Slide 1 — Welcome & Key Objectives
Goal
Introduce the purpose of the device: secure, user-friendly private key custody for cryptocurrencies. Emphasize that the device keeps private keys offline and provides tamper-evident protections.
Learning outcomes
- Understand the physical unboxing and verification steps.
- Complete the initial setup, create a secure PIN, and record recovery seed properly.
- Apply best practices for firmware, backups, and daily use.
Tip
Keep this slide as your agenda when converting to PowerPoint — each major heading becomes a slide title and each bullet becomes a speaker note.
Slide 2 — Unboxing & Physical Inspection
Before you open
Purchase only from official or trusted resellers. Verify tamper-evident packaging and serial numbers when available. Never accept a pre-initialized device from strangers.
What’s in the box
- Trezor device (model dependent)
- USB cable
- Recovery card or booklet
- User manual and stickers
Check for tamper
If the seal is broken or packaging looks suspicious, contact Trezor support and do not use the device.
Slide 3 — Connect & Initiate
Getting started
Connect the device to a computer or smartphone using the included cable. Open your browser and go to trezor.io/start. This ensures you follow the official setup flow and get the latest instructions.
Why use Trezor Start?
- Guided setup reduces mistakes.
- Official site ensures firmware and software integrity checks.
Accessibility
Trezor's UI provides on-device confirmation for all critical actions — never accept transactions you can't verify on the screen itself.
Slide 4 — Creating a Secure PIN
Why a PIN matters
The PIN locks access to the device's functions. It protects the device if physically stolen. The PIN is entered via the device’s interface and randomized on-screen keypad to prevent finger-tracing attacks.
PIN best practices
- Choose a PIN length you can remember but is not trivial (e.g., avoid 1234 or birthdates).
- Do not write the PIN on the recovery card.
- Use a PIN you will recall without help — if you forget and device is wiped, recovery seed is required to restore.
Note
After a few wrong attempts, the device increases wait time or may wipe — handle carefully and follow the prompts.
Slide 5 — Recovery Seed (Backup)
What is the recovery seed?
A recovery seed (usually 12, 18, or 24 words) is the human-readable backup of your private keys. If your device is lost or broken, the seed restores funds onto a new compatible wallet.
Recording the seed
- Write the words exactly as shown, in order, on the provided recovery card or a durable medium.
- Store the seed in multiple physically separate, secure locations (e.g., safe, bank deposit box).
- Never store the seed digitally (no photos, no cloud backups, no text files).
Advanced options
Consider adding a passphrase (hidden additional word) for extra protection; note that a passphrase is a commitment — losing it means losing access.
Slide 6 — Firmware & Software Updates
Keep software current
Firmware updates often include security patches and new features. Always update firmware only from the official Trezor site and follow the on-device instructions to verify authenticity.
Update checklist
- Back up your recovery seed before any firmware major update (precaution).
- Confirm the update signature and follow on-screen device confirmations.
- Do not use untrusted USB hubs — connect directly to known hardware.
Rollback policy
Understand Trezor's firmware policies if you maintain an older setup; consult official docs when in doubt.
Slide 7 — Creating & Managing Accounts
Accounts and addresses
Use Trezor Suite (or compatible wallet software) to create accounts per cryptocurrency. Each account can generate many addresses; use them to separate funds logically (savings, spending, business).
Privacy and address reuse
- Avoid address reuse to improve on-chain privacy.
- Use different accounts for different purposes and label them locally (labels do not leave your device).
Cold storage workflows
For high-value holdings, consider an air-gapped or multi-device workflow using the recovery seed and separate signing devices.
Slide 8 — Integrations & Everyday Use
Using Trezor with services
Trezor supports many wallets and services via integrations (exchange withdrawals, DeFi interfaces). Always verify domain names and use official integration guides.
Daily-use checklist
- Verify transaction details on the device screen before approving.
- Disconnect when not in active use.
- When connecting to new apps, test with small amounts first.
Security hygiene
Stay aware of phishing attempts. Bookmark official sites and never enter your recovery seed into any website or app.
Slide 9 — Troubleshooting & Support
Common issues
Device not recognized, PIN forgotten, or firmware errors are common. For hardware faults, contact official support; do not try to accept unknown firmware images.
When you lose access
- If lost or stolen: use exchange/custodial policies to freeze accounts where possible, and transfer funds from any hot wallets.
- If device is wiped: recover using the seed on a new device or compatible software that supports BIP39/SLIP-0039 where applicable.
Support resources
Use trezor.io/support and official documentation. Avoid advice from unknown forums unless verified by official docs.
Slide 10 — Summary & Best Practices
Key takeaways
1) Keep device firmware and software official and updated. 2) Store recovery seed offline in secure, multiple physical locations. 3) Use a strong PIN and verify every action on the device. 4) Prefer small test transactions when connecting to new services.
Daily checklist (short)
- Confirm device connection and firmware prompt before use.
- Check the address on the device screen before approving sends.
- Never disclose your recovery seed or enter it online.
Where to go next
Start at the official: trezor.io/start. For step-by-step videos and advanced setups, visit Trezor's official resources linked from their start page.