Built for teams where the deck matters
Never tweak a slide again.
Your brand lives in Codexroom. Your agent builds the deck from it. Your recipient opens a watermarked link, and you see who read what. The slide work your team has been doing all week is the slide work Codexroom now does for them.
30 minutes. One brand. One slide. The workspace is yours to keep.
Google Slides and PowerPoint were built for a world where one person made one deck. That world has moved on. Brands now police themselves at the layer of every token. Agents now write the first draft of every document. Compliance teams now ask who opened the deal book at 11.47 on a Tuesday night.
Codexroom is the version built for the world that arrived in 2026.
Used by deal teams, brand teams, and operators at firms in private equity, banking, consulting, life sciences, and enterprise sales.
The problem
Nobody likes making slides.
Your designer keeps the master in Figma. Your team rebuilds it in PowerPoint at 11pm. Your AI tool drafts something that looks roughly like you. Your delivery tool tracks the link. The deal book that goes out on Friday is a copy of a copy of a copy of the brand work you paid for, and the partner spent forty minutes nudging boxes the night before to make it presentable.
Every team you know works this way. None of them want to.
The solution
Run the brand, the agent, and the audience from one workspace.
Pillar 1
Govern the brand at the source.
Your designers author the tokens, slot types, slide templates, and deck chrome that hold your brand. Codexroom versions every layer and audits every change. A template fix updates the system. The decks already in flight render the way they rendered the day they shipped.
Pillar 2
Hand the agent a typed library.
Claude, Cursor, or any MCP client connects over a scoped OAuth grant. Your agent reads your tokens, searches your data room, and composes inside your slide templates. The validation engine catches a drift before the deck ever leaves the workspace.
Pillar 3
Send a link that knows who is reading.
One link per recipient. Layer the five gates that fit the deal: password, IP allowlist, origin allowlist, country allowlist, email verification, view cap. Visible watermarks carry the recipient's name on every slide. Invisible watermarks survive copy-paste and decode back to the share that made the file.
The capabilities
Six things every Codexroom workspace does on day one.
Govern the tokens, fonts, and layouts at the source.
Primitive tokens hold the raw values. Slide templates carry HTML, CSS, and a typed slot contract. Deck chrome wraps every slide with page numbers, headers, and the brand mark. Each layer versions. Past decks render the way they rendered the day they shipped.
Let the agent compose from your library.
Codexroom runs an MCP server with scoped OAuth. Your agent calls tools to list tokens, search the data room, build decks, and create shares. Scopes stay tight. Every action lands in the audit log under the user who authorised the grant.
Gate every share five ways and watermark it to the recipient.
Each share carries a 32-byte token and up to five gates the governor configures per link: password, IP allowlist, origin allowlist, country allowlist, email verification, view cap. The viewer renders the deck slide by slide in a sandboxed iframe. Recipients open the link on any device.
Trace a leak back to the share that made it.
Visible watermarks stamp the recipient's name on every slide. Three invisible channels combine inside the HTML: whitespace counts, CSS rule order, and zero-width characters. Drop a leaked file into the forensics tool and Codexroom returns the share that produced it.
Read the slides your recipients linger on.
Open events, slide views, and completion sit in an append-only log. A per-slide engagement chart points at the slides that get skipped and the slides that hold attention. Your next deck gets sharper.
Send a PDF or PPTX that still carries the watermark.
PDF renders pixel-accurate through headless Chromium with the watermark stamped in. PPTX converts through structured generation and writes the fingerprint into the document metadata. Either format reaches a recipient who wants a file.
The proof
The numbers your finance team already knows.
$2,000 to $10,000
The labour cost of one bespoke sales proposal. A team that ships 50 a year spends $100,000 to $500,000 on slide work alone.
Source: Vercor 2026 RFP pricing benchmarks.
10% win-rate lift
The reported gain across teams that move proposal production onto a governed system. On $65k of average contract value, two extra wins cover a year of Codexroom Growth.
Source: Loopio RFP statistics.
One day per person per week
The time most teams report rebuilding slides that already exist somewhere. Codexroom hands that day back.
Source: Codexroom design partner research, Q2 2026.
The industries
Codexroom suits teams where the deck is the deliverable.
Private equity.
LP decks, IR books, and portco updates that keep every fund on the same brand spine.
Read more →
Investment banking.
Pitchbooks, CIMs, and fairness opinions with watermarks tied to each prospect.
Read more →
Consulting.
A governed slide library your partners trust and your associates can compose from.
Read more →
Sales enablement.
Per-account decks that match the playbook and report back who read which slide.
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Investor relations.
Earnings packs, roadshow decks, and AGM books with one source of brand truth.
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Life sciences.
MLR-aligned content with named approvers on every metric and citation.
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Agencies.
A workspace per client brand, with watermarked handoff at the end of every project.
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Commercial real estate.
Offering memoranda and capital-stack decks that watermark themselves to each investor.
Read more →
See it work
See your brand build its next deck.
30 minutes. One brand. One slide. The workspace is yours to keep.