According to Get Backed, there are an almost infinite number of slides you might add to your pitch deck, depending on your venture and the way you tell your story. Here's a list of forty-one slides beyond the core ten to build into your deck or add to an appendix.
Frequently asked questions (FAQs). Usually, there are about five to ten questions that almost everyone asks. Build trust with investors by facing any difficult questions head-on. Create a slide and put the questions and answers next to each other.
History. Context can be helpful. A history slide, typically laid out as a timeline, gives you the ability to show your company's key mile markers, for example, incorporation, team formed, first product sold, money raised, and record sales month.
Products. Simply show your product(s). Make the product the hero of the slide: large, front and center, with little or no text around it.
Market. The market slide can show anything you want about the market you operate in. Characteristics like where the market is heading, how large it is, the changes taking place are important to lay out.
Patents. Patents can add value to your company. If you have them, show them. Patents are a clear demonstration that you can defend your venture from copycats.
People you are learning from. Few entrepreneurs include this slide; it's one of our favorites. List everyone you are learning from: advisers, friends, investors, and so on. They can be people you know personally or whose work you follow and admire. The list shows you are curious and are sourcing a wide range of feedback from key people.
Executive summary. This simple overview of the venture and its opportunity usually consists of one or two sentences, placed in the middle of the slide.
Income statement, balance sheet statement, and cash How statement. This trio makes up what people usually mean when they say "financials." The later the stage of the venture, the more important these elements become.
Investment highlights. List well-known and respected investors who have already invested in the business, as well as previous successful funding rounds.
Milestones achieved. This timeline of important achievements shows that your team knows how to get stuff done. If you haven't released your product yet, milestones are a great way to demonstrate momentum.
Branding. Consumer-facing and product-based startups often live and die by the experience they create for their customer. If the physical experience of your product matters, this slide gives you a chance to show that off.
Product roadmap. Investors want to know where you are headed next. What's most important in the next three, six, and twelve months? A product roadmap, usually displayed through a timeline or Gantt chart, gives your audience a full picture of the long-term vision of the product and your priorities.
Mission. A mission statement should be actionable and personal. It answers the question: Why do we exist? The mission statement should help your team make better decisions and gives others insight into what's driving the venture.
Vision. Vision statements are aspirational; they describe the kind of world you are striving to create. The goal of this slide is to get others to buy into your vision of the future.
Pictures. This really isn't a slide type, but a storytelling technique. Using a picture with few or no words can help immerse your audience into a scene or experience that you want them to understand.
Supply chain. This diagram traces where and how you source your raw materials and inputs for your product. A solid and protected supply chain can be a hedge against competition and an unfair advantage over existing players or new entrants.
How it works. Quickly explain to your audience how your product does what you say it does.
Risks. This slide lists the biggest challenges you face as a venture. Examples of risks include assumptions you've made that you have to prove or industry dynamics that make you vulnerable. This slide explains that you understand exactly what those risks are and what you are doing to defend against them.
Differentiation. If you are in what others may consider to be a crowded market, this slide explains what makes you different.
Locations. Show a current map of where your customers are or where your product is available.
Geographic growth plans. This future-oriented version of the "locations" slide shows where you plan to be over the next several months.
Screenshots. Screenshots of your product are a simple way to show your audience exactly what you are doing and lets them experience your product as a customer would.
Sales funnel. This diagram demonstrates how you are systematically getting customers. A typical funnel moves through a process of gathering leads, qualifying those leads, educating potential customers and answering objections, closing, and then following up with after-sales service. Investors like to know how you are moving people through each stage in the process and what the conversion rates are from one stage to the next.
Customer acquisition strategy. This slide is a different way of showing the same thing as the sales funnel: how you plan to get customers. Be specific on this slide. E-mail marketing campaigns, Google AdWords and Facebook ads, influencer or ambassador programs, referral programs, trade shows, and cold-pitching are all examples of potential acquisition strategies. In addition to showing the strategy, give data on the expected costs and conversion rates of these strategies.
Customer lifetime value. How much will each customer be worth over the course of his or her engagement with your product? Show this number and how you arrived at it (how many times do they purchase over what period of time?).
Designs/blueprints. Similar to the "how it works" slide, this gives you a chance to demonstrate the underlying mechanics of a product.
History and background. Tell the backstory of your team and the venture that led to where you are today. This slide can help you demonstrate expertise and previous success in your space.
Unique value proposition. Popularized by tools like the Business Model Canvas and Lean Canvas, this slide presents a clear statement of what makes you different and why customers will buy your product.
Competitive or unfair advantage. What difficult-to-copy advantage do you have over competitors?
Pipeline. Depending on the size of each deal, this list of the customers that you are currently negotiating with shows the names and logos of well-known customers or calculates the total size of those deals in dollars to show likely future sales.
Strategic partnerships. This slide shows the names or logos of strategic partnerships that will help you get more customers, lower costs, or break into new markets.
Customer quotes. Customer quotes give others a more intimate picture of why people buy your product or service.
Comparable companies. This slide lists the companies in your space and key metrics.
Go-to-market strategy. Which customers do you plan to target first and how do you plan to target them? Include evidence for why this is the right first move to make.
Case study. Tell a story of a specific customer or partnership and how your product did amazing things for them.
Organization chart. This slide is a diagram of your current team, their titles, and who reports to whom. Show a typical organization chart in a hierarchical tree format.
Exit strategy. Explain your strategy for whether you plan to exit the business through acquisition, IPO, or something else, when you plan to exit. For acquisition exit strategy, include a list of potential acquirers.
Exits. List the companies that are similar to yours and have had successful exits. Include their valuations at the time of the exit.
Conclusion. This is the "sum it all up" slide--a clear statement that explains the power of your venture and the opportunity your audience has to be a part of it.
Technology. Describe and visualize the core technology that powers your product and keeps your venture from being copied by others.
Valuation. List the terms of the deal you are offering: how much you are raising and the valuation of the company. If you are structuring your raise with a convertible note, include the valuation cap and the discount you are offering.
References
Get Backed, by Evan Baehr and Evan Loomis
Contexts
#get-backed (See: Get Backed)
#index (See: #index)
