Outline Icons for Iceberg Diagrams (extendable)

Slide Content

This slide presents a collection of simple outline icons designed for use in iceberg diagrams, indicating that they are extendable. Each icon represents a different concept: a light bulb for ideas, gears for processes, a checked clipboard for tasks or completion, a magnifying glass for analysis or search, cubes for building blocks or elements, a car for progress or travel, two figures for partnership or teamwork, and a badge for achievement or quality. These icons can be used to represent various elements of a business or a project in an iceberg diagram, which is typically used to illustrate that only a small part of a situation or problem is visible, while the bulk is hidden below the surface.

Graphical Look

  • A teal header section on the right side containing the text "Fully editable icons" in white.
  • An additional header on the left side in dark grey with the text "Outline Icons for Iceberg Diagrams (extendable)" in white.
  • A split background with a larger light grey area on the left and a smaller dark grey to teal gradient on the right.
  • Eight outline icons arrayed in two rows with four icons each on the grey background.
  • Each icon is grey and is paired with a small blue square either above or below it.
  • On the right side, three cubes are depicted with one being highlighted in yellow, indicating its editability.
  • A blue circle highlighting one of the cube icons.
  • A small text blurb at the bottom saying "More icons available. Check our website" with a URL.

The slide has a clean, modern aesthetic with a clear division between the content areas. The use of color highlights the editability of icons and draws attention to specific elements, creating a visually appealing and functional design.

Use Cases

  • To illustrate different components of a project when presenting an iceberg diagram during a business meeting.
  • In a strategy session, to visually categorize various aspects of a business challenge or model on a slide and show their relations to visible and underlying factors.
  • For an educational presentation, to help explain the concept of visible and hidden factors in any given situation using an iceberg diagram.
  • During a workshop, to assign or explain metaphorical meanings to icons that reflect different parts of a complex system or process.

Iceberg Model Template (PPT diagrams)