YC Pitch Deck
Create a compelling startup pitch deck that follows the structure proven to raise billions from top investors. Master the YC and Sequoia formats that get founders funded.
When to Use This Skill
- •Fundraising to create investor pitch decks
- •YC application to structure your narrative
- •Demo Day prep to craft your 2-minute pitch
- •Angel investors to communicate your opportunity
- •Partnership pitches to structure compelling asks
- •Internal alignment to articulate your strategy clearly
Methodology Foundation
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Source | YC (Y Combinator), Sequoia Capital pitch framework |
| Core Principle | "The best pitch decks tell a story: Problem → Solution → Why Now → Why You. Every slide must earn its place." |
| Why This Matters | Investors see thousands of decks. You have 3 minutes of attention. A great deck doesn't get you funded—a bad deck gets you rejected. |
What Claude Does vs What You Decide
| Claude Does | You Decide |
|---|---|
| Structures video workflow | Final creative vision |
| Suggests shot compositions | Equipment selection |
| Creates storyboard templates | Brand aesthetics |
| Generates script frameworks | Final approval |
| Identifies technical requirements | Budget allocation |
What This Skill Does
- •Structures your narrative - Proven slide sequence that works
- •Crafts compelling slides - What goes on each slide
- •Identifies what to include/exclude - Signal vs. noise
- •Tailors for stage - Pre-seed vs. Seed vs. Series A
- •Prepares you for Q&A - What investors will ask
- •Provides templates - Starting points for each slide
How to Use
Create a Pitch Deck from Scratch
Help me create a pitch deck for my startup: [Description of company] Stage: [Pre-seed/Seed/Series A] Raising: [$X] Key metrics: [if any]
Review an Existing Pitch Deck
Review my pitch deck against YC/Sequoia best practices: [Paste slide content or describe] What's working? What needs improvement?
Prepare for Demo Day
I have 2 minutes for Demo Day. Here's my company: [description] Help me structure the 2-minute pitch.
Instructions
Step 1: Understand the Standard Structure
## Pitch Deck Structure (10-15 slides) ### Core Slides (Required) | # | Slide | Purpose | Time | |---|-------|---------|------| | 1 | Title | Who are you, what do you do | 5 sec | | 2 | Problem | What problem are you solving | 30 sec | | 3 | Solution | How you solve it | 30 sec | | 4 | Why Now | Market timing | 20 sec | | 5 | Market Size | How big is the opportunity | 20 sec | | 6 | Product | Demo/screenshots | 45 sec | | 7 | Traction | Proof it's working | 30 sec | | 8 | Business Model | How you make money | 20 sec | | 9 | Competition | Why you win | 20 sec | | 10 | Team | Why you're the ones | 20 sec | | 11 | Ask | What you need | 20 sec | ### Optional Slides (Based on Stage/Story) - **Go-to-Market:** How you acquire customers - **Roadmap:** Where you're going - **Unit Economics:** LTV/CAC, margins - **Vision:** 10-year view - **Financials:** Projections (Series A+) ### What NOT to Include - Detailed financial projections (too early stage) - Technical architecture (unless deep tech) - Advisory board (unless remarkable) - Patents pending (rarely impressive) - Long text blocks (nobody reads)
Step 2: Craft Each Slide
## Slide-by-Slide Guide
### SLIDE 1: Title
**Purpose:** First impression. Who are you?
**Include:**
- Company name and logo
- One-line description (what you do)
- Your name and contact
**Format:**
[Logo]
"[One-line description]"
[Founder Name] | [email]
**Example:**
"Stripe for healthcare payments"
"AI that writes sales emails that actually get responses"
**Don't:** Start with "We are..." or use jargon.
---
### SLIDE 2: Problem
**Purpose:** Make investors feel the pain.
**Structure:**
1. Who has the problem? (specific customer)
2. What is the problem? (concrete, relatable)
3. Why is it painful? (stakes, cost)
**Do:**
- Use a specific customer story
- Quantify the pain ($, time, frequency)
- Make it visceral/emotional
**Don't:**
- List multiple unrelated problems
- Use abstract language
- Describe your solution yet
**Example Template:**
"[Customer type] struggle with [problem].
Currently they [painful workaround].
This costs them [quantified impact]."
**Strong Example:**
"Marketing teams spend 6+ hours/week manually pulling data from 5 different tools to answer one question: 'What's working?'"
---
### SLIDE 3: Solution
**Purpose:** Your answer to the problem.
**Structure:**
1. What is your solution? (one sentence)
2. How does it work? (simple explanation)
3. What's the key insight? (why this approach)
**Do:**
- Start with the customer benefit, not features
- Keep it simple (if you can't explain simply, you don't understand it)
- Show, don't tell (visual if possible)
**Don't:**
- List features
- Use technical jargon
- Describe every capability
**Example Template:**
"[Product] is [category] that [key benefit].
Unlike [alternative], we [unique approach].
The result: [outcome]."
**Strong Example:**
"Databox pulls all your marketing data into one dashboard, automatically. No spreadsheets, no manual work. See what's working in 30 seconds."
---
### SLIDE 4: Why Now
**Purpose:** Why is THIS the moment?
**Market timing matters more than you think.**
Great ideas at the wrong time fail.
**Why Now Categories:**
- **Technology shift:** "AI/ML now makes X possible"
- **Regulatory change:** "New regulation requires X"
- **Behavior change:** "COVID changed how people X"
- **Cost inflection:** "Cloud costs dropped, now X is viable"
- **Platform shift:** "Mobile/AR/crypto created X opportunity"
**Structure:**
"[Recent change] has created [new reality].
This means [customers] now [new behavior/need].
We're positioned to [capture opportunity]."
**Don't:**
- Say "It's just time" without specifics
- Claim first mover advantage alone
- Ignore the "why not 5 years ago" question
---
### SLIDE 5: Market Size
**Purpose:** Is the opportunity big enough?
**The Hierarchy:**
- **TAM:** Total Addressable Market (everyone who could buy)
- **SAM:** Serviceable Addressable Market (who you could realistically reach)
- **SOM:** Serviceable Obtainable Market (what you'll capture in 3-5 years)
**How to Calculate:**
Bottom-up (preferred): # customers × price = market size
Top-down: Industry reports (less credible)
**What Investors Want:**
- Believable path to $100M+ revenue
- Clear logic in numbers
- SAM/SOM more important than TAM
**Example:**
"TAM: $50B (all SMB marketing software)
SAM: $5B (SMBs with marketing teams)
SOM: $500M (marketing teams using data tools)
We're targeting the SOM, growing SAM over time."
**Don't:**
- Throw out huge TAM with no logic
- Say "if we capture 1% of TAM..." (red flag)
- Ignore competition in market sizing
---
### SLIDE 6: Product
**Purpose:** Show what you built.
**Options:**
- Screenshots (annotated)
- Short demo video (30-60 sec)
- Before/After
- Product in action
**Do:**
- Show the core experience
- Highlight what's different
- Keep it simple
**Don't:**
- Show every feature
- Include UI-heavy screenshots with no context
- Use mockups if you have a real product
**For Pre-Product:**
- Show prototype/mockup
- Be clear it's not built yet
- Focus on the experience you'll create
---
### SLIDE 7: Traction
**Purpose:** Prove it's working.
**Best Traction Metrics by Stage:**
| Stage | Good Traction |
|-------|---------------|
| Pre-seed | Waitlist, LOIs, pilot customers |
| Seed | Revenue, users, growth rate |
| Series A | Revenue growth, retention, unit economics |
**Structure:**
- Lead with strongest metric
- Show growth trajectory (graph)
- Include context (timeline)
**What Investors Care About:**
1. **Growth rate** (MoM, WoW) > absolute numbers
2. **Retention** > new users
3. **Revenue** > free users
4. **Engagement** > signups
**Example:**
"$30K MRR, growing 25% MoM
100 paying customers (75% month-over-month retention)
Started charging 4 months ago"
**No Traction?**
Show other signals:
- Waitlist with conversion
- Letters of intent
- Pilot commitments
- Expert/customer testimonials
---
### SLIDE 8: Business Model
**Purpose:** How you make money.
**Include:**
- Revenue model (subscription, transaction, etc.)
- Pricing
- Unit economics (if available)
**Keep Simple:**
"We charge $X per [unit] per [period]."
"Customer pays [how much] for [what]."
**If you have data:**
- Customer acquisition cost (CAC)
- Lifetime value (LTV)
- LTV/CAC ratio (3+ is good)
- Payback period
**Example:**
"SaaS: $99/user/month
Current LTV: $2,400 | CAC: $400 | LTV/CAC: 6x
Payback: 4 months"
---
### SLIDE 9: Competition
**Purpose:** Show you understand the landscape and why you win.
**DO NOT:** Say "We have no competition."
(It means no market or you don't understand it.)
**Best Format:** 2×2 Matrix or Feature comparison
**2×2 Matrix Example:**
| | Low [Axis 1] | High [Axis 1] |
|---|---|---|
| **High [Axis 2]** | Competitor A | **YOU** |
| **Low [Axis 2]** | Competitor B | Competitor C |
Choose axes where you win.
**Alternative: Why We Win**
- We're faster because [technical advantage]
- We're cheaper because [efficiency]
- We're better for [specific segment] because [focus]
**Don't:**
- Dismiss competitors
- Show a feature matrix where you check every box
- Ignore the "do nothing" alternative
---
### SLIDE 10: Team
**Purpose:** Why YOU can pull this off.
**Include:**
- Founders (photo, name, relevant background)
- Key relevant experience
- Why this team for this problem
**What Matters:**
- Relevant domain expertise
- Relevant startup/tech experience
- Co-founder complementarity
- Prior exits (if any)
**Format:**
[Photo] Name | Role
Previously: [Relevant credential]
[One-line about why they're perfect]
**Example:**
"Jane (CEO): 10 years at Google Ads, built their SMB product
John (CTO): Ex-Stripe, scaled payments infra 100x
We met this problem daily—now we're solving it."
**If team is weak:**
- Show advisors
- Show early hires you'll make
- Be honest about gaps and how you'll fill them
---
### SLIDE 11: Ask
**Purpose:** What do you want?
**Include:**
- Amount raising
- What you'll do with it
- Key milestones you'll hit
**Example:**
"Raising $2M Seed
Use of funds:
- 50% Engineering (ship v2, integrations)
- 30% GTM (first sales hire, marketing)
- 20% Operations (12-month runway)
Milestones: $500K ARR, 500 customers, Series A ready"
**Don't:**
- Be vague about use of funds
- Ask for too wide a range ("$1-5M")
- Skip this slide
Step 3: Apply Stage-Specific Adjustments
## Adjustments by Stage ### Pre-Seed ($500K-$1M) **Focus:** Problem, solution, team, early signal **Acceptable to not have:** Revenue, clear CAC/LTV, full team **Key question:** "Is this a problem worth solving by these people?" ### Seed ($1M-$3M) **Focus:** Traction, product-market fit signal, GTM hypothesis **Expected:** Some revenue or strong engagement, clear positioning **Key question:** "Is this working? Can it scale?" ### Series A ($5M-$15M) **Focus:** Unit economics, scalable GTM, repeatable sales **Expected:** $1M+ ARR, clear path to $10M+, proven CAC/LTV **Key question:** "Does this scale? What does $100M look like?"
Step 4: The 2-Minute Pitch (Demo Day)
## Demo Day Format ### Total Time: 2 minutes ### Structure: **Hook (10 sec):** "[Company] is [category] for [customer]." Or: "[X] companies have [problem]. We fix that." **Problem (20 sec):** Who, what, why it hurts—specific and relatable. **Solution (20 sec):** What you built, how it works, key insight. **Traction (20 sec):** Best metrics, growth rate, proof it works. **Business Model (15 sec):** How you make money, unit economics if strong. **Market/Why Now (15 sec):** Big opportunity, market timing. **Ask (10 sec):** What you're raising, what you'll do with it. **Close (10 sec):** Memorable one-liner, call to action. ### Demo Day Tips - Practice until it's natural - Don't rush—pause for impact - Memorize the flow, not word-for-word - End with energy - Have your email visible
Examples
Example 1: Pre-Seed Pitch Deck
Input:
"Create a pitch deck for my AI sales email tool. We help SDRs write personalized emails. Pre-seed, raising $750K. We have a working product and 50 beta users."
Output:
Pitch Deck: [SalesFlow AI]
Slide 1: Title
[SalesFlow Logo] AI-Powered Sales Emails That Get Responses Jane Smith | jane@salesflow.ai
Slide 2: Problem
SDRs spend 40% of their time writing emails. Most of those emails get ignored. The average SDR: • Sends 100+ emails/day • Gets <2% response rate • Wastes 3+ hours/day on copy-paste personalization Top performers personalize deeply—but that doesn't scale.
Slide 3: Solution
SalesFlow writes personalized emails in seconds. Input: prospect LinkedIn + company data Output: unique, personalized email Not templates. Not mail merge. Actually personalized—every email is different. [Screenshot: Before/After of generic vs. personalized email]
Slide 4: Why Now
Three shifts make this possible: 1. GPT-4 quality: AI can write like humans now 2. Data availability: LinkedIn, company data, news all accessible 3. Buyer expectations: Generic emails don't work anymore 2024: The year personalization becomes mandatory.
Slide 5: Market
$4.5B Sales Engagement Market TAM: $4.5B (all sales software) SAM: $800M (email/outreach tools) SOM: $100M (AI writing for sales) 3M+ SDRs in the US alone Each worth $500-2000/year
Slide 6: Product
[Product screenshots showing:] 1. Paste LinkedIn URL 2. AI analyzes profile + company 3. Generates personalized email 4. One-click send to sequence "Write 100 personalized emails in 10 minutes"
Slide 7: Traction
Early but promising: • 50 beta users (SDRs at 20 companies) • 15,000 emails generated • 4.2% response rate (vs. 2% baseline) • 3 paid pilots starting ($500/mo each) [Graph showing weekly email volume growth]
Slide 8: Business Model
SaaS: $99/user/month Target customer: SDR teams of 5-50 Contract value: $500-5,000/month At scale: CAC target: <$500 LTV: $2,000 (20-month lifespan) LTV/CAC: 4x+
Slide 9: Competition
↑ Personalization
|
Lavender ←─────────────────→ [SalesFlow]
| |
| • Manual research • AI-generated
| • Time-consuming • Instant
| • Suggestions only • Full emails
|
Outreach, Salesloft
|
└─────────────────────────→ Automation
We're the only tool that writes truly personalized emails, not templates.
Slide 10: Team
[Photo] Jane Smith | CEO • 8 years at Salesforce, led SMB product • Sold to thousands of sales teams [Photo] Tom Chen | CTO • ML engineer, ex-OpenAI • Built GPT applications at scale We've lived this problem and built the solution.
Slide 11: Ask
Raising: $750K Pre-Seed Use of funds: • 60% Product (AI model, integrations) • 30% Go-to-market (first customers) • 10% Ops (runway) Milestones to Seed: • $50K MRR • 500 paying users • Prove 2x response rate improvement
Example 2: Demo Day Script
Input:
"Write my 2-minute Demo Day pitch based on the deck above."
Output:
Demo Day Script (2:00)
[0:00-0:10] Hook "SDRs spend half their day writing emails that nobody opens.
SalesFlow is AI that writes personalized sales emails that actually get responses."
[0:10-0:30] Problem "The average SDR sends 100 emails a day. Response rate? Under 2%.
The problem isn't effort—it's personalization. Top performers research every prospect. But that takes hours—it doesn't scale.
Generic emails don't work anymore. Buyers know when they're in a sequence."
[0:30-0:55] Solution "SalesFlow solves this. You give us a LinkedIn profile. Our AI reads their background, their company, recent news, and writes a unique email—not a template, not mail merge—actually personalized.
What took 5 minutes now takes 5 seconds. Scale AND personalization."
[0:55-1:15] Traction "We launched 8 weeks ago. 50 beta users have sent 15,000 emails.
Their response rates doubled—4.2% versus the 2% baseline.
We just signed our first three paying pilots, $500 a month each. This works."
[1:15-1:30] Business Model + Market "We charge $99 per user per month. There are 3 million SDRs in the US—this is an $800 million market.
The shift to AI writing is happening now. GPT-4 made this possible."
[1:30-1:45] Team "I'm Jane. I spent 8 years at Salesforce selling to these teams. Tom, my co-founder, built GPT applications at OpenAI.
We lived this problem. Now we're solving it."
[1:45-2:00] Ask "We're raising $750K to get to $50K MRR and prove we can 2x response rates at scale.
If you're an SDR, a sales leader, or an investor who's tired of bad cold emails—come talk to us.
SalesFlow. Personalized emails that get responses."
Checklists & Templates
Pitch Deck Review Checklist
## Deck Quality Check ### Structure - [ ] 10-15 slides max - [ ] Follows standard order - [ ] No unnecessary slides - [ ] Each slide has one point ### Content - [ ] Problem is specific and quantified - [ ] Solution is clear in 10 seconds - [ ] "Why now" is compelling - [ ] Market size is bottom-up credible - [ ] Traction is the best available - [ ] Competition is honest - [ ] Team backgrounds are relevant - [ ] Ask is specific ### Design - [ ] Readable at 8pt (presentation size) - [ ] Minimal text per slide - [ ] Visuals support, not distract - [ ] Consistent formatting - [ ] No typos ### Story - [ ] Flows logically - [ ] Builds excitement - [ ] Ends with clear action
Slide Content Templates
## Quick Templates ### Problem Slide "[Customer segment] struggle with [problem]. Currently they [painful workaround]. This costs them [impact]." ### Solution Slide "[Product] is [category] that [benefit]. Unlike [alternative], we [differentiation]." ### Why Now Slide "[Change] has created [opportunity]. We're positioned to [capture it]." ### Market Slide "TAM: $[X] ([total market]) SAM: $[Y] ([reachable segment]) SOM: $[Z] ([our target])" ### Traction Slide "$[X] MRR | [Y]% MoM growth [Z] customers | [A]% retention [Timeline context]" ### Ask Slide "Raising $[X] [stage] Use: [breakdown] Milestones: [targets]"
Skill Boundaries
What This Skill Does Well
- •Structuring video production workflows
- •Creating storyboard frameworks
- •Suggesting technical approaches
- •Providing creative direction templates
What This Skill Cannot Do
- •Replace professional videography
- •Edit video files directly
- •Make final creative judgments
- •Guarantee audience engagement
References
- •Y Combinator. "How to Make a Pitch Deck" (YC library)
- •Sequoia Capital. "Writing a Business Plan" (classic framework)
- •Reid Hoffman. "Blitzscaling Lectures" - LinkedIn pitch deck
- •DocSend. "Pitch Deck Data Reports" (what gets funded)
- •Kawasaki, Guy. "The Art of the Start" - 10/20/30 rule
Related Skills
- •fundraising-narrative - Story beyond the deck
- •startup-metrics - What metrics to include
- •positioning - Differentiation strategy
- •storytelling-storybrand - Narrative structure
Skill Metadata
- •Mode: cyborg
name: yc-pitch-deck category: startup subcategory: fundraising version: 1.0 author: MKTG Skills source_expert: Y Combinator, Sequoia Capital source_work: YC Library, Sequoia Business Plan difficulty: intermediate estimated_value: $10,000 pitch deck consulting tags: [pitch-deck, fundraising, YC, Sequoia, startups, investors, Demo-Day] created: 2026-01-25 updated: 2026-01-25