March 18, 2026

How to Create a Product Demo GIF for Sales Decks

Learn how to turn your product into a short, looping GIF that makes sales decks more persuasive without video production or design tools.

How to Create a Product Demo GIF for Sales Decks

A sales deck with screenshots of your product looks like documentation. A sales deck with a 3-minute embedded demo video turns the presentation into a screening.

A sales deck with a 5-second GIF of the product doing the thing it does best? That is the proof moment.

This guide covers how to create product demo GIFs that work in sales decks: what to capture, how to make them, and where they fit in the narrative.


Why GIFs work in sales decks

Sales presentations have a pacing problem. You need to show the product without losing control of the story. The prospect should be looking at the slide and listening to you, not watching a video on mute or squinting at a static screenshot trying to imagine what happens next.

GIFs solve this because they are:

  • Silent: You keep the narrative. The GIF illustrates; you explain.
  • Looping: No one has to click play. The motion is immediate and continuous.
  • Short: One moment, one idea. The audience gets the point and you move on.
  • Lightweight: They live on the slide like an image. No buffering, no playback bar, and no "can you see my screen?" moments.

The goal is not to replace the full demo. It is to give the prospect a taste of the product in the slide where you are making the argument.


What to capture

Not every product screen makes a good GIF. The best demo GIFs show a single moment that communicates value without explanation.

Good demo GIF subjects

  • The "aha" interaction: The moment where the product clicks. A drag-and-drop that reorganizes a dashboard. A button click that generates a report. The action that makes someone think, "Oh, that is nice."
  • Before/after in motion: A toggle that switches between old and new. A filter applied to data. A theme change. Anything where the contrast tells the story.
  • Speed and ease: A task completing in 2 seconds that the prospect currently does manually in 10 minutes. Speed is persuasive. Showing it in motion is more credible than saying it saves time.
  • The key differentiator: Whatever your product does that competitors do not. If it is a unique interaction or a visual result, capture that exact moment.

Poor demo GIF subjects

  • Long workflows that need narration to understand
  • Settings pages or configuration screens
  • Complex data entry (too much reading, too little motion)
  • Anything where the important thing is text on screen, not the interaction

Rule of thumb: if the point requires reading text inside the GIF, it should be a screenshot or a live walkthrough, not a GIF.


How to record a product demo clip

Option 1: Screen recording (simplest)

Record the interaction directly from your product.

On Mac:

  • Cmd + Shift + 5 opens the screen recording tool. Choose Record Selected Portion and draw a box around just the part of the UI you need.

On Windows:

  • Win + Shift + S (Snipping Tool in Windows 11 supports video recording).
  • Or Xbox Game Bar: Win + G, then click the record button.

With a dedicated tool:

  • Loom: Record, then download the MP4 from your Loom library.
  • OBS Studio: Free, powerful, and overkill for simple recordings.

Tips for a clean recording:

  • Close notifications. Nothing kills a demo GIF like a Slack ping popping up mid-capture.
  • Use realistic but clean demo data. "Acme Corp" is fine. "asdf test 123" is not.
  • Record at 1x speed. Speed it up later if needed.
  • Capture only the relevant part of the screen. Full-screen recordings include too much noise.

Option 2: Export from a design tool

If you have the product interaction built in Figma, Framer, or Principle:

  • Export a short prototype interaction as a video (MP4 or MOV).
  • This works well for products that are not yet built, or when the live product does not have good demo data.

How to turn the recording into a GIF

Step 1: Trim to the exact moment

Watch your recording. Find the one interaction, the click, the transition, the result, that communicates the value. Mark the start and end.

A good demo GIF is 3-8 seconds. If you are going longer than 10 seconds, you are probably trying to show too much.

Step 2: Convert to GIF

Free tools:

  • EZGIF: Upload the video, set start/end time, set frame rate (10-12 fps), convert. Download the GIF.
  • ScreenToGif (Windows): Records directly as GIF with a built-in frame editor.
  • Kap (Mac): Lightweight recorder that exports to GIF directly.

For Google Slides specifically:

  • Slidekick: Upload the recording, trim in the editor, export as GIF or MP4 — send GIFs to Google Slides or download MP4 clips. It skips the convert-download-upload loop.

Step 3: Optimize

If the GIF is over 5 MB:

  • Shorten the clip
  • Reduce to 10 fps
  • Scale down the resolution (800px wide is usually enough)
  • Use EZGIF's optimizer to reduce colors or apply lossy compression

Where demo GIFs fit in a sales deck

Not every slide needs a GIF. Here is where they earn their place:

The "what it does" slide

This is the product introduction slide. Instead of a screenshot with arrows and annotations, show the product in action. One GIF. One moment. The prospect sees the product working and immediately has a clearer mental model.

The "how it works" slide

If your product has a 3-step workflow, show one of the steps as a GIF. The other two can be icons or text. The motion on one step makes the whole workflow feel more real.

The differentiation slide

When you say "unlike [competitor], we do X," show X. A GIF of your unique feature in action is more convincing than a comparison table.

The "proof" slide

Customer outcome, metric change, dashboard transformation. If you can show it as a before/after loop, the impact is immediate.


What makes a great demo GIF vs. a mediocre one

GreatMediocre
Shows one momentTries to show the entire product
Loops naturally: start and end feel connectedCuts abruptly and loops awkwardly
Uses real (or realistic) dataShows dummy text and placeholder content
Focuses on the interaction areaShows the entire screen with tiny details
3-6 seconds15+ seconds
Works without explanationRequires you to narrate what is happening

Mistakes to avoid

Making GIFs too long. If someone has to watch for 15 seconds to get the point, it is not a GIF for a sales deck. It is a demo video. Nothing wrong with demo videos, but they belong in a follow-up email, not on slide 6.

Capturing the full screen. Zoom in on the interaction that matters. A full-screen capture at GIF resolution looks blurry and makes the viewer work to find the important part.

Using GIFs on every slide. One or two well-placed GIFs make a deck feel polished. Eight GIFs make it feel like a website from 2004. Use motion where it matters and let the rest breathe.

Showing features instead of outcomes. The prospect does not care that the button is blue and has a dropdown. They care that the report generates in two seconds. Show the outcome.


Takeaway

A well-placed product demo GIF turns a "tell them about the feature" slide into a "show them the feature" slide. It is one of the fastest ways to make a sales deck more credible without adding length, complexity, or production effort.

Capture the right moment. Keep it short. Put it where the argument needs proof.


If your sales decks live in Google Slides, Slidekick handles the full workflow, record or import, trim, export as GIF or MP4 — send GIFs to Google Slides or download MP4 clips.

Get started with Slidekick

Import, trim, and export presentation clips as GIF or MP4 in one browser tab.

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