MODULE 10 — Pitch Deck, Investor Readiness & Launch
Building the Dashboard That
Displays Your Engine. Present your opportunity clearly and signal operational maturity.
Key Questions This Module Answers
- What must be in place before I raise capital?
- What belongs in a pitch deck?
- What traction counts at my stage?
- What financials do investors expect to see?
- Do I need a team or cofounder yet?
- Do I need a business plan?
- What documents will investors request?
- How do I leverage AI tools to increase credibility?
- What other materials (one-pager, two-pager, data room) should I prepare?
MODULE OVERVIEW
Choosing a funding pathway is strategic.
Being ready to pursue it is operational.
This module helps you determine:
- whether you are structurally prepared for capital
- how much to raise
- how long your runway must be
- what milestones capital must unlock
- how to build a basic financial model
- what signals reduce perceived risk
- when to delay fundraising
Capital only matters if it unlocks meaningful progress.
This module ensures you are prepared to use it correctly.
This is a launch-level milestone. If this feels like a lot, that’s normal. This is the stage where a project turns into a company.
Before Presenting Externally
Confirm the following items are in place.
Strategy & Market Foundation
Legal & Structure
Capital & Financial Discipline
Early Go-To-Market Inputs
What Counts at Your Stage
Traction depends on where you are. Select your stage to see what counts as credible evidence of progress.
Pre-Launch
No Product Live Yet
- Paid pilots
- Deposits or pre-orders
- Signed LOIs
- Waitlist with confirmed conversion intent
- Partner commitments
- Budget-confirmed buyer conversations
Early MVP Live
Product in Market
- Paying users
- Retention signals
- Feature usage data
- Expansion or upsell interest
- Referral signals
Enterprise / Government
B2B & Public Sector
- Procurement milestones
- Security reviews
- Pilot agreements
- Budget inclusion
- Named internal champion
Physical Product / Retail
Consumer Goods
- Sell-through data
- Repeat purchase intent
- Distribution commitments
- Reorder discussions
Deep Tech / R&D
Technical Innovation
- Technical milestones achieved
- Prototype validation
- Grant progression
- Letters of institutional support
Traction is evidence that movement is occurring.
Team, Cofounders & Vendor Strategy
At this stage, complexity increases. Ask yourself:
- Does my model require technical depth beyond me?
- Does my sales motion require dedicated business leadership?
- Am I becoming the bottleneck?
In many AI-era startups, fractional + vendor support is smarter than early full-time hires.
The Core Tradeoff: Simplicity, Protection, Flexibility
Before someone asks for your full deck, they often ask: “Send me a one-pager.”
What a Strong One-Pager Includes
- Company + value statement
- Problem
- Solution
- Target customer
- Market opportunity
- Business model
- Traction
- Raise amount
- Use of funds
When to Use a Two-Pager
- Product needs technical explanation
- Enterprise motion requires context
- Market dynamics need clarity
Keep it structured — not long-form.
Operator Version Structure
10–15 slides. Clean and structured.
01. Company
02. Problem
03. Customer
04. Solution
05. Product
06. Market Opportunity
07. Business Model
08. Go-To-Market
09. Traction
10. Financial Snapshot
11. Milestones
12. Team
13. The Ask
Slides Allowed to Expand (Max 2 Slides): Market Opportunity, Product, Go-To-Market, Financials (if complex model). Everything else remains single-slide.
What to Show
Your deck should present:
- 12–24 month revenue projection
- Burn rate
- Runway
- Raise amount
- High-level unit economics
Financial Statements
- P&L — Revenue and expenses over time.
- Cash Flow — Actual movement of cash.
- Balance Sheet — Assets, liabilities, equity snapshot.
Early investors care most about: Burn rate, Margin, Runway
What to Show
Investors look for economic logic — not perfection.
- COGS— Cost of Goods Sold
Direct cost to deliver - CM— Contribution Margin
Revenue – COGS
ARPU— Avg Revenue Per User
Revenue / UserCAC— Customer Acquisition Cost
Cost to acquire one customerLTV— Lifetime Value
Total revenue from a customerLTV:CAC— LTV to CAC Ratio
Unit economics indicator
Business Snapshot — IV20 Spirits
Raised nearly $500,000 in its first year through a structured friends-and-family round.
The raise succeeded because the opportunity was presented clearly and credibly.
Leverage Tools
In the AI era, small teams can produce high-quality outputs quickly.
Use AI tools to:
- Build investor-ready websites
- Improve SEO foundations
- Create press outreach campaigns
- Generate one-pagers and decks
- Organize data rooms
- Repurpose content for authority
Leverage increases perceived maturity.
Professional outputs signal operational readiness to investors.
Execution Layer
Helpful categories at this stage:
Website Builder Bot
Landing Pages and Investor Sites
Backlink Authority Bot
Domain authority building
One-pager Generator
Executive Summaries
SEO Audit Bot
Technical SEO analysis
Social Content Engine
Multi-platform content
Financial Slide Formatter
Investor-ready financials
Pres Outreach Bot
Media list & pitch generation
Pitch Deck Builder
Slide generation & formatting
Data Room Organizer
Due diligence prep
Execution Layer
Helpful categories at this stage:
Are You Ready to Raise?
Before scheduling investor meetings, confirm:
- You can defend your assumptions.
- You can explain milestone logic.
- You can present credible traction signals.
- Your financial model supports your narrative.
- Your structure and ownership are clean.
If not, return to:
- Module 4 (Problem & Sizing)
- Module 6 (Pricing)
- Module 9 (Capital Planning)
What Comes Next
Pitch Deck & Investor Materials
Once ready, you must communicate your opportunity clearly and convincingly.
