What Is A Pitch Deck?
The Pitch Deck is a brief, cut-to-the-chase, high-impact presentation of your business opportunity in Investor-Speak.
Investors and bankers have heard it all. They don’t want a long-winded explanation of everything you’re doing and how you’re doing it better, faster, and cheaper.
What’s an Effective Pitch Deck?
Investors and bankers want an introduction to the few crucial factors that weed out the winners and losers – from THEIR PERSPECTIVE – not yours. So how does the busy CEO accomplish that?
The ideal pitch deck delivers only those crucial elements – which unfold clearly and succinctly. Your pitch intrigues them. They want to learn more. No yawns, just questions. THAT’s the result of an expert pitch deck.
Pitching To The Distracted Investors
Investors’ attention spans are surprisingly short. Surprisingly, they’re easily bored and quickly lose focus. So one or two trailing sentences will shove them off the deep end, into daydreams about other pressing matters. It’s true. So don’t give them that opportunity. Stay on point and rise above your competitors.
Investors may also ask you to email the plan. In addition to your pitch deck, your business plan needs to stand on its own. It must deliver the full story in concise, easy-to-digest language.
When you engage me to write your business plan, I also deliver the primary tool you need to effectively communicate that plan to your target audiences (and knock their socks off) an expert pitch deck that gets attention.
What’s The Best Format For A Pitch Deck?
One pitch Deck reigns supreme, Guy Kawasaki’s model: The 10-20-30 Rule. Like the Investor-Quality Business Plan, The 10-20-30 Rule positions you as a savvy, credible business leader.
The Pitch Deck is an art.
By condensing your story down to the 10-20-30 rule, you are forced to consolidate a lengthy dissertation with a lot of details down to core concepts and key points. Only the most important facts related to a successful business.
What Is The 10-20-30 Rule For A Pitch Deck?
Guy Kawasaki is the Entrepreneur’s Entrepreneur. After taking Silicon Valley by storm in the 2000’s, he continues to blaze new trails and consults with leading entrepreneurs world-wide. He helps them to achieve new heights by taking them behind the scenes to learn how business leaders think.
Guy Kawasaki unveiled the 10-20-30 Rule on his blog, “How to Change the World”:
“As a venture capitalist, I have to listen to hundreds of entrepreneurs pitch their companies. Most of these pitches are crap: sixty slides about a “patent pending,” “first mover advantage,” “all we have to do is get 1% of the people in China to buy our product” startup. These pitches are so lousy that I’m losing my hearing, there’s a constant ringing in my ear, and every once in while the world starts spinning. (Kawasaki’s tongue in cheek reference to his diagnosis of Meneire’s Disease.)
“… I am evangelizing the 10/20/30 Rule of PowerPoint. It’s quite simple: a PowerPoint presentation should have ten slides, last no more than twenty minutes, and contain no font smaller than thirty points.”
AND SO IT HAS BEEN ADOPTED THE WORLD OVER:
10 slides
20 minutes
30 point font
Thirty point font doesn’t allow for many words on each slide. Sometimes, business owners and managers are just too close to the details to be able to get the entire thing down to this level.
With decades of investor pitch experience, I take that off your plate and provide you a pitch deck that’s ready to rock.
Other Uses For Your Pitch Deck
Even if you never pitch to investors, it serves you for years as a concise summary of the guiding principles of your business. You may use your Pitch Deck to present your business to a larger audience. You might send it to prospective Board or Advisory members to entice them to join.
Or your top employees can use it as an evangelistic tool, as Kawasaki himself does.
When promoting your business at the highest levels, it’s priceless. And it’s included as an integral part of your business plan delivery.