VCs Pitch Deck Principles: What VCs Want. Part 1.
VCs Pitch Deck Principles: What VCs Want. Part 1.
VCs Pitch Deck Principles: What VCs Want. Part 1.
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VC PITCH DECK PRINCIPLES FROM THE HORSES’ MOUTHS. PART 1.
Summary: Somehow, entrepreneurs seem deaf on what venture capitalists want to see
in the initial documents about a new company. So, we tossed the question out at the
(excellent) “Shaking the Money Tree” panel presented by LAVA—the Los Angeles
Venture Association (www.lava.org). And the answer is:
A PowerPoint “pitch deck” of no more than 15 pages and, maybe—
just maybe—a two page executive summary.
The Details.
At the LAVA conference to present the quarterly results on venture investing (prepared
by PriceWaterhouseCoopers) several panelists answered our question: What should a
Pitch Deck look like?
Jim Armstrong of Clearstone Venture Partners (www.clearstone.com) made it clear (and
we are paraphrasing here—hey, we’re not stenographers): “Entrepreneurs confuse
comprehensive for compelling. We want compelling.” Jim Andelman of Rincon Venture
Partners (www.rinconvp.com) said this: Remember your goal with the pitch deck—to
get a meeting with the venture capitalist. He put it another way (again,
paraphrasing): “VC’s are like moths to a flame and that flame is PowerPoint.”
Everyone on the panel agreed that the pitch deck should be a PowerPoint presentation of
no more than 10 to 15 pages.
OK, OK, some entrepreneurs will then respond by taking their 50-page business plan and
cramming it into those 15 slides using 10-point type. Uh, unclear on the concept.
True, if the VC wants more then you will have to prepare—and later submit—more
detailed plans like your go-to-market plan, etc.
So, we took that advice and mashed it together with other things we have heard from
many other vc’s over the gejillion of years we have been involved with startups. In this
case, the details are some pointers on what should be included in a Pitch Deck. In
subsequent posts (or articles) we’ll explain more of the process.
The Pitch Deck: Just remember that you are not trying to get everything—or even a lot
—of information in front of the VC. You’re just trying to get his or her attention.
• 15 slides. Maximum. That includes the title slide and the “Contact Us”
slide at the end.
L O S A N G E L E S | W A S H I N G T O N , DC | C O L O R A D O | M I L A N (ASSOCIATED)