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PITCH THINKING #2: What is a good pitch deck?

What is a good deck

Tl;dr: Learn why pitch decks suck and what makes a good pitch deck when fundraising. 

Pitch deck thinking course outline

You are now on part two of the pitch deck thinking course.

  1. What pitch material do you need?
  2. What is a good deck?
  3. The importance of narrative
  4. What are the key questions investors will want to get from your deck?
  5. How to approach writing decks
  6. The flick test
  7. Who do you trust with the pitch deck? Can I have an NDA?
  8. How do you know if your deck is good?
  9. How to send your deck to investors
  10. Formatting your deck
  11. 25 tips

If you can’t face them all at once, you can join the course and get these sent straight to your mailbox here:

The importance of narrative in a pitch deck

Most decks suck.

Fact.

FML, they are generally pretty painful. Can you imagine having to read them for a living? They’re called investors.

What gets me is there really is not a reason that they need to.

Of course, that assumes you have all the insider knowledge?

Hopefully, you will soon.

Why do pitch decks suck?

What is a good deck?

Opposite of above 😉

Here is an example of a slide from a deck I made for a client. It’s not a typical startup, so don’t read into the content. You can get it from the pitch deck template here.

But do you notice:

This isn’t a slide you would kick out of bed 😉 There is too much text in my opinion, though.

Actually, this is the first deck I made for a client. How I do things now is so different. I will upload an example of what I do now. I’m just getting up the emails so you can read them.

Btw, please give me feedback if the content is too light/sucks and I will make it better to help you! I know everything so I find it hard to make things basic enough sometimes. No offense. My blog is here to teach so please sound out in the comments. I don’t want you wasting time.

The key goal of a good deck

To drive the point home, a good deck:

  1. Gets you a meeting
  2. Gets investors interested and wanting to know more… without glaring large questions

Bonus point: No startup got past a second meeting when the question of ‘market size’ wasn’t addressed. Ensure what investors care about is covered!

That’s that. The next installment is here: The importance of narrative (Tell me a story, daddy!)

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