Most pitch decks fail before slide three. Investors see hundreds of decks — they know within the first few slides whether a founder understands their market and has a credible plan. Here’s how to build one that keeps them reading.

What Investors Actually Want to See

Before building your deck, understand what drives an investor’s decision. They’re asking three questions: Is this a big enough market? Can this team execute? Is now the right time? Every slide in your deck should answer at least one of these questions.

The 12-Slide Structure That Works

Slide 1: Cover

Company name, tagline, and your contact information. Keep it clean. Your tagline should explain what you do in one sentence.

Slide 2: Problem

Define the specific, painful problem your target customer faces. Use data where possible. Make the investor feel the pain before you pitch the solution.

Slide 3: Solution

Show your product or service and how it solves the problem. Keep it simple. If you need more than 30 seconds to explain your solution, simplify it.

Slide 4: Market Size

Show TAM (Total Addressable Market), SAM (Serviceable Addressable Market), and SOM (Serviceable Obtainable Market). Be specific and cite sources. Investors want to see a large but real opportunity.

Slide 5: Business Model

How do you make money? Cover your pricing model, revenue streams, and unit economics. Include LTV and CAC if you have them.

Slide 6: Traction

This is often the most important slide for seed-stage companies. Show revenue growth, user growth, key partnerships, or notable customer logos. Even early signals of traction matter — show the trend.

Slide 7: Go-to-Market Strategy

How will you acquire customers? Be specific about your channels, costs, and customer acquisition strategy. Vague answers here kill credibility.

Slide 8: Competitive Landscape

Show you know your competition and explain your unfair advantage. A 2×2 matrix comparing you vs. competitors on the dimensions that matter most to customers works well here.

Slide 9: Team

Investors bet on people. Highlight relevant experience, prior exits, domain expertise, and any advisors or board members who add credibility.

Slide 10: Financial Projections

Show a 3-year revenue forecast with key assumptions clearly stated. Don’t be overly optimistic — investors will reverse-engineer your assumptions and unrealistic numbers destroy credibility.

Slide 11: The Ask

How much are you raising? What will you use it for? Break down the use of funds across hiring, product, marketing, and operations. Include a target close date.

Slide 12: Contact & Thank You

Your name, email, website, and a clear call to action (schedule a follow-up call).

Common Pitch Deck Mistakes

  • Too much text — investors skim, they don’t read
  • No clear ask — always know exactly how much you’re raising
  • Skipping the problem slide — context makes the solution compelling
  • Unrealistic financial projections — they undermine everything else
  • No traction — even early signals matter; show them

Download a Proven Pitch Deck Template

Our pitch deck template is built on the exact 12-slide structure above, with placeholder content and design guidance on every slide. Compatible with PowerPoint, Google Slides, and Keynote. Get the pitch deck template →