×

Stay up to Date

Thoughts and leadership game changers from Merge Lane
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Mergelane Blog

Broadening the On-ramp for Women-run Companies

A Slide by Slide Guide to a Killer Investor Pitch

I’ve seen thousands of entrepreneurs pitch in dozens of different pitch formats, but the following is the format I’d recommend. I’ve compiled this through my own experience as an investor, the best of the existing resources I found, and input from several angel investors.  

Photo by Ministerio TIC Columbia

A Killer Investor Pitch in 13-15 Slides

This format works well for both a live presentation and an investor deck to send by email. I would just suggest putting a sentence or two of narrative on the email deck slides. Both the written and spoken presentations should be as short and sweet as possible.

Slide 1: Intro: Describe who you are and what your company does in as few words as possible. Communicate this in a way that anyone can understand. No matter how technically complicated a business is, it can always be described in simple human terms by answering three simple questions:
-Who is your business serving?
-Does your business provide a product or a service?
-Does your business save your customers time, money, headaches or a combination of the three?

Slide 2: The Problem: What is the pain/problem your customers are experiencing? Your business may be solving larger societal problems, and it’s fine to mention that, but society isn’t going to pay to solve its problems. Keep your primary focus on the pain point of your users and/or paying customers.

Slide 3: The Market/Opportunity:
- How big is the problem?
- What is the size of your addressable market?
- Are there any trends that are driving/will drive the growth of your market? Briefly explain.

Slide 4: The Solution:
- How is your company solving this problem?
- Business model
- How do you plan to make money doing this?
*Note: Make this slide short and sweet, but IMPACTFUL. If your business model is complicated, consider breaking this into two slides: 1) The Solution and 2) The Business Model (include a list of revenue streams).

Slide 5: The Competition/Competitive Advantage: Who is already solving this problem?
- In what areas are they doing a good job?
- In what areas are they failing?
- Why is your product or service better than the competition?
Communicate this in a way that explains why your product or service is better suited to solve the pain/problem your customers are experiencing. Make sure to explain: 
- Do you have direct competitors? Indirect competitors?
- Is “business-as-usual” your competition? (i.e.: if you are creating a biofuel, you are not just competing with similar biofuels, you are competing with other alternative fuels as well as business-as-usual (gasoline)
*Note: If explaining your competition helps to explain why your solution is so great, you may consider making this slide, slide #4. Also, if the competitive landscape is complicated, consider breaking this into two slides: 1) Competition, 2) Competitive Advantage.

Slide 6: Sustainable Competitive Advantage
- Do you have any unique and defendable intellectual property?
- Have patents been filed?
- What prevents your current or future competitors from replicating your product/service?

Slide 7: Go to Market Strategy
- Are you selling direct to consumer or business to business?
- Do you have any channel sales/marketing partners?
- Will your company manufacture/distribute the product or will you work with partners?

Slide 8: Traction
- Is your product complete?
- Have you earned revenue?
- Do you have any contracts or letters of intent from customers/key partners?

Slide 9: The Team: Give a brief bio of each of your key team members and explain:
- Their current role in the company
- Why they are qualified to fulfill that role
- Whether they have past experience launching or exiting a company
- Do you have an advisory board and who is on it?

Slide 10: Financial Projections: Include a basic chart that shows your 5-year projections for:
- Revenue
- Gross margin %
- EBITDA
- Headcount
- Unit sales
*Note: If these metrics don’t make sense for your business, change accordingly. If you actually have historical financial data, include the last three years in this chart.

Slide 11: Funding and offering: 
- How much money has been invested to date?
- How much money are you raising in this round?
- Have you determined your company’s valuation?
- Do you know whether you are raising debt or equity?
- Can you briefly explain the terms of the deal? 

Slide 12: Exit Strategy: How do you plan to deliver a return on investment?
- What are some potential exit scenarios?
- Do you plan to sell the company? License your technology? Other?
- What types of companies/entities would likely purchase your business or license your technology? Are there any acquisitions that have occurred in the past three years in your industry?  What was the acquisition sale price?

Slide 13: Conclusion: Briefly recap why the investment opportunity is promising. Don’t forget to include your contact information!

Related Posts

Welcoming “Ridiculous” Goals | Executive Coaching While Powder Skiing

I allowed myself to include all of my “ridiculous” wants and aspirations on my list of 2023 goals, one of which was “finding a coach and co-collaborator who would agree to hold meetings from the chairlift.” Believe it or not, I was actually able to manifest that.

Read more ➞

Striving for Success Unapologetically

It is amazing what you can achieve if you get out of your own way.

Read more ➞

When the “Safe” Route Is Actually Less Safe

I have learned the important lesson that being mediocre at anything is not a “safe” path to success. I now realize that the “safe” path for others may not be the best route for me.

Read more ➞

What If Everything Goes Right Rather Than Wrong?

In investing, and in life in general, an ability to foresee potential pitfalls has served me well. However, being able to see what can go wrong can prevent me from seizing an opportunity. I sometimes forget that most of my successes have been the result of seemingly impossible feats.

Read more ➞

Stay up to date!

Sign up to receive updates on everything we are up to, including future events and the latest news.

Thank you! Your submission has been received!

Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form