9 interactive presentation examples to steal attention

November 25, 2025

Words by Jeff Cardello

What do you do when you have a big concept, message, or story you want to share? 


Interactive presentations turn practical information into action-packed visual narratives. By weaving together storytelling, action, and engagement, they offer curated web experiences that both captivate and inform those navigating through. 

We’re going to cover 9 different interactive presentation examples, showing how they simplify complex topics, invite exploration, and help people understand the bigger ideas being communicated.

1. SpaceX by Vev

Throughout history humans looked up to the skies with curiosity and awe. This interactive presentation example for SpaceX evokes the same sense of wonder.

Built with Vev, it’s a design alive with motion. Rockets blaze, text shoots into position, and data visualizations blossom as one scrolls. There’s a great sense of pacing and organization that explains how SpaceX’s reusable rockets work, the engineering behind them, and their vision for making humanity interplanetary.

2. Mindhyve.ai

Not every interactive presentation example fits within two dimensions. Mindhyve.ai offers an expansive three-dimensional digital adventure through a forest of bioluminescent trees and flickering butterflies, with dramatic sweeps and zooms as one scrolls.

While the user experience feels surreal and dreamy, this actually serves as a straightforward interactive presentation. Each scene is accompanied by a careful crawl of text explaining Mindhyve’s AI agent technology.

With its clear narrative and gorgeously rendered 3D visuals, Mindhyve.ai transforms learning about AI into a user experience that’s both magical and informative.

3. Pleo: Brand Guidelines

Brand guidelines serve an important purpose in helping people understand the visual identity, tone, and personality of an organization. While most people don’t browse through them for fun, those of us on the nerdier side of web design pore over them like foodies over cookbooks. Oh, the delicious possibilities.

In this interactive presentation example designed with Vev, Pleo not only covers all of the creative nuances of its brand but puts them into an easy-to-follow format. The left-hand navigation breaks down all the main topics, letting visitors get to the information they want to quickly without having to scroll through pages and pages of content.

4. Madar

Madar brings high-tech to the shipping industry, streamlining the movement of freight across the globe.

This interactive presentation example takes visitors on a scroll-powered journey along a neon highway. Along the way are different stops, and each explains a main point about the benefits of using Madar to handle freight logistics.

With a glowing expressway through details and data, Madar takes complex information and presents it in a cinematic and enthralling visual experience.

5. Spylt: Caffeinated Chocolate Milk 

If you’re doing a product launch or are running a specialized marketing campaign, interactive presentations are a great way to bring in organic traffic and to get the word out about your brand.

This design for Spylt overflows with splashes of chocolatey goodness, playful micro-interactions, along with everything someone would want to know about its buzzy caffeinated milk. It takes what could have been a conventional FAQ and turns it into something for more imaginative and engaging.

6. Purpose Talent

Purpose Talent connects companies and skilled workers. With quirky illustrations, paper-like textures, and a card-driven user experience, it’s an interactive presentation example that feels warm and inviting.

Opening up with a title slide, Purpose Talent lays out its main message of “Work that matters” in the hand-drawn style typeface Tay Bea. From here they talk about what they do in a series of screens, with each hitting a main point with supporting details.

With its rounded slides, parallax scrolling, and simple scroll-trigged animations, each section is distinct. There’s a clear sense of organization that makes it easy to understand how Purpose Talent works in helping companies find the right people.

7. Getty: Tracing Art

Every work of art has a backstory.  There is the person who created it, the galleries it has been displayed, and who has owned it. This historical record is known as provenance and certifies the authenticity of a piece of art.

Tracing Art is an interactive presentation example that tells the story of Willem Kalf’s “Still Life with Chinese Porcelain Jar.” Starting in the year 1669 we read about the life of Kalf, the context of the objects in the painting, and where the painting has been over the years. From this point we see other art in Getty’s collection and get further explanations about the importance of provenance.

Along with being an intriguing art history lesson, there is so much going on visually. Sticky position images, parallax scrolling, and scaling transformations reveal something interesting at each moment as visitors move through.

8. Aether 

With its first slide of a case of earbuds opening up like some mystical treasure chest in an ocean of inky blue, Aether builds interest right at the top of this interactive product presentation example.

Scrolling turns the earbuds into position, bringing them up for visitors to take a closer look. Each section highlights a product feature, with a snippet of text explaining it. This simple messaging finds just the right balance with the sophisticated liquid-like animations.

Aether shows how effective interactive presentations are in helping brands showcase their products, explain how they work, and inspire people to buy.

9. Ocean Lovers Guide to Composting

Did you know that apple cores, tree trimmings, or other organic waste that you regularly toss into the rubbish, could actually make the planet a better place? Composting turns these often discarded items into soil, which helps decrease methane emissions, as well as locking carbon dioxide and other byproducts into the ground, preventing them from reaching the atmosphere.

Interactive presentations, which split content into a sequence of related slides, are a great fit for educational materials. This interactive presentation example helps to spread the message about how composting can help improve our world’s oceans. It not only delivers plenty of information about how to compost and its environmental impact, but does so through a user experience filled with bright colors and optimism that feels like flipping through a storybook.

Transform information into interactive experiences

Interactive presentations can be more than just static pages of bullet points held together by a common theme. They have to potential to educate, inspire, and communicate the ideas you want visitors to learn. Vev lets you turn content into immersive narratives with ready-made elements like sliders, image carousels, scrollytelling elements, and other dynamic visuals without having to write any JavaScript, CSS, or HTML.

What type of interactive presentation do you want to start building with Vev?

Promotional image for "COLLEGE BASKETBALL CROWN" with players on court and text "WHO WILL WEAR THE CROWN?".