xAI integrated Grok into Microsoft PowerPoint — slides from talking points without leaving the app
xAI launched a Grok add-in for Microsoft PowerPoint. The AI assistant now works directly inside the app: it turns talking points into finished slides…
AI-processed from xAI News; edited by Hamidun News
xAI released a Grok add-on for Microsoft PowerPoint — now the AI assistant works directly inside the application, without switching between services and manual content copying.
What Grok can do in PowerPoint
The add-on integrates into the standard PowerPoint interface and adds three key features. First — generating slides from notes: you just write a structure or brief description of a topic, and Grok assembles a full deck with headings, bullets, and basic formatting. Second — expanding an existing presentation: you can ask to add a new section, detail a specific slide, or insert a transition block. Third — narrative work: Grok analyzes the logic of content delivery and suggests edits to ensure the argumentation holds from the first slide to the last.
- Generating a full deck from short notes and theses
- Expanding and refining an existing presentation
- Polishing narrative and storytelling logic
- All right in the PowerPoint interface — no browser and extra tabs needed
The key advantage is that users don't leave their familiar working environment. Previously, a typical scenario looked like this: open ChatGPT in a browser, write a prompt, wait for a response, copy the result, switch to PowerPoint, paste the text into the right slides, and fix formatting manually. Now this multi-step process collapses into one.
Why this matters for the corporate market
The corporate market, where PowerPoint is de facto the standard, is doubly sensitive to context-switching problems and data security issues. Many companies restrict or outright ban the use of third-party SaaS services: data from presentations and internal materials must not go to external servers. A built-in add-on lowers this barrier — Grok works within a product that IT departments have already approved.
Besides, integration reduces the barrier to entry for non-technical users. Employees don't need to register on a separate service, figure out a new interface, or remember yet another subscription — it's enough to install the plugin and keep working in the familiar PowerPoint with new capabilities. Microsoft Office is used by hundreds of millions of people worldwide — even a small fraction of those who choose Grok alongside Copilot represents meaningful scale for xAI.
Competition with Microsoft Copilot
Grok's entry into PowerPoint is a direct move into territory that Microsoft has so far considered its own. Copilot — the company's own AI assistant — is already built into PowerPoint as part of the Microsoft 365 Copilot subscription and offers a similar set of features: slide generation, narrative rewriting, working with text inside the application. The difference is primarily in price.
Microsoft 365 Copilot costs around $30 per month per user — this is a premium on top of the basic Microsoft 365 subscription. Grok is included in xAI subscriptions: X Premium and X Premium+ users get access to it at no extra cost. For companies looking for an AI assistant in the Office environment at a lower price, Grok becomes a compelling argument.
xAI is consistently expanding Grok beyond the X platform — into tools that users work with every day. Notably, the company chose PowerPoint rather than Google Slides or Keynote: Microsoft Office still dominates in the corporate environment where key business decisions are made.
What this means
Grok in PowerPoint is not just a convenient feature. It's xAI's bid for the corporate productivity segment, where an AI assistant is embedded in everyday work tools rather than existing separately. For users, the choice has widened: PowerPoint now features both Copilot and Grok. Competition for the "smart office" moves to a new level — and Microsoft is no longer the only player in this field.
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