Pitch Deck
Create a concise pitch deck that forces strategic clarity — whether you're raising money or not.
Why Build One Even Without Fundraising
Building a pitch deck forces you to answer questions you might be avoiding:
- What is the size of the market you're targeting?
- What's the unfair advantage that makes you likely to win?
- What does traction look like so far?
- What specifically does the money (or effort) go toward?
A pitch deck also gives you a one-slide summary for potential partners, a framework for integration conversations, a reference document for roadmap decisions, and an asset for press outreach.
The 10-Slide Structure
This is the standard format investors expect — and the right structure for clarity regardless of audience:
| # | Slide | What It Answers |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Problem | What specific problem exists and why does it matter? |
| 2 | Solution | How do you solve it? |
| 3 | Product | What does it look like and how does it work? |
| 4 | Market | How large is the opportunity? |
| 5 | Business Model | How do you make money? |
| 6 | Traction | What's happened so far? |
| 7 | Competition | How do you fit in the landscape? |
| 8 | Team | Why are you the people to build this? |
| 9 | Financials | What are the key numbers? |
| 10 | Ask | What do you need and what will it unlock? |
Slide-by-Slide Guidance
Slide 1: Problem
Make the audience feel the pain. What's specific, quantified, and relatable? Avoid abstract claims ("content marketing is inefficient"). Use specific, visceral framing ("Marketing teams spend 40% of their time on content that still underperforms in search").
Slide 2: Solution
Show the transformation from the painful state (Slide 1) to the better state your product enables. Focus on outcomes, not features.
Slide 4: Market — Three-Layer Sizing
Avoid citing a huge TAM that isn't credible or a tiny niche that seems too small.
- TAM — Total Addressable Market (the whole pie)
- SAM — Serviceable Addressable Market (the segment you can actually reach)
- SOM — Serviceable Obtainable Market (realistic 3-year capture)
Use both bottom-up (number of target buyers × ACV) and top-down (market reports × percentage) as a sanity check.
Slide 6: Traction — Relative to Stage
Traction is relative. Pre-launch traction might be beta users, waitlist signups, LOIs, social following growth, or community mentions. Show the trend (growth rate), not just the absolute number.
Slide 10: The Ask — Be Specific
"We're raising money to grow" is not an ask. "We're raising $500K to hire two engineers and fund 6 months of paid acquisition" is an ask. Even without fundraising, write a "what we need" slide — specific partnerships, pilot customers, strategic introductions.
Build the Narrative Arc
The narrative flows: Problem → Stakes → Solution → Proof → Opportunity → Team → Ask
Write slide outlines in text before opening slide software. For each slide: the single claim, 3-5 supporting bullets, the one visual or data point that best supports it, and what question it must answer for the reader.
Tools
- DeckChat.ai — Build decks with AI, upload outline and iterate with chat
- STORYD.ai — Best for data-driven slides (market size, traction charts, financials)
- Google Slides / Figma — Fast assembly with clean templates when speed matters over polish
Deliverable
One markdown file: pitch-deck-outline.md containing all 10 slides with:
- Slide headline (the single claim in 5-10 words)
- Key supporting bullet points
- Recommended visual or data point
- Speaker notes (what you say vs. what's on the slide)
Then build the actual deck in DeckChat or STORYD.
Resources
- DeckChat.ai — AI-powered pitch deck builder
- STORYD.ai — Data-driven presentation tool
- Sequoia Capital Pitch Deck Template — Industry-standard structure reference