When the user wants to create, review, or restructure a fundraising pitch deck for seed or Series A. Also activates when the user mentions "deck", "pitch", "investor presentation", or "slide structure".
86
83%
Does it follow best practices?
Impact
Pending
No eval scenarios have been run
Passed
No known issues
From startup-context: company one-liner, stage, product description, target customer, business model, traction metrics, team bios, fundraising history, and competitive landscape. If any of these are missing, prompt the founder before drafting slides.
From the user: target round size, target investor type (VC vs. angel), whether this is for a live pitch (fewer words, more visuals) or a send-ahead deck (more self-explanatory text).
.agents/startup-context.md to populate slide content. Flag any gaps..pptx, chain to the Anthropic pptx skill after content is finalized.Structured markdown with one H3 per slide. Each slide section contains:
| # | Slide | Purpose | Common Mistakes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Title / Hook | Company name, one-liner, and a memorable hook stat or image | Burying the one-liner; using a generic tagline |
| 2 | Problem | Make the pain visceral and specific to your ICP | Being too abstract; citing a problem everyone already knows |
| 3 | Solution | Show what you built and how it eliminates the pain | Feature-dumping; not connecting back to the problem |
| 4 | Demo / Product | Screenshot, GIF, or live product walkthrough | Showing the admin panel instead of the user-facing magic |
| 5 | Market Size | TAM/SAM/SOM with a credible bottoms-up calculation | Using only top-down "the market is $X trillion" numbers |
| 6 | Business Model | How you make money, unit economics, pricing | Not showing actual or projected unit economics |
| 7 | Traction | The chart that goes up and to the right | Vanity metrics; hiding the Y-axis; mixing timeframes |
| 8 | Competition | Why you win — positioning matrix or comparison table | Claiming "no competitors"; using a 2x2 where you magically own the top-right |
| 9 | Team | Founders + key hires, relevant backgrounds | Listing every employee; not explaining founder-market fit |
| 10 | Go-to-Market | How you acquire customers today and at scale | Saying "we'll go viral" without a concrete channel strategy |
| 11 | Financials / Ask | How much you're raising, use of funds, key projections | Not specifying what milestones the money unlocks |
| 12 | Closing / Vision | The big dream — where this goes in 5-10 years | Being too conservative; forgetting contact info |
investor-research — use before building the deck to tailor the narrative to specific investor interestsdata-room — prepare the backup materials investors will request after seeing the deckfundraising-email — write the outreach email that accompanies the deckExample prompt: "Help me build a seed deck. We're raising $3M for an AI-powered contract review tool for mid-market legal teams. We have $40K MRR and 12 paying customers."
Good output snippet (Problem slide):
Slide 2: Problem
Title: Mid-market legal teams review 500+ contracts/month with 1990s tools Key message: Contract review is the #1 time sink for legal teams at companies with 200-2,000 employees, costing $180K+/year in paralegal hours per company. Content:
- 73% of mid-market companies still use manual redlining in Word
- Average contract review takes 45 minutes; 30 minutes is repetitive clause checking
- Errors in reviewed contracts cost companies 2-5% of deal value annually Visual suggestion: Side-by-side showing a paralegal buried in Word docs vs. your product highlighting risks in seconds Investor question this answers: Is this a real, painful, expensive problem?
Example prompt: "Review my existing deck — I keep getting passed on after the first meeting."
Good output approach: Read the deck, identify which of the 12 slides are missing or weak, check if the narrative arc has tension, and test every slide against the investor-question framework. Deliver specific rewrites, not vague advice.
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