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Board presentation deck template for seed stage startups

Board deck template

Tl;dr: Get a FREE board presentation deck template for startups and advice on best practice in running effective board meetings with your investors. NOTE: If you want it, it gets emailed to you automatically. Fill in the download box! 

 

You’ve raised funds and formality has begun. This means monthly or quarterly meetings with your Board and your newly appointed members from investors. As per their information rights, they need updates from you. Darn. Another thing to do! To help you, I’ve put together a board presentation template to lighten the load.



Why do you need a board presentation template?

Startup is hard and you don’t always have the answers. Fortunately, a good board is at hand to ask the tough questions, provide a sounding board as well hopefully valuable insight.

As an early stage startup, you are likely going to have meetings with the board monthly, so there is no hiding. It’s expected that you will prepare the material beforehand.

I’m not going to write a load of boring stuff about what a board meeting is, why you need them etc. (People like Steve Blank cover this stuff to various degrees). So, take my word you will have board meetings… and that having a nice board presentation template to kick things off will be handy! Let’s get into pragmatic stuff 😉

“Board meetings are the height of insecurity for a CEO. Basically, it’s a group of people who can both judge you and fire you based on that judgment.” – Jeff Bonforte Xobni (Exit to Yahoo)

General advice for board presentation material

Best practice before a board presentation

“Send your decks 2 days in advance so people have 48 hours to review and have everyone show up in person for it so you build a face-to-face relationship.”

Brett Hurt, Bazaarvoice

 

Best practice in running a meeting

Best practice after meetings

“Define your board relationship, goals and give them each a job. Don’t treat them like your boss”

Marc Pincus, Zynga

“Whenever a to-do item came up, I was always the first one to look at one of my board members and say, ‘Kevin, why don’t you handle that?’ And of course, he’d be like ‘Uh, oh, okay, sure.’ Because what else could he say? If you’re not making unreasonable requests and they’re on the board, they’re supposed to help out.”

Jeff Bonforte Xobni (Exit to Yahoo)

The agenda for your first board presentation after a fundraise

Congrats (or not) on closing your fundraising round! You want to start with your best foot forward and that means setting things up properly. David Teten at ff Venture Capital recommends the following agenda points to get everyone on the same page:

Some of this may be totally over your head, that’s cool. At least you know what needs to get done. Discuss with your lead investor and get their input in ensuring everything is done right. They will be delighted you took the initiative and will reflect maturity on your part.

 “Spend the first board meeting almost as a meta-meeting. Talk about what you want to accomplish in board meetings. Figure out some key metrics that you want to manage to and build a really simple (10-12 slide) board package deck that the team can fill out each time.”

Brian O’Kelley, Appnexus

Approach to this board presentation template

I wanted to make a board deck template for my own founders and this is it. There are some decent ones online, but I didn’t think they really suited early stage companies and they are a little more like how to guides than here you go, use it and get back to work (which I like).

The best guides are from Sequoia and NextView. I’ve ripped off all their insight. I’ve also trawled the internet for all the pearls of wisdom I could find and incorporated them too (Like having a slide up front with the key goal of the meeting). So, this represents the state of the art in my humble opinion.

Note – every business is different! You are going to have to refactor some slides so they suit you. Every slide in the ‘calibration’ segment needs to be redone to your KPIs. I’ve set things out pretty to give you inspiration, but it’s just inspiration. Keep things simple and try show your actuals vs plan as much as you can. Your investors want to know if you are on track or not.

Note: If you are a SaaS company, there are some good metrics slides in this template deck to get inspiration from

The template board presentation slides

Thought has gone into the order and content in the board deck template. Let’s go through each slide now so you understand them and the thought behind them.

Section 1: Intro

 

Slide 1: Title of the board presentation

 

Slide 2: Agenda / time allocation

Slide 3: Key goal of the meeting

Section 2: Approvals

Slide 5: Approvals needed

Slide 6: Budget

Section 3: Commitments

Slide 8: CEO Commitments

Slide 9: Board Commitments

Section 4: Big Picture

Slide 11: CEO Summary – Highlights

 

Slide 12: CEO Summary – Lowlights

Slide 13: Industry comments

Section 5: Calibration

Slide 15: Financial status

Slide 16: Acquisition – leads

Slide 17: Conversion

Slide 18: Retention

Slide 19: Engagement

Slide 20: Activity

Slide 21: Performance vs plan

Section 6: Company Building

Slide 23: Org Chart

Slide 24: Compensation and hires

Slide 25: Product roadmap and timeline

Slide 26: Technical Core Initiatives

Slide 27: Customer Pipeline

Slide 28: NPS and Customer Feedback

Section 7: Focus session

Conclusion on the board presentation template

There we have it.

Here are your next steps:

  1. Download the board presentation template now!
  2. Add your logo on the first page
  3. Go through each slide (reading my guide notes above) and restructure the deck, change the points, etc., especially in the calibration section
  4. When you are happy with it, send it to your Chairman of the Board, or your lead investor Partner and ask for feedback. Incorporate the comments
  5. Circulate to the rest of the Board. Tell them you worked with the Chairman on it and want feedback and buy into the format
  6. Use it!

Any questions on the board presentation template, sound off in the comments.

 

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