Many decks are brilliant but get rejected. Only ~20% get the first meeting with a VC. The first goal of the blurb and deck isn’t to raise funds, but to get the investor’s first meeting.

This % is low due to founders not pitching the way VC thinks. Mainly because:
(1) Every slide is a test that can kill your deck. But founders have misconceptions about each of them. Eg. The market slide is not about how big the market is, but why the market is interesting. The team slide is not about being the smartest team but being the right team with quality insights (not all insights are equal!), etc
(2) founders’ stories don’t stand out from the crowd. Every pitch sounds the same. The unique strengths and differentiators must stand out instantly
(3) And a big misconception is presenting the startup’s value as a function of past achievements rather than the magnitude of the opportunity, if everything goes right. While investors analyze past data, “the value is never a premium on the past. It’s always a discount to the future” (Peter Thiel)

Ultimately, VCs asks themselves whether their ownership in your startup can return 3-5x their total fund size. At the early stage, the leading indicators to predict this are: (1) Why now (the market), (2) why you selected this specific problem, (3) why are you different (the solution), (4) why this team and its insights.

Lastly, remember that “raising venture capital is the easiest thing a startup founder will ever do.” And that fundraising is a means to an end, not a milestone or a goal.

(Click on the arrow to open each session)

10 pratical tips
  1. Tell the story like a founder, not like a COO
  2. Position your story in an area of interest. E.g. Don’t position your company as a media company or co-working space if these verticals are no longer of interest
  3. The slide headline is always the summary or description of the slide. It is not a title. It is not “The team”, “The market”, etc… Use statemetns not captions in the headline of the slide (eg. “sales autolook” vs. “sales are growing 20% MoM”). One line per headline
  4. One concept per slide. The concept is indicated in the headline
  5. Make the slide readable in 5 secs. No extra words, no extra colors, lines, boxes, etc..
  6. Inside the slides use graphs rather than texts
  7. Bottom-up forecasts for market size are usually more appealing than top-down ones
  8. Bottom-up > Top-down. In everything you do (eg. forecast, market dynamics, product dev., what users need, etc…)
  9. No autocelebration, show magnitudes with numbers. “We are having exponential growth” and “we are growing 50% MoM” have opposite effects
  10. Avoid declarations without proof or validation
  11. Specific answers show clarity. High-level asnwers or statements reveal lack of clarity
  12. Concise answers. Founders who know what matters can summarize their findings in just a few words. Being concise indicates clarity.

The slides

Slide 0. The one-liner and blurp
Slide 1. The problem: not all problems are equal 🍀

This slide is not about a list of good problems for the users. And, it’s not a top-down gap in the industry. Not all problems are equal. Not all problems are worth solving.

This slide is about identifying the right problem: (1) the highest-ranked problem for the users. Show this ranks first in the list of all problems. And, that it (2) has an unbearable and extreme level of pain & urgency. It’s a burning problem.

Ideally, you have also identified a (3) specific niche of customers to focus on serving them well. Initally, “it’s better to have a few users that truly love you than many that sort of like you” – PG

Many founders identify good problems but fail to identify the highest-priority ones. This leads to building a nice-to-have solution rather than a must-have. A nice-to-have solution will block your growth and LTV. A must-have solution will also help you win against the high switching costs of potential customers.

At this stage, it’s vital to understand if this is a problem worth solving. Not all problems are worth solving and worth many years of the founder’s life. Start by asking: “How do you know this specific problem is the 1) most painful & urgent and 2) it has burning pain for your users?”.

  • as discussed, not having identified the highest-priority problems. Then,
  • Not being specific. High-level statements reveal lack of clarity. Being specific indicates clarity
  • Not being concise. Founders who know what matters can summarize their findings in just a few words. Being concise indicates clarity.
Slide 2: The solution: a must-have, 10x, use data

If the problem and customer niche are framed well in the previous slide, the solution becomes obvious. No explanation needed.

This slide is about:
(1) Show it’s a must-have, not a nice-to-have solution. In the problem slide, prove the problem is extremely urgent & painful, and is the highest-priority (ranks #1)
(2) strong differentiators and a 10x better solution. Also needed to overcome switching costs
(3) If live, use data to prove you are “making something people want”. Adoption and retention rates are great metrics. The total number of users is not.

Slide 3: The market: SAM and bottom-up 🍀

Have a clear understanding of your SAM vs TAM. Use a bottom up calculation for the path to $100m ARR.

This slide is not about how large the total market (TAM) is. This is calculated top-down. It is often taken from a McKinsey or GS report. It shows a high level gap in the market or some unmet demands. It lacks evidence of founder’s deep understanding of the problem, the customers’ niche, and the market that will be addressed in the short term.

This slide is about how large your addressable (SAM) or obtainable (SOM) market is in the medium and short term. This is calculated bottom-up. It shows the founders’ granular understanding of the market, the initial niche market, and potential adoption rates. Bottom-up indicates clarity and deep understanding.

I personally like to present both markets in this slide. The bottom-up one to show the founders’ insights and deep knowledge of the market. Then add the top-down TAM to give a quick feeling of the overall market. Some investors still ask. Some other examples.

Some investors model bottom-up to test key assumptions and see what it takes to reach $100M ARR and then $1B. Every founder should present this calculation as well.

One final note, for some investors, the market comes first and the team comes second. Sequoia and Benchmark focus a lot on the market, and it’s why now. For other investors, the team comes first: there are many pivots, and markets can change over time.

When a great team meets a lousy market, market wins. When a lousy team meets a great market, the market wins. When a great team meets a great market, something special happens.” – Andy Rachleff, Benchmark

We have always focused on the market — the size of the market, the dynamics of the market, the nature of the competition — because our objective always was to build big companies. If you don’t attack a big market, it’s highly unlikely you’re ever going to build a big company” – Don Valentine, Sequoia

“This is an area that people talk so much about. Do one hour of research, figure out where there are billions of dollars being made in the market, and customers use your competitors’ products. After that… I don’t care.” – Michael Seibel, YC

Slide 4: The market why now 🍀

This slide is about whether there is a shift that is happening in the market. A current that will pull the founders into hyper growth.

Some investors are fixated on the current market trends, or the “why now.” Others pay more attention to the founder’s insights, key problems, and market size.

This slide is not about forcing or artificially creating a “why now”. This can backfire.

  1. A technological shift – AI, mobile, and cloud had strong shifts. 1) Uber had perfect timing or “why now”. The advent of the mobile phone was a strong current for them. 2) The current played a role also on Instacart (2012) v.s. Webvan (1996)
  2. A shift in demand. Today there is a FOMO in consuming AI from both individuals and corporates. This is also driving achillaries services (eg. data centers, energy, chips, quality data to train models, etc…)
  3. Replicate a proven model from the US or China in a large and fast-growing market like India or Brazil. The Uber model was replicated in each local market by local champions (eg. Grab in SEA, Ola in India, Didi in China, etc)
  4. A government or regulator shift – an example could be Robotics or EV in China, given the magnitudes of investments and incentives. Or the US Genius Act for web3 companiescompanies
Slide 5: Traction: the one-metric only
Slide 6: The future: bottom-up
Slide 7: The team: not all insights are equal 🍀
Slide 8: Takeaways: the three vertebrae
The closing slide

Simply have your company name, the one-liner and your contact details (yes, some founders forget them).

Slide 2.1: Competition: be better at what matters
Slide 2.2: The defensible position
  • Clarity: Which moat matters most
  • Durability: why these advantages will strengthen over time instead of eroding
  • Evidence: traction, metrics, or case studies proving the moat is already forming
Slide 2.3: The distribution or go to market

(Coming soon)

Slide 2.4: Unit economics, payback period

(Coming soon)

Slide 2.5: The ask

This is a simple slide. Explain how much money you need to achieve which milestones and how would you allocate the funds.

I personally prefer not to add this slide and explain these concepts during the first call.

Other sources

This deck from Khosla Ventures is a must read. Start here.

This video by Michael Seibel is exhaustive and concise.

Here an extremely short explenation about each slide by Sequoia.

Here YC’s pitch deck.

My ppt template

(Coming soon)

Aibnb, Seed stage

This is a great example. The deck is concise with a clean look.

Their “one liner” is epic!

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1FlMXpFiyBwkxU5TGH48dfyK8ZRGO7xfh/view

DropBox, Seed stage

I really like the explenation of the problem. Using only a picture to explain it (slide 2) was a good hack.

Great to see the “why now” slide. The competitor slide is really simple and effective.

https://www.slideshare.net/slideshow/dropboxs-original-pitch-deck/251815932

Uber, Seed stage

I like the Market size slide and slide 8 to show how the product works.

https://www.slideshare.net/slideshow/uber-pitch-deck-2008/79075025

If you want a feedback on your deck, read here!

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Leave a reply to Hizkia Cancel reply

  1. Very informative, loved the blurb! For the deck I loved the team and market slide insight. Extremely helpful for founders

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  2. Thanks for sharing this! A very complete and thorough guide on deck explanation!

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  3. Extremely helpful! Thanks for sharing this insights for us in an easy to understand and concise way. Looking forward for more.

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  4. One of the most complete and actionable deck explanations out there.

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  5. Thanks, I just used some tips and applied it for my deck. I really like the fact that you address each slide by itself

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  6. Well-written and very useful Giac. Thanks! Interesting insights about how VCs thinks and how to design the preso for that. I like this bit in particular: “The biggest misconception is presenting the startup’s value mainly as a function of past achievements…”

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  7. Awesome and very well structured repository for the Founders to read through at any stage. Do post on Linkedin from time to time :D. Many will benefit.

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  8. Thanks Giacomo for sharing this! Giacomo is the go-to person if I would like to seek advice, he’s reasonable, logical, structured and give a vivid understanding from various perspectives. This write-up is definitely helpful and great references for those who are still developing their pitch decks.

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  9. We need more people like Giacomo—genuinely one of the most helpful and insightful voices I’ve come across in the founder/VC ecosystem. I stumbled upon his blog through a random Reddit comment, and I’m truly grateful for everything he’s shared.

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