams or other remote meeting apps long enough, you would have learned by now that for some topics, it’s best to ask participants to schedule a separate meeting so that the ongoing discussion remains on track.

Other Issues to Troubleshoot while presenting a PowerPoint presentation on Microsoft Teams

Someone has already set up Teams for your organization’s error

If you’re using a premium subscription for Microsoft Teams managed by your organization’s IT team, you might get an error when logging in to Teams. In such a case, you might get the following error:

“Someone has already set up Teams for your organization.”  

If you see the error message mentioned above, this means that your account isn’t ready yet, and you need to contact your organization’s IT team to ask when your account might be ready for use.

We’re sorry–we’ve run into an issue error.

Another prevalent issue is when the following error message appears:

“We’re sorry–we’ve run into an issue.”

This is a generic message, and usually, it can be resolved by clicking the Restart button that appears below the error. In case the issue isn’t resolved after restarting the Teams app, ensure your Internet connection is working. More often than not, the issue is associated with the Internet connection. If the issue persists, you can clear your cache , reinstall Teams or contact your IT support team. The error can also occur if there is an outage affecting Microsoft products or if there is a configuration issue for Microsoft 365 accounts associated with your organization.

Final Words

Using Microsoft Teams to share a presentation file is easy enough. However, when presenting a PowerPoint presentation in Teams, you must decide how to present your slide deck. If you need to switch back and forth between your slides and another document, spreadsheet, or browser window, it might be best to share your entire screen. However, if you wish to focus only on the slide deck, sharing your Window can help you avoid sharing the rest of your screen with the audience.

sharing presentation via teams

Like this article? Please share

Meeting, Microsoft Teams, Share Filed under PowerPoint Tutorials

Related Articles

What is an All Hands Meeting?

Filed under Business • July 28th, 2022

What is an All Hands Meeting?

The proper meeting format can boost your company’s transparency and help employees align with its core values. In this article, we will introduce the All Hands Meeting model and why it’s a resource you should consider from now on.

A guidebook to set Meeting Objectives by taking Effective Meeting Notes

Filed under Business • February 17th, 2022

A guidebook to set Meeting Objectives by taking Effective Meeting Notes

Make an impact in your meetings by applying the science of note-taking. Capture all the valuable information you require by taking effective meeting notes.

Quick Guide to Project Kick Off Meetings

Filed under Business • May 20th, 2021

Quick Guide to Project Kick Off Meetings

Every time a team must begin a project an essential set of meetings must happen to ensure the success of the project. In this blog post we discuss the Project Kick Off Meeting and why it´s so important at the beginning of any new project.

Leave a Reply

sharing presentation via teams

sharing presentation via teams

The right way to present a PowerPoint file during a Microsoft Teams meeting

sharing presentation via teams

Check out Matt's book!

This is the field guide every Microsoft Teams user out there has been waiting for, covering Teams, chat, meetings, files, and more!

Subscribe to our newsletter!

Stay in the know with goings-on in Office 365, SharePoint, Microsoft Teams and more. It only takes a second, plus it's free!

Get the Periodic Table as a Poster

sharing presentation via teams

You can have your PPT cake and eat it too

PowerPoint is likely one of the most popular apps shared during a Teams meeting. There’s a reason when you bring up the share options, PowerPoint takes up more than a third of it. People present slides all the time. But are they using PowerPoint to its potential when they use Teams? Most people do not. To view a video version of this post (lots of video demos!), press play below. (You should watch it, actually.)

PowerPoint has a lot of really great features and while this isn’t a PowerPoint best practices post, I do really appreciate PowerPoint for many of its professional features, like smooth transitions (Morph can be amazing), slide notes, non-distracting animations, screen annotations, and especially presenter view.

Well, if you’ve ever tried to present a slide deck in Teams, you’ll know that some of these features can be hard to find depending on which method you use to share your slides. There are three main sharing options and these are the only three I’ll cover today.

The three options—and I’m going to stick to this naming convention throughout the post—are The Teams Built-In Share, Desktop Window Share, and Presenter View Share.

TL;DR: For the most part, you want Presenter View Share. Launch your slideshow like you would normally. Alt-Tab to your meeting and share the window (not the screen) , Alt-Tab back to your presentation, right-click, and select Use Presenter View . That's it! Below is a more in-depth review of this way and the most common other ways to share slide decks during a Teams meeting.

sharing presentation via teams

Teams Built-In Share

Teams Built-In Share is the first option we’re going to discuss and it uses the built-in PowerPoint option. The sharing drawer shows you all your recent PowerPoint files. Though note that they’re only ones you’ve accessed in SharePoint or OneDrive; you don’t see anything from your local device or other cloud locations like Google Drive. Whether you know it or not, this method makes use of PowerPoint for the web—or formerly known as PowerPointOnline—so you’re getting the “Lite” version of PowerPoint when you present. That can work in many situations, especially if your slides are simple and straight forward.

There are a couple major upsides to this method. First, everything stays right in Teams and you have full control of your computer and its screen, unlike normal presentation mode with PowerPoint, where it completely takes over your screen. The other is that your viewers can actually choose to jump ahead or backward in your slides at their own pace without impacting what others see, which is a benefit you don’t get from any otherPowerPoint sharing option. You can disable this if you want to keep them on the slide you’re presenting, though. I generally don’t like people being able to jump slides on their own; it's usually more a distraction than a benefit. So for me, this isn’t a compelling feature.

The major downsides to this method are that you’re stuck with PowerPoint Lite: animations and transitions are sometimes really poor—and yes, animations and transitions are incredibly powerful for your message when they’re used correctly. But more importantly to me, you don’t get presenter view, so no annotations, no notes, and you have absolutely no idea which slide or animation is coming up next (unless you practice your slides a lot, but let's be real: you probably cobbled them together right before the meeting). Those downsides are the reason that I never use this method, even if it is right up in my face when I want to share a slide deck in Teams. The only way you’ll find me using Teams Built-In Share is once presenter view is built into PowerPoint for the web. 

Desktop Window Share

Desktop Window Share, the second option, is a nice little hack for sharing your presentation from the desktop app, complete with all the slick transitions and animations you’d like. You won’t get presenter view with this method, but you will get safety and comfort of all the full-fledged features in the desktop app and it won’t take up your whole screen while you’re presenting. Though it will include a little chrome in the top toolbar.

This method is similar to what people use when they set up kiosks for people to browse at expos or stores, except in this case, it doesn’t take up the whole screen. To present this way, you need to toggle a setting. Jump into the Slide Show tab in PowerPoint and click Set Up Slide Show . Select Browsed by an individual and click OK.

Now when you present this slideshow, it’ll show your entire slide in its own window, without the rest of PowerPoint showing. It’s like a mini PowerPoint presenter mode. To share this window, jump to your Teams meeting, click Share , and select PowerPoint under the Window section. Handy.

Presenter View Share

Note: This feature seems to have been recently removed from PowerPoint on macOS; I haven't been able to test it on Windows to confirm any impact there. I've reached out to Microsoft for some explanation or insights on this. I'll provide an update when I have one.

And lastly, Presenter View Share is my favorite way to present a slide deck during a Teams meeting and it’s really the subject of this post. Presenter View Share gives you all the features of the desktop app—because that’s what you’re using—including presenter view. That means you get notes and annotations, can see the upcoming slide, and can jump around slides as much as you want.

This technique is actually stupidly simple, but it’s not obvious at all. To share your presentation this way, it works best if you’re only using one monitor. If you have a second monitor, I’d actually recommend disconnecting it. And that’s coming from someone who always uses two monitors. The reason for that is the feature isn't available when you have two monitors because you'll already have presenter view on one of them and you can't share PowerPoint as a window when you have two monitors because the app takes up two windows and becomes essentially disqualified from being shared as a window (the only way to share the slides is by sharing the whole screen, which is less private).

First, have your PowerPoint file open and start the presentation the way you normally would. Now, Alt-Tab (Command-Tab on Mac) back to your Teams meeting and share the PowerPoint window—not the whole screen. Alt-Tab back to PowerPoint. And here’s where the magic happens: right-click on your slide and click Use Presenter View . And that’s it!

sharing presentation via teams

Wait, you’re worried that the people on the other end are seeing presenter view? They’re not. In fact, they didn’t even see you right-click because the menu isn’t part of the window. For them, nothing happened. While on your side, you just went from low fi to high fi in a matter of two clicks. From here you can do all the stuff you want through presenter mode and everyone on the other end will only see slides.

So, why do I like this method the most? Because I get to have my cake and eat it too! Sure, the slides take up my whole screen, but that doesn’t stop me from jumping around my device all I want. Alt-Tab is your best friend. If you’re not an Alt-Tab person now, you will be moving forward, because it’s a great little trick for jumping between apps.

That means I can be taking notes about a potential customer in my OneNote app during a demo without them knowing. Or I can check in on the meeting itself to see if someone’s raised their hand or said something I need to respond to. All they’ll ever see is the current slide—even if you see another app on top of it—because all I’m sharing with them is the PowerPoint window.

Edit: Some folks have reported they can actually use two monitors and still are able to share the single presented-view of PowerPoint. I can't confirm this because on Mac, the Use Presenter View isn't available when you have two screens (the option is not available in the right-click menu). That said, if you use multiple monitors, you're a power user. So take 2 minutes to check with a colleagues to test if it still works in your situation to pull this off, but with the multiple monitors you're used to. So if one of your original thoughts was, "I can't not use two monitors", test before you knock it. 🙂

sharing presentation via teams

Frankly, I’ll never look back on any other presentation options again. At least until Teams Built-In Share—remember, I really mean PowerPoint for the Web when I say this—finally transitions from PowerPoint Lite to a full-fledged version of PowerPoint. Once that day comes, I may convert. But for now, I’m sticking to the desktop app because it’s a beast.

But what do you think? How do you present slides during Teams meetings? What tips do you have when you’re presenting? Share them in a comment below so others can learn some of your tips and hacks for better meetings in Teams.

sharing presentation via teams

Recent blog posts

sharing presentation via teams

Periodic Table of Microsoft 365 - 2022 Edition

sharing presentation via teams

Send a link to a Power App in an email or communication

sharing presentation via teams

Publish a Power App to a SharePoint page

Obviously you have an opinion, so share it.

sharing presentation via teams

[email protected] ​ jumpto365, Inc. PO Box 1960 PMB 24057 Wilmington, DE 19899

  • Infographics
  • Periodic Table
  • Periodic Table Poster
  • Other Tables
  • Recipes by jumpto365
  • Reuse Requirements
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Billing Portal

Tools & Service Descriptions (preview)

Integrations (alpha).

sharing presentation via teams

sharing presentation via teams

Try Process AI free

How to share a presentation on microsoft teams.

Do you want to share a presentation on Microsoft Teams ? We’ll take you through the steps of sharing your PowerPoint slides with ease!

  • Log into Teams and locate the channel or chat .
  • In the message box, click the “Attach” button .
  • Select “File” from the drop-down menu and upload the presentation.
  • Now everyone can access it.

There’s more! Did you know you can present your slides directly in a meeting?

  • Navigate to the meeting or start a new one.
  • Click the “Share” button and select “PowerPoint” .
  • Present in a window or share a file. This helps participants follow along.

Make your presentations more engaging by using live captions . This is helpful for those with hearing difficulty and those in noisy environments.

Promote active participation from your audience. Use features like annotations and highlighting tools which emphasize key points and gather feedback. This encourages teamwork and productivity.

Overview of Microsoft Teams presentation sharing

Sharing presentations on Microsoft Teams ? It’s a breeze! Just select the file you want to share & who you want to share it with – and you’re good to go. Plus, real-time editing capabilities enable multiple users to work on the same presentation simultaneously. You can even present slides directly from Teams, making collaboration faster and easier. To optimize viewing quality, make sure to adjust resolution settings. There you have it – seamless information exchange and team productivity in no time!

Step 1: Accessing the Microsoft Teams platform

To share a presentation on Microsoft Teams, you must access the platform first. It is key for successful collaboration and communication between your team. Follow these simple steps to easily access Microsoft Teams and begin sharing presentations!

  • Go to the Teams website in your web browser.
  • Enter your email address and password.
  • Click “Sign In”.
  • On the dashboard, click “Join or create a team” on the left.
  • Choose a team from the list or enter a code from your team leader.
  • To create a new team, click “Create Team” and follow the prompts.
  • After joining/creating a team, you have access to Teams’ features.
  • Use different channels and tabs to interact with your team and locate files.
  • To share a presentation, go to the “Files” tab in a channel and upload the PowerPoint.

Don’t miss this opportunity to engage with your team using Microsoft Teams. Communicate, exchange ideas and share presentations quickly and easily. Start sharing now!

Step 2: Starting a presentation sharing session

  • Log into your account with the Teams app.
  • Pick the channel you’ll share your presentation to.
  • Look for the “Share” button at the bottom of the chat window.
  • Select the presentation file you wish to share with “Browse teams and channels”.
  • Once you’ve chosen the file, click “Share” to start the sesh.
  • Navigate your slides with the provided controls.

Make sure everyone has access to the presentation. Plus, Teams offers collaboration features like annotating and questioning through chat.

Pro Tip: Check your internet connection’s stable before you start the presentation sharing session. No interruptions!

Step 3: Choosing the sharing options

When it comes to sharing presentations on Microsoft Teams, choosing the right option is key. Here’s how to do it:

  • Click the “Share” button at the bottom of the meeting screen.
  • A pop-up window will appear with several options – select “PowerPoint” to share a presentation.
  • Next, decide whether you want to share your entire desktop or just a single window. This lets you control what the participants see.
  • Finally, click “Share” to start sharing your presentation.

Remember to double-check that your presentation looks good before you continue with the meeting.

Furthermore, Microsoft Teams offers extra features such as annotation tools and letting people edit documents simultaneously – this boosts collaboration and involvement during presentations.

Did you know that Microsoft Teams is now one of the most popular collaboration tools for businesses? Its easy-to-use interface and many features make it great for remote working.

Step 4: Sharing the presentation

Sharing a presentation on Microsoft Teams is crucial for efficient collaboration with your team. Follow these steps to easily share and engage your audience:

  • Get Ready: Make sure your presentation has all the content and visuals you need. This helps others understand your message.
  • Open Teams: Launch the Teams app on your computer or use the web version. Sign in with your details to access the workspace.
  • Join/Start Meeting: Join an existing meeting or start a new one. Sharing presentations is usually done in meetings with discussion and collaboration.
  • To share the entire PowerPoint, select “PowerPoint”.
  • To share slides or other documents, choose “Browse”.
  • Teams has extra options like Slide Show mode or sharing single application windows.
  • Engage Participants: Choose the sharing method, file, or slides. Click “Share” to start presenting. Participants view your presentation in real-time. They can ask questions or give feedback via chat or audio.

Follow these steps for successful collaboration on Microsoft Teams. Be prepared, use appropriate sharing methods, and engage your audience.

Step 5: Navigating and presenting the slides

Want to know how to smoothly move through slides on Microsoft Teams? Here’s the step-by-step guide:

  • Press the “Share” button at the bottom of your screen to start presenting.
  • Use the arrows on your keyboard or click the navigation buttons to go back and forth between slides.
  • If you need to jump to a specific slide, select the “Go to slide” option and enter the number.
  • To end presentation mode, click the “Stop presenting” button at the top of your screen.

Plus, use shortcuts like “B” to black out your screen and “W” to display a whiteboard. This helps keep the presentation on track.

A funny thing happened to a colleague presenting slides on Teams. Instead of advancing to the next slide, they clicked an emoji reaction. This caused a lot of laughter. It’s a great reminder to double-check actions when navigating virtual slides.

Step 6: Ending the presentation sharing session

To finish the Microsoft Teams presentation-sharing session, do these steps:

  • Click on the presentation screen to go to the meeting controls.
  • Find the ‘Stop Presenting’ button at the top of the screen. Then click it.
  • A pop-up will appear. It’ll ask if you want to stop presenting. Click ‘Stop Presenting’ again to confirm.
  • The presentation sharing session will end. You’ll go back to your regular view of the meeting.
  • You can stay in the meeting or leave.

Remember, ending the presentation-sharing session doesn’t mean you have to leave the meeting. You can still talk with others and contribute to discussions before you finish.

Pro Tip: Before you finish the presentation-sharing session, make sure all the points are covered and all questions or concerns are answered. This will help everyone finish the session on a good note.

Share presentations on Microsoft Teams for simple, efficient results! Just follow the steps outlined in this article. Showcase your work, collaborate, and ensure everyone’s on the same page.

  • First, upload the file to the platform. Select “Share” and choose the presentation from your files. You can share your entire screen or just a specific window. This lets you control what participants see.
  • Navigate through slides smoothly. Make sure participants see each slide clearly. Use presenter view and annotations. Use laser pointer tools for clearer communication.
  • Microsoft Teams also offers a recording feature. If you want to share with those who weren’t able to attend or review later, you can record the meeting. Everyone will have access to the presentation.

Start sharing today and experience seamless communication!

Additional tips and troubleshooting guidelines

  • Double check the sharing settings. Ensure you enabled the right permissions on Microsoft Teams before the presentation. It will let everyone view and interact with it without issues.
  • Optimize your internet connection. Stable and reliable internet is needed for successful presentation sharing. Use a wired network or strong Wi-Fi to avoid interruptions.
  • Be mindful when sharing your screen. Close any unnecessary applications or tabs. This will reduce distractions and maintain a professional atmosphere.
  • Remember, attention to detail is key when presenting on Microsoft Teams. Consider the tips and troubleshooting guidelines. This will help you deliver a seamless and engaging presentation.
  • Technical issues may occur despite preparation. Remain calm and try restarting the app or checking compatibility. If nothing works, contact the support team for assistance.

Let me tell you a story. A colleague had a crucial sales pitch through Teams. His PowerPoint slides didn’t display properly. He had taken our tips into account and switched to screen sharing mode. He was able to deliver his pitch using alternative tools within seconds. This shows the value of flexibility and quick thinking in overcoming challenges while presenting on Microsoft Teams.

sharing presentation via teams

No credit card required

Your projects are processes, Take control of them today.

OSIT-Logo---Horizontal---White_webnav

  • Our Community
  • Our philosophy
  • Awards & Certification
  • Join our team
  • Security Training
  • There are no suggestions because the search field is empty.
  • Cyber Security
  • IT Projects
  • Communications

Accounting Practices

  • Not for Profit
  • Engineering

Our Tech Experties

  • Case Studies
  • What it Costs
  • Our Partners
  • What Our Clients Say

How to share your screen and PowerPoint in Microsoft Teams

How to share your screen and PowerPoint in Microsoft Teams

William Palfrey

Categories: Microsoft 365

Sharing your screen, presentations and whiteboards in Microsoft Teams is a great way to make your Teams meetings more effective. And fun… After all, who doesn’t like a cheeky post-meeting game of hangman to secure the office bragging rights for the day? 🏆

Microsoft Teams brought many teams together and has been the tool that brings projects from start to finish. But sometimes, clients will require our IT support services to show them the ropes - especially with sharing screens and PowerPoint presentations in Microsoft Teams. 

In this article I’ll show you precisely how you can do these things on Microsoft Teams:

  • Share your entire desktop,
  • Share a specific window,
  • Share a PowerPoint presentation, or
  • Share a whiteboard that your team can “collaborate” on 🙂

Sharing Screen Content in Microsoft Teams

You've got a handful of options at your disposal when you want to share content in a meeting, let’s get clear on what the options look like and the best scenario for each. 👇

Microsoft Teams - Screen Sharing-min-1

Select the share your desktop option if you want to share your entire desktop screen in Microsoft Teams.

Note: This is the equivalent of having someone look over your shoulder and will include visibility of all your notifications, reminders, and other desktop activity.

Tip : Choose this option when you need to share multiple windows simultaneously. It’s a good idea to disable your notifications or set your computer to do-not-disturb mode first.

Select the share your screen option if you want to present one of your open windows in the Microsoft Teams app. An example might be a spreadsheet, webpage or word doc.

Note : This option will exclude notifications, reminders or desktop activity outside the shared window.

Tip : Choose this option if you only need to share one thing and want to keep the rest of your screen private.

Microsoft Teams have built in the capability of sharing your PowerPoint presentations. This interactive method of sharing allows your team to interact with your presentation by skipping forward and backwards through your slides, without disrupting your flow as the presenter.

Tip : Choose this option whenever you share a PowerPoint in Microsoft Teams and want your audience to be able to move through the presentation at their own pace.

Note : As the presenter, you can disable the ability for others to browse through the slides if you wish.

Each Teams meeting has a whiteboard where meeting participants have space to ink together. Select the share your whiteboard option if you want to open the virtual whiteboard that everyone can collaborate on in Microsoft Teams.

Tip: Choose this option if you want to brainstorm with your team and have your ideas attached to your meeting. Also great for a quick game of hangman, tic tac toe or dots and crosses. 🙂

How to share your screen in Microsoft Teams

  • While in a meeting, chat or group chat click the share icon
  • Choose if you’d like to share your entire desktop or just one specific window
  • When you’re done sharing click the stop sharing Icon

How to share your PowerPoint presentation in Microsoft Teams

  • Choose from one of your recently opened PowerPoint slide presentations. Alternatively, click Browse to navigate to your PowerPoint file
  • Your team members will be able to navigate through your presentation by default. (Optional turn off this feature by clicking the eye icon to turn off participant navigation). And that's how to share PowerPoint on Teams
  • And when you’re done sharing, click the stop sharing icon

How to share your whiteboard in Microsoft Teams

  • Select the whiteboard option from the menu
  • Everyone will be able to grab a pen and interact with the whiteboard

If you need further help with PowerPoint or any of the Microsoft 365 productivity tools, your friendly neighbourhood IT support guys are willing to help. 

Microsoft Teams Training Resources

- Microsoft Teams Quick Start Guide for New Users

- Microsoft Teams for Beginners: 101

You may also be interested in

How to use Microsoft Teams: The Ultimate 2024 Guide

Microsoft Teams Quick Start Guides

Drop your details below and tell us where to send your quick start guide - we'll also include a copy of our Microsoft Teams for Beginners 101 guide too.

Share on facebook

Turn that IT frown upside down

IT isn’t supposed to distract you from the important stuff. It’s supposed to enable you to do more of it, more efficiently. And that’s our sole purpose at Office Solutions IT – delivering IT support services that take care of the complex business of managing IT, so you can focus on your business. Get in touch and find out more.

  Call us on 1300 349 195   Email us [email protected]   Schedule a call

OSIT LOGO

Recent Blog Posts

How-To Geek

How to share your screen in microsoft teams.

Teams lets you share not just your PC screen but also your mobile screen!

Quick Links

Table of contents, how to screen share in microsoft teams on desktop, how to screen share in microsoft teams on mobile.

Microsoft Teams makes it easy to share your desktop or mobile device's screen in your online meetings. You can even choose between sharing your device's entire screen or just a specific app window. Here's how.

Related: What Is Microsoft Teams, and Is It Right for My Business?

  • Share Your Screen in Microsoft Teams on Desktop
  • Share Your Screen in Microsoft Teams on Mobile

On a Windows, Mac, Linux, or Chromebook computer, you can use Teams web version or the app to share your screen in a meeting.

To start, first, launch Microsoft Teams on your computer and join a meeting.

In the meeting, at the top of the Teams interface, click the "Share Content" option (an up-arrow icon).

Click "Share Content" in Teams on desktop.

You will see a "Share Content" section to the right of the Teams interface. To share your computer's entire screen, then in this section, click "Screen." To share a specific app's window, click the "Window" option instead.

Select "Screen" or "Window" in Teams on desktop.

If you select the "Screen" option, Teams will start presenting your desktop's screen in the meeting. You will see a red border around your screen indicating the screen is being shared.

On Linux, you will not see the red border around your screen when it's shared. You also can't share a specific app's window on Linux.

Entire screen sharing in Teams on desktop.

If you choose the "Window" option, select the app window that you'd like to share.

Select an app window in Teams on desktop.

When you've finished your meeting and you want to stop screen sharing, then at the top of the Teams interface, click "Stop Presenting."

Click "Stop Presenting" in Teams on desktop.

And that's all there is to screen-sharing in Teams on desktop. Very useful!

Like Teams, you can also share your screen in Zoom and Google Meet meetings .

Related: How to Share Your Screen in a Zoom Meeting

On an iPhone, iPad, or Android phone, you can use the official Teams app to share your phone's screen in your online meetings, similar to sharing mobile screens in Skype .

To do so, first, launch the Microsoft Teams app on your phone. In the app, join the meeting where you'd like to present your phone's screen.

In the meeting, from the bottom bar of the Teams app, select the three dots.

Tap the three dots at the bottom of Teams on mobile.

From the three-dots menu, select "Share."

Tap "Share" in the three-dots menu in Teams on mobile.

Choose the "Share Screen" option. To include the audio in your screen share, toggle on the "Audio" option.

Select "Share Screen" in Teams on mobile.

If you're on Android, you will see a "Display Over Other Apps" page. Here, find "Teams" and tap it. Then enable the "Allow Display Over Other Apps" option.

Enable "Allow Display Over Other Apps" for Teams on Android.

If you're on an iPhone or iPad, tap the "Start Broadcast" option.

Tap "Start Broadcast" for Teams on iPhone.

Tap the back button to get back to the Teams screen. There, in the prompt that opens, select "Start Now."

Tap "Start Now" in Teams on mobile.

A red border will appear around your phone's screen, which indicates your screen is currently being shared. To stop sharing your screen, tap "Stop Presenting."

Tap "Stop Presenting" in Teams on mobile.

And that's how you make explaining various concepts and ideas easier by sharing your screen with Microsoft Teams!

Did you know you can use a whiteboard in a Teams meeting ?

Related: How to Use a Whiteboard in a Microsoft Teams Meeting

MSPoweruser

  • Software Reviews
  • Affiliate disclosure
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy policy

Microsoft Teams announces freely move toolbar for improved presentations

published on June 4, 2024

Share this article

Improve this guide

Read our disclosure page to find out how can you help MSPoweruser sustain the editorial team Read more

  • Microsoft Teams introduces movable presenter toolbar for screen sharing.
  • Presenters can now optimize video playback for smoother presentations in Teams.
  • These features are in preview for Teams Public Preview or Microsoft 365 Targeted Release.

microsoft teams microphone not working

Microsoft Teams is introducing two new features designed for the screen-sharing experience for presenters in virtual meetings.

Previously, the Presenter toolbar in Teams remained fixed at the top of the screen during screen sharing. This new update lets presenters to drag and reposition the toolbar anywhere on their screen.

This customization ensures that the toolbar doesn’t obscure important areas of the content being shared, such as menus or captions.

Teams now offer a new “Optimize” button on the Presenter toolbar. This button allows presenters to manually optimize video playback for a smoother viewing experience for meeting participants. This feature is particularly useful in situations where automatic video detection fails or experiences delays.

How it works 1. Start your Teams meeting and, when the time comes to present, select Share from the toolbar to share your screen. 2. You can now move the Presenter toolbar from its default location at the top of the screen and reposition it in any area of your screen. Just click on any non-interactive area of the Toolbar or on the new drag handle. NOTE: The Presenter toolbar will also minimize after 4 seconds when not in use; when minimized, the toolbar will still display a red badge to clearly indicate the ongoing sharing session. 3. If you are sharing video or other high-motion content, you can click the Optimize?button on the?toolbar for a smoother playback experience.

These new features are currently available in preview for users enrolled in the Teams Public Preview or Microsoft 365 Targeted Release program.

The update applies to the new Teams client for Windows and macOS.

It’s important to note that only the presenter needs to be using the preview version for everyone in the meeting to benefit from these improvements.

In summary, these updates aim to provide presenters with more control and flexibility when sharing their screen in Teams meetings.

More here .

Devesh Beri

Tech Journalist

These are the things that motivate me - creating informative and helpful content, pursuing my passion for motorsports and music, engaging in expeditions, maintaining a healthy lifestyle, and spending time with my adorable cat Taco.

multiplayer browser games

Was this page helpful?

Let us know if you managed to solve your tech problem reading this article.

We’re happy to hear that!

You can subscribe to our newsletter to stay up to date with the latest news and best deals!

Do you have a suggestion?

We know how frustrating could be to look for an universal solution.

If you have an error which is not present in the article, or if you know a better solution , please help us to improve this guide.

sharing presentation via teams

sharing presentation via teams

Support for Xamarin ended May 1, 2024. Build cross-platform mobile and desktop apps with .NET today.

Migrate Xamarin apps to .NET

Xamarin Support Ended May 1, 2024

As of May 1, 2024, Xamarin is no longer supported or updated by Microsoft. See the Xamarin support policy for details.

We recommend you use .NET Multi-platform App UI (.NET MAUI), the evolution of Xamarin.Forms, which lets you create Android, iOS, macOS, and Windows apps with a modern, cross-platform framework. We have resources and guidance to help you migrate Xamarin apps to .NET MAUI.

Dig deeper: Mobile apps with .NET

sharing presentation via teams

Multi-platform with .NET MAUI

.NET MAUI is the evolution of Xamarin.Forms and uses the latest technologies for building native apps on Windows, macOS, iOS, and Android, abstracting them into one common framework built on .NET.

Xamarin.Forms apps can be migrated to .NET MAUI using the upgrade assistant so you can start taking advantage of the latest features and performance enhancements.

Dig deeper: .NET MAUI

sharing presentation via teams

Introducing Microsoft 365 Copilot – your copilot for work

Mar 16, 2023 | Jared Spataro - CVP, AI at Work

  • Share on Facebook (opens new window)
  • Share on Twitter (opens new window)
  • Share on LinkedIn (opens new window)

Screenshot Microsoft 365 Copilot

Humans are hard-wired to dream, to create, to innovate. Each of us seeks to do work that gives us purpose — to write a great novel, to make a discovery, to build strong communities, to care for the sick. The urge to connect to the core of our work lives in all of us. But today, we spend too much time consumed by the drudgery of work on tasks that zap our time, creativity and energy. To reconnect to the soul of our work, we don’t just need a better way of doing the same things. We need a whole new way to work.

Today, we are bringing the power of next-generation AI to work. Introducing Microsoft 365 Copilot — your copilot for work . It combines the power of large language models (LLMs) with your data in the Microsoft Graph and the Microsoft 365 apps to turn your words into the most powerful productivity tool on the planet.

“Today marks the next major step in the evolution of how we interact with computing, which will fundamentally change the way we work and unlock a new wave of productivity growth,” said Satya Nadella, Chairman and CEO, Microsoft. “With our new copilot for work, we’re giving people more agency and making technology more accessible through the most universal interface — natural language.”

Copilot is integrated into Microsoft 365 in two ways. It works alongside you, embedded in the Microsoft 365 apps you use every day — Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Teams and more — to unleash creativity, unlock productivity and uplevel skills. Today we’re also announcing an entirely new experience: Business Chat . Business Chat works across the LLM, the Microsoft 365 apps, and your data — your calendar, emails, chats, documents, meetings and contacts — to do things you’ve never been able to do before. You can give it natural language prompts like “Tell my team how we updated the product strategy,” and it will generate a status update based on the morning’s meetings, emails and chat threads.

With Copilot, you’re always in control. You decide what to keep, modify or discard. Now, you can be more creative in Word, more analytical in Excel, more expressive in PowerPoint, more productive in Outlook and more collaborative in Teams.

Microsoft 365 Copilot transforms work in three ways:

Unleash creativity. With Copilot in Word, you can jump-start the creative process so you never start with a blank slate again. Copilot gives you a first draft to edit and iterate on — saving hours in writing, sourcing, and editing time. Sometimes Copilot will be right, other times usefully wrong — but it will always put you further ahead. You’re always in control as the author, driving your unique ideas forward, prompting Copilot to shorten, rewrite or give feedback. Copilot in PowerPoint helps you create beautiful presentations with a simple prompt, adding relevant content from a document you made last week or last year. And with Copilot in Excel, you can analyze trends and create professional-looking data visualizations in seconds.

Unlock productivity. We all want to focus on the 20% of our work that really matters, but 80% of our time is consumed with busywork that bogs us down. Copilot lightens the load. From summarizing long email threads to quickly drafting suggested replies, Copilot in Outlook helps you clear your inbox in minutes, not hours. And every meeting is a productive meeting with Copilot in Teams. It can summarize key discussion points — including who said what and where people are aligned and where they disagree — and suggest action items, all in real time during a meeting. And with Copilot in Power Platform, anyone can automate repetitive tasks, create chatbots and go from idea to working app in minutes.

GitHub data shows that Copilot promises to unlock productivity for everyone. Among developers who use GitHub Copilot, 88% say they are more productive, 74% say that they can focus on more satisfying work, and 77% say it helps them spend less time searching for information or examples.

But Copilot doesn’t just supercharge individual productivity. It creates a new knowledge model for every organization — harnessing the massive reservoir of data and insights that lies largely inaccessible and untapped today. Business Chat works across all your business data and apps to surface the information and insights you need from a sea of data — so knowledge flows freely across the organization, saving you valuable time searching for answers. You will be able to access Business Chat from Microsoft 365.com, from Bing when you’re signed in with your work account, or from Teams.

Uplevel skills. Copilot makes you better at what you’re good at and lets you quickly master what you’ve yet to learn. The average person uses only a handful of commands — such as “animate a slide” or “insert a table” — from the thousands available across Microsoft 365. Now, all that rich functionality is unlocked using just natural language. And this is only the beginning.

Copilot will fundamentally change how people work with AI and how AI works with people. As with any new pattern of work, there’s a learning curve — but those who embrace this new way of working will quickly gain an edge.

Screenshot Microsoft 365 Copilot

The Copilot System: Enterprise-ready AI

Microsoft is uniquely positioned to deliver enterprise-ready AI with the Copilot System . Copilot is more than OpenAI’s ChatGPT embedded into Microsoft 365. It’s a sophisticated processing and orchestration engine working behind the scenes to combine the power of LLMs, including GPT-4, with the Microsoft 365 apps and your business data in the Microsoft Graph — now accessible to everyone through natural language.

Grounded in your business data. AI-powered LLMs are trained on a large but limited corpus of data. The key to unlocking productivity in business lies in connecting LLMs to your business data — in a secure, compliant, privacy-preserving way. Microsoft 365 Copilot has real-time access to both your content and context in the Microsoft Graph. This means it generates answers anchored in your business content — your documents, emails, calendar, chats, meetings, contacts and other business data — and combines them with your working context — the meeting you’re in now, the email exchanges you’ve had on a topic, the chat conversations you had last week — to deliver accurate, relevant, contextual responses.

Built on Microsoft’s comprehensive approach to security, compliance and privacy. Copilot is integrated into Microsoft 365 and automatically inherits all your company’s valuable security, compliance, and privacy policies and processes. Two-factor authentication, compliance boundaries, privacy protections, and more make Copilot the AI solution you can trust.

Architected to protect tenant, group and individual data. We know data leakage is a concern for customers. Copilot LLMs are not trained on your tenant data or your prompts. Within your tenant, our time-tested permissioning model ensures that data won’t leak across user groups. And on an individual level, Copilot presents only data you can access using the same technology that we’ve been using for years to secure customer data.

Integrated into the apps millions use every day. Microsoft 365 Copilot is integrated in the productivity apps millions of people use and rely on every day for work and life — Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Teams and more. An intuitive and consistent user experience ensures it looks, feels and behaves the same way in Teams as it does in Outlook, with a shared design language for prompts, refinements and commands.

Designed to learn new skills.  Microsoft 365 Copilot’s foundational skills are a game changer for productivity: It can already create, summarize, analyze, collaborate and automate using your specific business content and context. But it doesn’t stop there. Copilot knows how to command apps (e.g., “animate this slide”) and work across apps, translating a Word document into a PowerPoint presentation. And Copilot is designed to learn new skills. For example, with Viva Sales, Copilot can learn how to connect to CRM systems of record to pull customer data — like interaction and order histories — into communications. As Copilot learns about new domains and processes, it will be able to perform even more sophisticated tasks and queries.

Committed to building responsibly

At Microsoft, we are guided by our AI principles and Responsible AI Standard and decades of research on AI, grounding and privacy-preserving machine learning. A multidisciplinary team of researchers, engineers and policy experts reviews our AI systems for potential harms and mitigations — refining training data, filtering to limit harmful content, query- and result-blocking sensitive topics, and applying Microsoft technologies like InterpretML and Fairlearn to help detect and correct data bias. We make it clear how the system makes decisions by noting limitations, linking to sources, and prompting users to review, fact-check and adjust content based on subject-matter expertise.

Moving boldly as we learn  

In the months ahead, we’re bringing Copilot to all our productivity apps—Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Teams, Viva, Power Platform, and more. We’ll share more on pricing and licensing soon. Earlier this month we announced Dynamics 365 Copilot as the world’s first AI Copilot in both CRM and ERP to bring the next-generation AI to every line of business.

Everyone deserves to find purpose and meaning in their work — and Microsoft 365 Copilot can help. To serve the unmet needs of our customers, we must move quickly and responsibly, learning as we go. We’re testing Copilot with a small group of customers to get feedback and improve our models as we scale, and we will expand to more soon.

Learn more on the Microsoft 365 blog and visit WorkLab to get expert insights on how AI will create a brighter future of work for everyone.

And for all the blogs, videos and assets related to today’s announcements, please visit our microsite .

Tags: AI , Microsoft 365 , Microsoft 365 Copilot

  • Check us out on RSS

sharing presentation via teams

At a private donor retreat, Trump team says Minnesota and Virginia are in play

PALM BEACH, Fla. — Top officials for former President Donald Trump ’s campaign believe they can flip Democratic strongholds Minnesota and Virginia into his column in November, they told donors behind closed doors at a Republican National Committee retreat Saturday.

Brandishing internal surveys, pollster Tony Fabrizio and senior advisers Susie Wiles and Chris LaCivita delivered a set of presentations that focused on finances, messaging and the political map, according to two people who were present at the Four Seasons resort here. Fabrizio’s numbers, posted on a slide shared with NBC News, showed Trump ahead of President Joe Biden by small margins in the key swing states from 2020 — including Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona and Georgia.

The Trump camp’s discussion of expanding the electoral map deeper into the Democratic territory of Minnesota and Virginia comes as Biden’s re-election team says it is eyeing North Carolina — which Republicans have won in three consecutive presidential races — and Florida , where the GOP has prevailed in the last two presidential elections. Biden took the 2020 contest by a margin of 74 electoral votes, with victories in the pivotal states of Wisconsin, Arizona and Georgia coming from a cumulative advantage of about 44,000 votes.

“I think that the Biden campaign is deliberately playing a faux game by talking about [how] they’re going to expand the map in Florida and North Carolina,” LaCivita said in a telephone interview with NBC News. “But we have a real, real opportunity in expanding the map in Virginia and Minnesota.”

The top lines of the internal polling shared with donors are relatively consistent with sparse public surveys that show Biden with a small edge in Virginia, while Trump’s advantage in his own polling in Minnesota is at odds with the few public surveys in that state. But all of the public polls in Minnesota and Virginia — and the trials run by Trump’s campaign — fall within their margins of error, suggesting tight races in both states.

Trump’s team tested head-to-head, four-way and six-way races in each state, according to LaCivita. In the six-way trial in Minnesota, which includes four independent candidates, Trump and Biden were tied at 40% apiece, with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. at 9%, he said. When the field was narrowed to four candidates, Trump led Biden 46% to 41%. In a head-to-head matchup, Trump led Biden 49% to 46%.

Biden won Minnesota by about 7 percentage points in 2020, and the state has not favored a Republican nominee for president since Richard Nixon’s 1972 re-election campaign.

In Virginia, Trump’s internal survey showed Biden leading Trump 40% to 37% in a six-way test that included Kennedy at 8%. Biden led Trump 48% to 44% in a head-to-head matchup. And, in a four-way race, Biden had a 42%-to-41% advantage over Trump.

Trump aides declined to make the full surveys, including their methodology, available to NBC News. Campaigns often use the promise of playing offense on new turf as an incentive for donors to give money to support those efforts.

"Trump’s team has so little campaign or infrastructure to speak of they’re resorting to leaking memos that say ‘the polls we paid for show us winning, don’t ask us to show you the whole poll though.’ Sure, guys," Biden campaign spokeswoman Lauren Hitt said.

"While we have 150 offices open with hundreds of staff across the key battlegrounds, the RNC is closing offices and hemorrhaging money on legal fees," she added. "Joe Biden has hit every battleground at least once, while Trump’s in the courtroom or on the golf course. We’ll see how that translates in November.” "

Jonathan Allen reported from Washington, D.C.; Matt Dixon from Orlando, Florida; and Olympia Sonnier, Dasha Burns and Abigail Brooks from Palm Beach, Florida.

sharing presentation via teams

Jonathan Allen is a senior national politics reporter for NBC News, based in Washington.

Matt Dixon is a senior national politics reporter for NBC News, based in Florida.

sharing presentation via teams

Olympia Sonnier is a field producer for NBC News. 

sharing presentation via teams

Dasha Burns is a correspondent for NBC News.

Abigail Brooks is a producer for NBC News.

  • How to Login
  • Use Teams on the web
  • Join a meeting in Teams
  • Join without a Teams account
  • Join on a second device
  • Join as a view-only attendee
  • Join a breakout room
  • Join from Google
  • Schedule a meeting in Teams
  • Schedule from Outlook
  • Schedule from Google
  • Schedule with registration
  • Instant meeting
  • Add a dial-in number
  • See all your meetings
  • Invite people
  • Meeting roles
  • Add co-organizers
  • Hide attendee names
  • Tips for large Teams meeting
  • Lock a meeting
  • End a meeting
  • Manage your calendar
  • Meeting controls
  • Prepare in a green room
  • Share content
  • Share slides
  • Share sound
  • Apply video filters
  • Mute and unmute
  • Spotlight a video
  • Multitasking
  • Raise your hand
  • Live reactions
  • Take meeting notes
  • Customize your view
  • Laser pointer
  • Cast from a desktop
  • Use a green screen
  • Join as an avatar
  • Customize your avatar
  • Use emotes, gestures, and more
  • Get started with immersive spaces
  • Use in-meeting controls
  • Spatial audio
  • Overview of Microsoft Teams Premium
  • Intelligent productivity
  • Advanced meeting protection
  • Engaging event experiences
  • Change your background
  • Meeting themes
  • Audio settings
  • Manage attendee audio and video
  • Reduce background noise
  • Voice isolation in Teams
  • Mute notifications
  • Use breakout rooms
  • Live transcription
  • Language interpretation
  • Live captions
  • End-to-end encryption
  • Presenter modes
  • Call and meeting quality
  • Meeting attendance reports
  • Using the lobby
  • Meeting options
  • Record a meeting
  • Meeting recap
  • Play and share a meeting recording
  • Delete a recording
  • Edit or delete a transcript
  • Switch to town halls
  • Get started
  • Schedule a live event
  • Invite attendees
  • organizer checklist
  • For tier 1 events
  • Produce a live event
  • Produce a live event with Teams Encoder
  • Best practices
  • Moderate a Q&A
  • Allow anonymous presenters
  • Attendee engagement report
  • Recording and reports
  • Attend a live event in Teams
  • Participate in a Q&A
  • Use live captions
  • Schedule a webinar
  • Customize a webinar
  • Publicize a webinar
  • Manage webinar registration
  • Manage what attendees see
  • Change webinar details
  • Manage webinar emails
  • Cancel a webinar
  • Manage webinar recordings
  • Webinar attendance report
  • Get started with town hall
  • Attend a town hall
  • Schedule a town hall
  • Customize a town hall
  • Host a town hall
  • Use RTMP-In
  • Town hall insights
  • Manage town hall recordings
  • Cancel a town hall
  • Can't join a meeting
  • Camera isn't working
  • Microphone isn't working
  • My speaker isn’t working
  • Breakout rooms issues
  • Immersive spaces issues
  • Meetings keep dropping

sharing presentation via teams

Laser point or draw on PowerPoint slides in Microsoft Teams meetings

When using PowerPoint Live to share content in a Teams meeting, emphasize your points and engage viewers with the colorful laser pointer and drawing tools. Your “ink” will be visible to everyone in the meeting.

Only the presenter can point and draw on the slides.

Pointer and drawing tools below current slide

Focus viewer attention with the laser pointer

pointer icon

To create a short line simply move the mouse around. To create a longer line, press and hold the mouse button as you draw.

Tip:  If you quickly make several marks, they will all be visible at the same time and then fade away together.

Highlight and connect ideas with the drawing tools

These markings will last throughout the meeting.

pen icon

Press and hold the mouse button as you draw.

Erase your ink marks

eraser icon

Stop drawing

Cursor tool is first one after 3 dots

Need more help?

Want more options.

Explore subscription benefits, browse training courses, learn how to secure your device, and more.

sharing presentation via teams

Microsoft 365 subscription benefits

sharing presentation via teams

Microsoft 365 training

sharing presentation via teams

Microsoft security

sharing presentation via teams

Accessibility center

Communities help you ask and answer questions, give feedback, and hear from experts with rich knowledge.

sharing presentation via teams

Ask the Microsoft Community

sharing presentation via teams

Microsoft Tech Community

sharing presentation via teams

Windows Insiders

Microsoft 365 Insiders

Was this information helpful?

Thank you for your feedback.

IMAGES

  1. how to share your presentation on microsoft teams

    sharing presentation via teams

  2. How to Share a PowerPoint Presentation on Microsoft Teams

    sharing presentation via teams

  3. How to share PowerPoint slides in Microsoft Teams

    sharing presentation via teams

  4. Share content in a meeting in Teams

    sharing presentation via teams

  5. How To Share A Powerpoint Presentation Using Microsoft Teams

    sharing presentation via teams

  6. Top 13 Things to Know About Screen Sharing in Microsoft Teams

    sharing presentation via teams

VIDEO

  1. Meeting with AnoushehDaniali 20240421 203808 Meeting Recording

  2. Online Office meeting presentation

  3. Microsoft Inspire

  4. BIG EARNINGS PLAYS... on Stock Talk Live!!!

  5. This Is How We Bounce Back

  6. How To Recruit Good Employees With Video

COMMENTS

  1. Share slides in Microsoft Teams meetings with PowerPoint Live

    Present your slides. If you're already in a Teams meeting, select Share and then under the PowerPoint Live section, choose the PowerPoint file you're wanting to present. If you don't see the file in the list, select Browse OneDrive or Browse my computer. If your presentation is already open in PowerPoint for Windows or Mac, go to the file ...

  2. 7 Options for Sharing PowerPoint Slides in Teams

    In this article I am using the Teams app in Windows 10. The seven options are: Share your entire screen/desktop. Share the Slide Show window. Share the editing window with a clean look. Run the Slide Show in a window and share that window. Use the PowerPoint sharing option in Teams. Use Presenter View to show the audience your slides while you ...

  3. How to properly present PowerPoint slides in Microsoft Teams

    In this step-by-step tutorial, learn how to best present Microsoft PowerPoint slides in Microsoft Teams.⌚ Timestamps0:00 Introduction1:58 Example of the prob...

  4. How to share PowerPoint slides in Microsoft Teams

    If you're leading a presentation and need to share your PowerPoint slides during a Microsoft Teams meeting, here's how: • Once your meeting is active, select...

  5. How to share PowerPoint Slides in Microsoft Teams

    Learn how to share PowerPoint Slides in Microsoft Teams the correct way. There are different ways to present your PowerPoint slides in a Teams meeting. In th...

  6. The Ultimate How To Guide for Presenting Content in Microsoft Teams

    This makes it easy to do presentations using Teams - without having to have a PowerPoint desktop app open at the same time. Seems to work only on Teams Desktop with new meeting experience mode at the moment. ... Sharing looks a bit different when you are using Teams web client. Sharing is available in (new) Microsoft Edge and Google Chrome ...

  7. How to Present PowerPoint Slides in Microsoft Teams

    Method 2: Share PowerPoint Window. If you want only to present your PowerPoint slide deck, it's best to share just that window. Here's how: Click Share and select Window when it's your turn to present. Enable Include computer sound if you have a video or to share and select your presentation from the list. A red border will appear around your ...

  8. How to Share a PowerPoint Presentation on Microsoft Teams

    Method #3: Share PowerPoint Window to Present Your Slides. If you intend to hide parts of your screen, you can simply share the relevant PowerPoint window so that your audience can only view the presentation. During a Live call, click the Share button and select your screen or window to share.

  9. The right way to present a PowerPoint file during a Microsoft Teams

    First, have your PowerPoint file open and start the presentation the way you normally would. Now, Alt-Tab (Command-Tab on Mac) back to your Teams meeting and share the PowerPoint window—not the whole screen. Alt-Tab back to PowerPoint. And here's where the magic happens: right-click on your slide and click Use Presenter View.

  10. Complete Guide to Presenter View in Teams

    In Teams share the screen that has the slides on it; Deliver your presentation; Full detailed article. I have an article with full details, including screen captures, on PowerPoint Presenter View with 2 screens on a Mac. Video. The steps are very similar to using 2 screens in Zoom because sharing a screen is similar in Teams or Zoom.

  11. How to Share a Presentation on Microsoft Teams

    To share a presentation, go to the "Files" tab in a channel and upload the PowerPoint. Don't miss this opportunity to engage with your team using Microsoft Teams. Communicate, exchange ideas and share presentations quickly and easily. Start sharing now! Step 2: Starting a presentation sharing session. Log into your account with the Teams app.

  12. How to present videos in Microsoft Teams meetings WITHOUT LAG using web

    QUICK LINKS: 00:28 — Video playback challenges when sharing your desktop. 01:24 — The solution using web streaming. 01:58 — Using PowerPoint Live to share and synchronize video playback. 02:22 — Demo: adding online videos using PowerPoint on the web. 03:34 — Demo: Microsoft Teams meeting experience for the presenter and other participants. 04:29 — Demo: Using PowerPoint desktop to ...

  13. How to share your screen and PowerPoint in Microsoft Teams

    How to share screen in Microsoft Teams. Watch on. While in a meeting, chat or group chat click the share icon. Choose if you'd like to share your entire desktop or just one specific window. When you're done sharing click the stop sharing Icon. How to share your PowerPoint presentation in Microsoft Teams.

  14. How to Share Your Screen in Microsoft Teams

    In the meeting, at the top of the Teams interface, click the "Share Content" option (an up-arrow icon). You will see a "Share Content" section to the right of the Teams interface. To share your computer's entire screen, then in this section, click "Screen." To share a specific app's window, click the "Window" option instead.

  15. Seeing your Speaking Notes in PowerPoint while presenting slides in

    Get more answers to your virtual presentation questions here and get updates of new articles and videos here. If you don't want to use Presenter View, you can still see your speaking notes while presenting your PowerPoint slides in a Teams meeting using these four methods. ... Start the PowerPoint Slide Show and in Teams just share the ...

  16. Microsoft Teams announces freely move toolbar for improved

    1. Start your Teams meeting and, when the time comes to present, select Share from the toolbar to share your screen. 2. You can now move the Presenter toolbar from its default location at the top of the screen and reposition it in any area of your screen. Just click on any non-interactive area of the Toolbar or on the new drag handle.

  17. Microsoft Teams Blog

    Successfully navigating a fast-paced workplace requires teams to collaborate closely and share the same information. Cha... 4,160. Deploy and manage Shifts to your Frontline teams in Teams Admin Center Ines_Gil on May 09 2024 08:00 AM. Schedule and shift management are a foundational driver of productivity for frontline workforces. ...

  18. Xamarin

    Multi-platform with.NET MAUI. .NET MAUI is the evolution of Xamarin.Forms and uses the latest technologies for building native apps on Windows, macOS, iOS, and Android, abstracting them into one common framework built on .NET. Xamarin.Forms apps can be migrated to .NET MAUI using the upgrade assistant so you can start taking advantage of the ...

  19. Introducing Microsoft 365 Copilot

    Copilot is integrated into Microsoft 365 in two ways. It works alongside you, embedded in the Microsoft 365 apps you use every day — Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Teams and more — to unleash creativity, unlock productivity and uplevel skills. Today we're also announcing an entirely new experience: Business Chat.

  20. Collaborate on files in Microsoft Teams

    In Teams, go to OneDrive > My Files. Find the file you want to share. Hover over the file and select Share . Enter the name, group, or email you want to send your file to. Add an optional message to give the recipient context. Select Sharing settings to change file permissions. Select Copy link to copy the file link to your clipboard.

  21. At a private donor retreat, Trump team says Minnesota and Virginia are

    In Virginia, Trump's internal survey showed Biden leading Trump 40% to 37% in a six-way test that included Kennedy at 8%. Biden led Trump 48% to 44% in a head-to-head matchup. And, in a four-way ...

  22. Laser point or draw on PowerPoint slides in Microsoft Teams meetings

    When using PowerPoint Live to share content in a Teams meeting, emphasize your points and engage viewers with the colorful laser pointer and drawing tools. Your "ink" will be visible to everyone in the meeting. Only the presenter can point and draw on the slides. To begin sharing, see Share PowerPoint slides. You'll see the laser pointer ...