When you want to group objects in Microsoft PowerPoint, you can use the Grouping tool. This tool lets you group objects by their properties or by their type. You can also group objects by their location in the slide. To use the Grouping tool, open a slide and select one or more objects. Then click on the Grouping button to start the grouping process. The Grouping tool will help you group objects by their properties and by their type. You can also group objects by their location in the slide. To do this, select one or more objects and then click on the Location button to start the grouping process. The Location tool will help you group objects according to where they are located in the slide.


If you have several objects on a PowerPoint slide that you want to assign the same animation to, you don’t have to apply the animation to them individually. Instead, group them together so that they act as one object.

To get started, open the PowerPoint presentation and go to the slide that contains the objects that you would like to group and animate. If you haven’t inserted the objects yet, you can do so by clicking the “Insert” tab and choosing the option (such as “Pictures” or “Shapes”) for your desired object.

Next, select all of the objects on the slide that you’d like to group together. You can do this by pressing and holding the “Ctrl” key (“Command” on Mac) and clicking the objects. Alternatively, you can click and drag your mouse over the objects.

An object is selected if a box appears around it.

Next, right-click a selected object. In the context menu that appears, hover your cursor over “Group,” and then select “Group” from the sub-menu.

All selected objects are now grouped together, and PowerPoint will treat them as a single object.

When you apply an animation, it will affect all objects that are in that group. To set an animation, click the group, and in the “Animations” tab, choose the animation that you’d like to use from the “Animation” options. We’ll use the “Float In” animation in this example.

Now, when you play the animation, the objects in the group will animate simultaneously.

That’s all there is to it! A big part of PowerPoint’s appeal is the ability to manipulate objects in many different ways. You can take your animation skills to the next level by combining multiple motion paths to your grouped object.

RELATED: How to Combine Motion Paths in Microsoft PowerPoint