Funding

Pitch Deck Template

Use the pitch deck template to turn a blank document into decisions, owners, dates, and details you can actually review.

The deck is a conversation starter

A pitch deck should make someone want the next meeting. It does not need to explain every detail; it needs to make the problem, customer, traction, and business model easy to understand quickly.

  • Lead with the customer pain, not the company history.
  • Use one message per slide.
  • Show evidence before forecasts.
  • Keep backup numbers ready outside the deck.

Proof beats polish

Investors and partners look for signs that the market is responding. Customer quotes, revenue, waitlists, usage, pilots, or strong retention say more than a perfect-looking slide.

Before you send it

Read the deck in five minutes without explaining it. If the story does not hold together on its own, simplify the sequence before adding design.

After each pitch

Write down the first question people ask. Repeated questions usually point to the slide that needs clearer evidence or a sharper claim.

Template Preview

Inside this template

SectionPurpose
Problem and customerName the pain and who feels it strongly.
Solution and productShow how the offer solves the pain in a specific way.
Traction and proofAdd revenue, pilots, usage, testimonials, or waitlist data.
Ask and use of fundsClarify the amount, purpose, runway, and expected milestones.

Related Resources

Frequently Asked Questions

How should I customize the pitch deck template?

Replace sample language in the Pitch Deck Template with your own customer details, numbers, timelines, owners, and proof. It should sound like your business before anyone else reads it.

Can I share the finished pitch deck template?

Yes, but review private numbers, customer names, and legal language first. Export a clean PDF version of the Pitch Deck Template for partners, clients, advisors, or investors.

What if the Pitch Deck Template has blanks?

Leave unknowns visible in the Pitch Deck Template, assign each one to an owner, and add a due date. A marked assumption is safer than polished wording that hides missing information.