3d paper infographics for powerpoint

Charts & diagrams

3D Paper Diagram for PowerPoint

Free 3D Paper diagram for PowerPoint with folded ribbon effect. These pre-designed diagrams are especially suitable to illustrate elements with 4 parts or 4 concepts. Includes 3 slides with different shapes (variants). Shapes are fully editable, thus can be optimized according to your needs.

Cause and Effect PowerPoint template

Charts & diagrams

Cause and Effect Tree Diagrams For PowerPoint

Free diagrams with editable trees and leaves for PowerPoint. These pre-designed diagrams are especially suitable to illustrate Cause and Effect relationships (Cause: “why it happens?” and Effect: “what happens?”) or Word/Tag clouds. Includes 6 slides. Shapes are fully editable, thus can be optimized according to your needs.

Arrows PowerPoint diagram

Charts & diagrams

Diagrams With Simple Arrows For PowerPoint

Free life cycle diagrams for PowerPoint with simple arrows. Pre-designed diagrams made of 4 to 8 fully editable shapes. Includes 7 slides, with different examples / variants. Shapes are editable, thus can be optimized according to your needs.

Flowers editable PowerPoint diagrams

Charts & diagrams

Flower Diagrams For PowerPoint

Free flower diagrams for PowerPoint with 8 petals. These pre-designed diagrams made of 8 fully editable shapes are especially suitable for marketing or business concepts. Includes 3 slides, with 2 examples of colored illustrations / variants. Shapes are editable, thus can be optimized according to your needs.

Iceberg PowerPoint charts

Charts & diagrams

Iceberg Diagram for PowerPoint

Free iceberg diagram for PowerPoint. Used in various fields (marketing, management, psychology, human resources, finance) the iceberg model is an analogy that allows to illustrate opposite or dual concepts: visible vs. less visible/hidden, conscious vs. unconscious, perception vs. emotion, known vs. unknown, etc. Includes 3 slides, with editable shapes and with 2 concrete examples: “The iceberg model of meaning”, and “The iceberg analogy of a brand”