eddiebe147

Pitch Deck Creator

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# Install this skill:
npx skills add eddiebe147/claude-settings --skill "Pitch Deck Creator"

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# Description

Create compelling investor pitch decks that tell your story and secure funding

# SKILL.md


name: Pitch Deck Creator
slug: pitch-deck-creator
description: Create compelling investor pitch decks that tell your story and secure funding
category: business
complexity: complex
version: "1.0.0"
author: "ID8Labs"
triggers:
- "pitch deck"
- "investor pitch"
- "fundraising deck"
- "investor presentation"
- "create pitch"
tags:
- fundraising
- investors
- pitch-deck
- presentations
- business-operations


Pitch Deck Creator

Expert pitch deck creation system that helps you craft compelling investor presentations that tell your story, demonstrate traction, and secure funding. This skill provides proven frameworks for pitch deck structure, slide design, and storytelling based on successful fundraises from top accelerators and venture capital firms.

Your pitch deck is often your first impression with investors. This skill helps you distill your business into a clear, compelling narrative that captures attention, builds credibility, and drives investment decisions. Whether you're raising a seed round or Series A, this provides the structure and best practices used by successful founders.

Built on pitch deck frameworks from Y Combinator, Sequoia Capital, and analysis of hundreds of successful fundraises, this skill combines storytelling, visual design, and financial rigor to create decks that convert meetings into term sheets.

Core Workflows

Workflow 1: Standard Pitch Deck Structure

The proven 10-15 slide framework (10-20 minute presentation)

Slide 1: Title/Cover
- Company name and tagline
- Your name and title
- Contact information
- Logo (clean, professional)
- Optional: Traction headline ("$2M ARR, Growing 20% MoM")

Slide 2: Problem
- What painful problem are you solving?
- Who experiences this problem?
- Current broken solutions (status quo)
- Quantify the pain (time wasted, money lost, inefficiency)
- Make it relatable—tell a story

Slide 3: Solution
- How does your product solve the problem?
- Key features and benefits
- "Aha moment" that makes solution obvious
- Demo screenshot or product visual
- Why is this better than alternatives?

Slide 4: Product/Demo
- Show the product (screenshot, video, prototype)
- Walk through key user flow
- Highlight differentiation visually
- Keep it simple—don't get lost in features
- Focus on value delivered, not complexity

Slide 5: Market Opportunity
- TAM/SAM/SOM (market size)
- Market growth rate and trends
- Why now? (timing, technology shifts, regulation)
- Bottoms-up market validation
- Chart showing market size and your wedge

Slide 6: Business Model
- How do you make money?
- Pricing model (per user, per transaction, subscription)
- Unit economics (CAC, LTV, payback period)
- Revenue streams (if multiple)
- Path to profitability

Slide 7: Traction
- The most important slide
- Revenue growth chart (hockey stick)
- User growth, engagement metrics
- Key milestones achieved
- Customer logos (if impressive)
- Testimonials or case studies
- Pipeline or LOIs (if pre-revenue)

Slide 8: Competition
- Competitive landscape
- 2x2 matrix or comparison table
- Your unique positioning
- Defensibility and moats
- Why you'll win

Slide 9: Go-to-Market Strategy
- Customer acquisition channels
- Sales process and cycle
- Marketing strategy
- Partnerships and distribution
- Customer acquisition costs
- Growth playbook

Slide 10: Team
- Founders and key team members
- Headshots, names, titles
- Relevant backgrounds and accomplishments
- "Why us?" narrative
- Advisors and board members (if notable)
- Key hires planned

Slide 11: Financials
- 3-5 year projections (revenue, key metrics)
- Historical financials (if applicable)
- Key assumptions
- Path to profitability or next milestone
- Unit economics validation

Slide 12: The Ask
- Amount raising
- Type of funding (Series A, Seed, etc.)
- Use of funds (breakdown by category)
- Milestones this funding enables
- Runway this provides (18-24 months ideal)

Slide 13: Vision (Optional)
- Long-term vision (5-10 years)
- Market leadership goal
- Potential exit outcomes
- Category creation

Slide 14: Appendix Teaser
- "Additional slides available"
- Sets up deep-dive slides for Q&A

Appendix (Hidden Slides for Q&A):
- Detailed financials
- Additional product screenshots
- Customer case studies
- Technical architecture
- Competitive analysis deep-dive
- Team bios expanded
- Market research data
- Cap table and previous rounds

Workflow 2: Storytelling & Narrative

Craft a compelling story that resonates emotionally

  1. The Arc
  2. Setup: Here's a big problem affecting millions
  3. Conflict: Current solutions are broken/inadequate
  4. Resolution: We built X, and it's working
  5. Stakes: This is a huge opportunity, and we can win
  6. Call to Action: Join us with $X investment

  7. Opening Hook
    Start with one of these:

  8. Startling statistic ("$100B wasted annually on X")
  9. Relatable story ("Every day, Sarah wastes 3 hours on...")
  10. Bold claim ("We're automating an entire industry")
  11. Question ("What if you could X in 5 minutes instead of 5 hours?")

  12. Problem-Solution Fit

  13. Make the problem visceral and obvious
  14. Position your solution as inevitable ("Of course!")
  15. Create an "aha moment" where solution clicks
  16. Use visuals to reinforce (before/after, pain vs. relief)

  17. Traction as Validation

  18. Traction proves your story isn't just theory
  19. Show momentum—up and to the right
  20. Demonstrate market demand is real
  21. Position metrics as proof of product-market fit

  22. The Why Now

  23. What changed to make this possible now?
  24. Technology enablers (AI, mobile, cloud)
  25. Regulatory shifts
  26. Behavioral changes (COVID, remote work)
  27. Market maturation

Workflow 3: Slide Design Principles

Create visually compelling slides that support your narrative

  1. Design Rules
  2. One idea per slide: Don't cram multiple concepts
  3. Minimal text: Headlines + supporting visuals (not paragraphs)
  4. High contrast: Dark text on light background (or vice versa)
  5. Readable fonts: Sans-serif, 24pt+ for body text
  6. Consistent branding: Use your brand colors, logo placement
  7. White space: Don't fill every pixel—give eyes room to breathe

  8. Visual Hierarchy

  9. Headline: Top, large, bold (what's the point?)
  10. Supporting visual: Chart, diagram, screenshot (reinforces point)
  11. Supporting text: Minimal bullet points or caption
  12. Eye flows: Top-left → Top-right → Center → Bottom

  13. Data Visualization

  14. Line charts: Growth over time (traction slide)
  15. Bar charts: Comparisons (revenue by segment)
  16. Pie charts: Parts of whole (use of funds)
  17. Tables: Competitive comparison
  18. Simplify—remove gridlines, excess labels
  19. Highlight key data point (color, annotation)

  20. Color Strategy

  21. Primary brand color: Headlines, key elements
  22. Secondary color: Accents, highlights
  23. Neutral grays: Body text, backgrounds
  24. Green: Positive trends, growth
  25. Red: Problems, urgency
  26. Limit to 3-4 colors total

  27. Common Mistakes to Avoid

  28. Wall of text (slides aren't a document)
  29. Tiny fonts (investor can't read from back of room)
  30. Busy backgrounds (distracting)
  31. Inconsistent fonts and colors
  32. Low-quality images (pixelated logos)
  33. Animations and transitions (cheesy, distracting)

Workflow 4: Traction & Metrics

Demonstrate momentum and product-market fit

  1. What Counts as Traction?
  2. Revenue: MRR, ARR growth (best proof)
  3. Users: Active users growing (DAU, MAU)
  4. Engagement: Retention curves, usage frequency
  5. Pipeline: Committed deals, LOIs, waitlist
  6. Partnerships: Distribution deals, integrations
  7. Team: Key hires, advisors
  8. Product: Milestones shipped

  9. How to Show Traction

  10. Growth chart: X-axis time, Y-axis metric (up and to the right)
  11. Annotate milestones: Product launch, funding round, partnership
  12. Highlight growth rate: "300% YoY" or "40% MoM"
  13. Multiple metrics: Don't rely on one vanity metric
  14. Cohort retention: Show users stick around

  15. Pre-Revenue Traction
    If you don't have revenue yet:

  16. User signups and waitlist
  17. Letters of Intent (LOIs) from customers
  18. Pilot customers and feedback
  19. Partnership commitments
  20. Product milestones achieved
  21. Team assembled

  22. Framing Metrics

  23. Choose metrics that matter for your stage
  24. Seed stage: User growth, engagement, qualitative feedback
  25. Series A: Revenue, retention, unit economics
  26. Growth stage: Revenue growth rate, efficiency (CAC payback)
  27. Show trajectory, not just absolute numbers

Workflow 5: Tailoring for Audience

Customize pitch for different investor types

  1. Venture Capital (VC)
  2. Emphasize: Market size, growth potential, scalability
  3. Metrics: ARR, MoM growth, retention
  4. Vision: Billion-dollar outcome, category leadership
  5. Tone: Ambitious, fast-growing, disruptive

  6. Angel Investors

  7. Emphasize: Team, early traction, product vision
  8. Metrics: User growth, engagement, early revenue
  9. Vision: Path to next round (seed or Series A)
  10. Tone: Founder story, passion, scrappiness

  11. Strategic Investors (Corporates)

  12. Emphasize: Synergies, market fit with their business
  13. Metrics: Customers, partnerships, market validation
  14. Vision: How you enhance their ecosystem
  15. Tone: Collaborative, complementary

  16. Accelerators

  17. Emphasize: Coachability, hustle, learning velocity
  18. Metrics: Progress since starting, iteration speed
  19. Vision: Ambitious but realistic milestones
  20. Tone: Hungry, humble, adaptable

Quick Reference

Action Command/Trigger
Create pitch deck "Build investor pitch deck"
Problem slide "Write problem slide for [industry]"
Traction slide "Design traction slide with [metrics]"
Market sizing "Create market opportunity slide"
Competition slide "Build competitive positioning slide"
Team slide "Create team slide with [bios]"
Financial slide "Design 3-year projection slide"
The Ask "Create funding ask slide for $[amount]"
Appendix "Build appendix with [topics]"
Deck review "Review pitch deck for [round type]"

Best Practices

Content

  • Lead with traction: If you have strong metrics, show early
  • Be concise: Each slide = 1 minute of speaking time
  • Tell a story: Connect slides into a narrative arc
  • Quantify everything: Use numbers to build credibility
  • Show, don't tell: Visuals > bullet points
  • Address risks proactively: Don't ignore obvious concerns

Design

  • Professional aesthetics: Use a template or hire a designer
  • Consistent formatting: Same fonts, colors, layout across slides
  • High-quality visuals: No blurry screenshots or clip art
  • Readable from afar: Investor should read from 10 feet away
  • Brand alignment: Deck reflects your product's brand
  • PDF format: For email (not PPT—formatting breaks)

Delivery

  • Practice: Rehearse 10+ times before investor meeting
  • Time it: Stay within 15-20 minutes (leave time for Q&A)
  • Memorize flow: Don't read slides verbatim
  • Eye contact: Look at investors, not screen
  • Passion: Show you believe in the mission
  • Anticipate questions: Prep appendix slides for deep dives

Iteration

  • Get feedback: Pitch to advisors, mentors before investors
  • Track questions: If same question comes up 3+ times, add slide
  • Update metrics: Refresh traction slide weekly/monthly
  • A/B test: Try different hooks, orders, emphasis
  • Version control: Keep archive of iterations

Common Pitfalls to Avoid

  • Too many slides: 20+ slides lose attention
  • Text-heavy: Walls of text are unreadable
  • No traction: All vision, no proof
  • Unclear ask: Vague on amount and use of funds
  • Weak team slide: Irrelevant backgrounds
  • Unrealistic projections: Hockey stick with no basis
  • Ignoring competition: "We have no competitors" (red flag)
  • Burying the lead: Hiding your best metrics
  • Overly technical: Jargon-filled for non-technical investors
  • Missing the "why now": Doesn't explain timing

Pitch Deck Examples to Study

Airbnb Seed Deck (2008):
- Simple, clear problem/solution
- Strong market sizing
- Early traction shown
- Clean, minimal design

Uber Pitch Deck (2008):
- Bold vision ("everyone's private driver")
- Market math (10M trips/day × 10% commission)
- Simple business model explanation

LinkedIn Series B Deck (2004):
- Network effects clearly articulated
- User growth and engagement metrics
- Competitive positioning vs. Monster, CareerBuilder

Buffer Seed Deck (2011):
- Transparent metrics (revenue, users)
- Clear traction trajectory
- Honest about challenges

Investor Meeting Flow

Before Meeting:
- Send deck 24-48 hours in advance (optional—some prefer not to)
- Research investor (portfolio, thesis, interests)
- Prepare appendix for likely questions

During Meeting (60 minutes):
- Intro and small talk (5 min)
- Deck presentation (15-20 min)
- Q&A and discussion (30-40 min)
- Next steps and timeline (5 min)

After Meeting:
- Send thank you email within 24 hours
- Share any promised materials (data room, intro to customer)
- Update with metrics/milestones between meetings
- Ask for feedback if you get a "no"

Use of Funds Breakdown Template

Category Amount % Purpose
Engineering $400K 40% Hire 2 senior engineers, scale infrastructure
Sales & Marketing $300K 30% Hire 1 sales lead, 1 marketer; ad spend
Operations $100K 10% Ops hire, tools, contractors
Product $100K 10% Design, PM, user research
Legal & Accounting $50K 5% Corporate setup, compliance
Contingency $50K 5% Buffer for unexpected
Total $1M 100% 18-month runway

Tools & Resources

Design Tools:
- Pitch (pitch.com): Beautiful templates, collaboration
- Canva: Easy drag-and-drop, templates
- Google Slides / PowerPoint: Classic options
- Figma: For custom design control

Templates:
- Sequoia Capital Pitch Deck Template
- Y Combinator Series A Template
- Guy Kawasaki 10-slide format

Inspiration:
- Slidebean: Database of successful pitch decks
- PitchDeckHunt: Collection of decks from funded startups
- DocSend Pitch Deck Analyzer: Benchmarking data

Data Visualization:
- Flourish: Animated charts
- Datawrapper: Clean, simple charts
- Chart.js: Custom charts for screenshots

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