Ever opened your amazing PowerPoint presentation, only to find that your carefully picked private symbols are gone? Looks like little squares or mystery boxes instead? Yup, we feel your pain. But don’t worry—this guide will help you fix it in no time. And yes, we’ll make it fun!
If your private symbols aren’t showing in PowerPoint, it’s probably due to a missing font or encoding mismatch. To fix it, try installing the correct font, embedding it in your presentation, or using Unicode with caution. Keep things consistent from one computer to another. Follow our easy fixes below!
Private symbols usually refer to characters in the Unicode Private Use Area (PUA). These are custom symbols made just for you—or at least, your organization.
Some fonts use the PUA to store icons, logos, or industry-specific signs. They look great when you create the presentation. But show it on another computer, and… boom, they vanish!
Let’s break down the usual culprits:
Each of these is annoying, but fixable. Let’s get to the solutions.
The most common issue is that the font isn’t physically installed on the computer you’re using to open the presentation.
Now reopen your presentation. If your symbols show up, congrats! If not, keep reading.
This is a power move. Embedding fonts ensures they travel with your presentation, so your icons show up on every computer.
Save the file again and test it on another computer. Your private symbols should be back in business!
If you can’t embed a font—because some fonts can’t be embedded!—then at least keep the font file with your presentation.
When sharing your PowerPoint file:
Old-school? Yes. But it works like a charm.
Some private symbols come from special symbol fonts like Webdings, Segoe MDL2 Assets, or custom icon libraries. These are not standard text characters.
If you’re using these fonts, make sure:
Stick with one font per private symbol. Mixing them up only causes chaos.
If your symbols were created using Unicode values in the Private Use Area, it’s good practice to enter them properly:
Different fonts can show completely different icons for U+E001. That’s why sticking to one font is key.
If you’re totally fed up with vanishing symbols, try this hack—turn the symbol into an image!
Symbols can’t disappear if they’re actually pictures. Genius, right?
Image not found in postmetaThis might sound like your IT guy talking, but really—update your stuff! Sometimes missing symbol issues come from bugs or outdated font handling.
Don’t underestimate the power of a good update!
Okay, so you’ve fixed things. But how do you avoid issues in the future? Here are some life-saving tips:
Still having issues? Sometimes the problem is deeper—like font licensing, corrupt files, or OS-level restrictions.
Ask your IT team, design team, or community forums. Or better yet, switch to simple icons or images that everyone can see without lifting a finger.
Private symbols add personality to your slides. Custom icons, logos, or secret emoji? Super fun. But only if they show up!
With these simple tricks, you can make sure your symbols never go missing again. Whether it’s installing fonts, embedding them, or using images instead—you’ve now got the toolbox you need.
So go out there, open PowerPoint, and show off those secret symbols in style!