name: pitch-deck version: 1.0.0 category: Finance & Fundraising domain: pitch-deck author: Matt Warren license: MIT status: production updated: 2026-02-07 activation_triggers:
- "pitch deck"
- "investor deck"
- "fundraising deck"
- "pitch to investors"
- "slide deck"
- "series A deck"
- "seed deck" tools: []
Pitch Deck
Investor pitch deck structure, narrative arc, and slide-by-slide content.
Purpose
Create a compelling pitch deck that tells your startup's story and makes investors want to learn more. Focus on narrative, not slide design.
Workflow
Step 1: Gather Context
- Company, product, and stage
- What you're raising and at what valuation
- Traction metrics
- Team background
- Use of funds
Step 2: Deck Structure (10-12 slides)
- Title: Company name, one-line description, your name
- Problem: The pain point (make it visceral)
- Solution: How you solve it (demo-worthy)
- Market: TAM/SAM/SOM (credible, not fantasy)
- Product: How it works (screenshots, demo)
- Traction: Growth metrics, revenue, users, key milestones
- Business Model: How you make money
- Competition: Positioning map (why you win)
- Team: Why you're the team to do this
- Financials: Key metrics and projections
- Ask: How much you're raising, use of funds, milestones
- Appendix: Supporting data (optional)
Step 3: Write Slide Content
For each slide: headline, 3-5 bullet points or a key visual description, and speaker notes.
Step 4: Narrative Check
The deck should tell a story:
- Problem is painful → Solution is elegant → Market is huge → You're winning → Team can execute → Now is the time
Step 5: Common Mistakes Review
Flag issues:
- Too many slides
- No clear ask
- Unsubstantiated TAM
- Team slide missing relevant experience
- No traction data
Output Format
## Pitch Deck: [Company Name]
### Slide 1: Title
**Headline:** [text]
**Content:** [bullet points]
**Speaker notes:** [what to say]
[Continue for each slide]
### Narrative Arc
[Story summary]
Constraints
- 10-12 slides maximum — if you need more, you're not focused enough
- Every number must be defensible
- Don't make claims about market size without showing the math
- Be honest about stage and traction — investors see through exaggeration