Send a copy of a presentation

You can send a copy of a presentation that recipients can open and modify however they want on their own computers and devices. Their changes don’t affect the original presentation or any other copies of the presentation.

If recipients of the presentation use different software than you, you can choose another format for the copy you’re sending. For example, you can send a copy as a PDF, a Microsoft PowerPoint presentation (.pptx and .ppt), and more.

You can send your presentation in a variety of ways, including Mail, Messages, or in a tweet or a post to social media sites.

Send a copy

If you want to restrict access to the copy or prevent recipients from modifying it, you can protect it with a password.

  1. Do one of the following:

    • If the presentation is open: Tap Share menu button, then tap Send a Copy.

    • If the presentation is closed: Tap Share menu button, tap Send a Copy, then tap the presentation.

  2. Tap a format (Keynote, PDF, PowerPoint, or ePub).

    If you’re not sure whether your recipient has Keynote or PowerPoint, choose PDF. Recipients can open and read a PDF but not make changes to it.

  3. Tap an option for sending:

    • AirDrop: Tap AirDrop, then tap a recipient. The recipient must accept your presentation before it’s sent. For WebDAV, you’re asked to sign in to the server if you’re not already connected.

    • Mail, Messages, or another service: Tap an option. Tap More to add another service to the options. You set up third-party services in Settings on your device’s Home screen.

    • iCloud Drive or a third-party file provider: Tap “Send to.” If the location you want is open, tap a folder, then tap “Export to this location.” To choose a different location, tap Locations, tap a service in the menu (you may need to turn it on), then tap the “Move to” button to confirm. If you don’t see a service or provider in the menu, make sure it’s installed on your device.

    • Upload to a computer, server, or third-party file provider: Tap iTunes, WebDAV, or More (to add a third-party service).

  4. Provide any requested information (an email address if you’re sending an email, for example), then send or post the copy.

See also
Share and edit a presentation with others
Use iCloud with Keynote
Use a WebDAV server to store presentations
Use iTunes to transfer files