MyPitchDecks turns your stage, sector and round into a slide-by-slide deck investors actually want to read. Built for Aylesbury founders who would rather spend time on the product than on the deck.
Start Building Your Aylesbury Pitch Deck Read the case studies →Pitch decks are an information design problem disguised as a graphic design problem. MyPitchDecks treats it as the former: structure first, prompts for each slide, sense-checks for the mistakes most early-stage decks make, and exports when the content is finally right.
A long answer to a short question: why does a deck for a Aylesbury founder need to be structured before it is designed?
Founders in Aylesbury typically come to MyPitchDecks at one of three moments. The first is the moment of starting — pre-seed, no funding history, no introductions, just a product idea and a friend who said you should probably make a deck. The second is the moment of scaling — seed already in the bank, looking at a Series A in six months, knowing that the deck that closed the seed will not close the next round. The third is the moment of repositioning — an existing deck that keeps getting polite passes, and a sense that the structure, not the substance, is the problem.
The platform is built for all three. The pre-seed founder gets a vision-led, problem-first structure with team and founder-market fit doing the heavy lifting on the slides where traction would normally live. The Series A founder gets a traction-led, unit-economics-honest structure that reads more like an investment memo than a pitch. The repositioning founder gets a diagnostic — show us the existing deck, here is why investors are bouncing, here is what the new structure should look like.
Underneath all three is the same engine: a slide-by-slide framework tuned to your stage, your sector and your round, with prompts that reflect what the best decks in that category have actually done. MyPitchDecks references real decks — Airbnb at pre-seed, Buffer at seed, LinkedIn at Series B — not because they are famous, but because the structural decisions they made are the decisions that still work in 2026.
The deck is the headline. Around it, the platform also handles business plan output for the funders who still ask for one, a legal template library for term sheets and SAFEs, and a curated investor network filterable by stage and sector. One platform, end to end, so a Aylesbury founder can spend their fundraising weeks on conversations rather than on tooling.
Pitch deck, business plan, legal templates, investor network. One place.
AI structure tailored to your stage and category, with editable slide-level prompts. Built for Aylesbury founders raising pre-seed through Series A.
Long-form business plan output for grant funders, banks and corporate VCs who still want the written document alongside the deck.
Slide-by-slide breakdowns of Airbnb, Buffer, LinkedIn, Uber, Front, Tinder, Dropbox, Mint and the Sequoia template — the decks that actually closed.
UK-drafted SAFE notes, term sheets, NDAs, employment agreements, IP assignment, ESOP and shareholder agreements — the founding-stage paperwork stack.
Curated list of active early-stage investors filterable by sector and stage, with notes on cheque size and recent investments.
The administrative paperwork most founders forget about until the round is closing. SH01s, board resolutions, the lot.
The UK funding map, and where Aylesbury founders sit on it.
The most common pattern we see with Aylesbury founders is technical: a builder who has spent two or three years on a product, has paying customers or strong design partner signal, and is now looking at fundraising for the first time. The skill set that built the product — careful, iterative, evidence-driven — is exactly the wrong skill set for writing a pitch deck. Founders try to communicate every nuance, every caveat, every edge case, and the deck collapses into a wall of text that no investor finishes.
MyPitchDecks pulls the founder back to the structural decisions: which insight goes on the front page, what the headline of each slide says, where the supporting detail lives. The platform is opinionated about what the slide should do; it leaves the founder to do the substantive work of saying the right thing. The result is a deck that reads like a confident first-time fundraiser, not a confused first-time fundraiser, and that is the difference that gets the meeting.
A pre-seed deck and a Series A deck are different documents. MyPitchDecks generates the structure that matches the round you are actually raising.
10–12 slides. Lead with the problem and your wedge into it. Founder-market fit and team carry the slides where traction would normally sit. Ask is small, milestone-driven, and clearly described.
12–15 slides. Some signal — design partners, waitlist, paid pilots, early MRR. Market sizing and go-to-market start to matter. Sequoia-style structure works as a default.
15–20 slides. Lead with traction by slide two. Cohort behaviour, retention, payback, and a credible plan to scale. The deck is read as a memo, not a pitch.
Different shape from SaaS. Liquidity, take rate and unit economics on day one. Chicken-and-egg has to be answered, not avoided. MyPitchDecks has a marketplace template for this.
A slide-by-slide map of what each slide is for, what good looks like, and the most common mistake at each stop. This is the structure MyPitchDecks generates by default for a seed-stage deck.
One company name, one positioning sentence, one logo. The one-liner has to be specific enough that an investor reading it cold understands what you do, but compressed enough to fit on a phone screen. Vague "we are reinventing X" lines fail this test. The platform prompts you to compress it until a non-customer can repeat it back.
Who hurts, how much, how often. Specific over general. The best problem slides describe a particular workflow, a particular person, and a particular cost — time, money, frustration — that the current alternatives impose. Founders typically over-rotate on industry-level statistics here; investors respond to a single concrete story.
The structural change in technology, regulation, behaviour or cost that makes your business newly possible. This slide is not optional. A business idea that could have worked five years ago raises an obvious question: why has it not worked yet, and why are you the team to do it now? Address it head on.
What you have built, framed as the answer to the problem on slide two. Lead with the narrowest, most specific wedge — the buyer you serve first, the workflow you replace first — rather than the eventual platform vision. The platform vision goes later. The wedge is what the round is funding.
One or two clear screenshots or diagrams that show the user actually using the product. No marketing splash, no animated mockups. Investors are looking for evidence that the product exists, that it solves the problem you described, and that the team can execute. Three workflow screenshots beat one hero image.
What has happened since you started. For pre-seed, this is design partner conversations, waitlist quality, or domain expertise. For seed, this is paid pilots, early MRR, or strong qualitative signal. For Series A, this is the cohort behaviour and unit economics. The slide leads with the strongest available signal and labels it honestly.
Bottom-up first, top-down as a sanity check. Who buys, how many of them are there, what do they pay. The platform walks you through the bottom-up build and flags the most common mistake: quoting a 100bn top-down number without a bottom-up to back it. Investors want a defensible serviceable market, not a fantasy total addressable market.
How you make money and what each customer is worth. For SaaS, this is ACV, CAC, LTV and payback. For marketplaces, take rate, GMV and contribution margin. For consumer, retention curves and monetisation. The slide must show that the business works at unit level — even directionally — at the stage you are at.
How you acquire customers and the evidence that the channel works. Three vague channels with no evidence reads worse than one specific channel with a clear early signal. The slide should answer the question an investor will ask first: what is the cheapest, most repeatable way you have found to put the product in front of buyers?
Name the obvious incumbents and the obvious new entrants. Articulate, in one line each, what your wedge is against them. Skip the 2x2 with you in the top right. Investors are looking for evidence that you understand the alternatives, including do-nothing, and have a structural reason to win against the most credible of them.
Who you are and why this team can build this company. Surface the credentials that matter — domain time, prior shipping, founder-market fit — and skip the rest. A two-person team that owns its gaps reads better than a five-person team padded with part-time advisors. Investors back teams; this is the slide where you give them reason to.
How much you are raising, what it buys, what milestones the round funds, and what the next round looks like. Be specific. "Raising 1m for eighteen months of runway, hiring two engineers, a head of growth, and reaching 100k MRR before the Series A" is concrete. "Raising a round to scale" is not. The platform prompts you until the ask is specific.
Every investor reads decks at speed. These are the mistakes that make them stop reading. The platform flags each of them automatically as you draft.
The first three slides decide whether the rest of the deck gets read. Founders frequently spend slides one through five on context, market trends, and team intros before anyone has heard what the company actually does. Invert it. Lead with the problem and the wedge; let the context follow.
Quoting a top-down market size with no bottom-up build behind it signals that the founder has not done the homework. Always pair them. The bottom-up build is the credibility; the top-down is the upper bound. The platform forces a bottom-up calculation on the market slide before the deck exports.
Three founders, six advisors, and four interns on the team slide reads as desperation. Investors back the operational team — the people who will be working full-time on the company in six months. Advisors and part-timers belong in the appendix or on the dedicated advisor section, not on the main team slide.
"Content marketing, partnerships, paid ads" is not a go-to-market strategy. Pick the channel where you have evidence, describe what is working, and quantify it. Investors are looking for one channel that is repeatable and cheap, not three that are aspirational. One slide, one channel, one set of numbers.
Heavy gradients, custom illustrations, and animated transitions distract from the content. Investors are reading the deck on a phone, often in two minutes between meetings. Clean typography, plenty of whitespace, and a single visual per slide outperform anything more elaborate. Design follows content; never the other way round.
Five-year projections in a seed deck signal naivety. Investors price the round on the next eighteen to twenty-four months. Show a directional ramp, label the assumptions, and stop. The financial model goes in the data room; the deck does not need a year-five revenue line that nobody believes.
"Raising a round to scale" is not an ask. The ask slide must contain the amount, the runway, the headline use of funds, and the milestones the round buys. Without those, the investor cannot evaluate the round, and the meeting either does not happen or happens with the wrong context.
"We have no real competitors" is the line that makes investors stop reading. There is always a competitor — including the customer doing nothing, or solving the problem with spreadsheets. Naming the alternatives and articulating your wedge against each shows you understand the market. Pretending there are none does not.
Different rounds, different bars. Knowing what investors are looking for is half the structural battle for any Aylesbury founder.
Pre-seed investors are pricing two things: the size of the eventual opportunity and the founders ability to execute on it. There is no traction to grade, so the slides that would normally do that work — traction, unit economics, GTM evidence — instead lean on team, founder-market fit, and a clear, narrow wedge into the market. Decks at this stage are typically ten to twelve slides. The ask is small, the milestones are clearly described, and the runway buys eighteen months of building plus a defined seed milestone. Pre-seed checks are made on conviction, not data.
Seed investors are looking for evidence that the product solves a real problem for real customers. Design partners, paid pilots, early MRR, waitlist conversion — any structured signal beats none. The deck is twelve to fifteen slides, the market sizing has to be defensible bottom-up, and the GTM slide has to surface at least one channel with quantified early traction. Seed checks are made on data plus conviction; the data does not need to be huge, but it needs to be honest and specific.
Series A investors are pricing a business that is past the question of whether it works and into the question of whether it scales. Decks lead with traction by slide two, surface cohort behaviour, retention curves, payback periods, and a credible plan to deploy the round. Fifteen to twenty slides is normal; the deck reads more like an investment memo than a pitch. The ask is bigger, the use of funds is granular, and the next milestone is a set of metrics rather than a product launch.
Marketplaces are graded on a different axis from SaaS. The deck has to surface supply and demand metrics, liquidity by cohort, take rate evolution, and a clear answer to the chicken-and-egg problem — how the first side of the market got built without the other. Investors who know the category will ask about liquidity within five minutes of the deck landing in their inbox; the deck has to answer that question on slide six or seven, not bury it in the appendix.
Whether you are raising from a co-working space in Aylesbury or pitching London-based VCs over Zoom, the deck has to do the same job: explain what you are building, who it is for, why now, and what the round buys. MyPitchDecks gives you that structure without the fifty hours of trial and error.
Design is downstream of structure, but it still matters. These are the principles MyPitchDecks builds in by default so founders do not have to fight typography while they fight the round.
The text on the slide should be readable in five seconds. The detail lives in speaker notes, the appendix, or the data room. A pitch deck slide that requires reading time is a slide that does not survive the inbox skim, which is where most rounds are won or lost.
Each slide answers one question. If a slide is trying to answer two, it is two slides. Investors read decks at speed; a slide doing double duty makes them slow down to figure out what they are looking at, and that friction is what loses meetings.
Two or three product screenshots demonstrating the actual workflow outperform a paragraph of feature copy every time. Investors trust what they can see. Polished marketing splash imagery rarely lands the same way as a clean shot of the product doing its job.
A number on a slide without context is meaningless. Forty percent retention is great or terrible depending on the cohort and the product. Always pair numbers with the time window, the cohort definition, and the comparison point that makes them legible.
Plain language outperforms jargon at every stage. Specific verbs — sells, charges, replaces, automates — outperform abstract ones — leverages, empowers, transforms. Investors are looking for clarity; jargon is the most reliable signal that the founder has not yet thought clearly about the business.
The most common deck design failure is cramming. Slides that fill the whole canvas read as anxious; slides that leave space read as confident. Leave room. Investors mentally fill the gaps with the impression of a founder who knows what they are doing.
A pitch deck is one artefact in a longer process. Knowing what comes before and after sets expectations and reduces the chance the round stalls in diligence.
Before the first investor email goes out, the deck, the model, the data room, and the cap table all need to be in shape. Most founders under-invest in this phase and pay for it during diligence, when the deal slows and momentum dies. MyPitchDecks generates the deck and business plan and links to the legal templates that populate the data room.
The deck lands in the investor inbox alongside a short cold-outreach email or a warm intro forward. Most early-stage rounds are won on this pre-read, before the first call happens. The platform generates a short outreach template tuned to the deck content; the founder writes the personalised line at the top.
First calls and follow-ups happen over two to six weeks for a typical seed round. The deck is the reference document, but the conversation usually goes deeper than the slides — model assumptions, market scoping, hiring plan, founder backgrounds. Speaker notes and appendix material handle the detail the deck itself does not carry.
A term sheet is the headline economics and control terms; it is non-binding but signals real commitment. Diligence follows: references, technical review, financial review, legal. The legal template library covers the documents you will encounter at this stage — SAFE notes, term sheets, shareholder agreements — drafted founder-readable.
Final documents are signed, funds wire, and the company moves to its post-round operating cadence. The work shifts from fundraising to executing, hiring, and reporting. The deck does not get retired — it gets updated for the next round, with a new traction slide, a new ask, and a new structure tuned to the new stage.
An honest framing of what the platform does and does not do.
What MyPitchDecks gives a Aylesbury founder, beyond the obvious time savings, is calibration. The hardest thing about a first deck is knowing what investors at your stage are actually grading: how much detail goes on a market slide, what counts as traction at seed, when to lead with the team, when to bury the team. The platform encodes those calibrations into the prompts on each slide, so you spend your week on the substance — the wedge, the insight, the team — instead of on second-guessing whether your deck is at the right level of depth. By the time you reach the fifth or sixth investor meeting, the deck is doing its work and you are doing yours.
From the team at MyPitchDecksFrom blank page to investor-ready in three steps.
Pick your stage, your sector, and the round you are raising. The AI picks the right framework — pre-seed, seed, Series A, marketplace, regulated, or category-creation.
MyPitchDecks generates a slide-by-slide skeleton with prompts, examples, and links to relevant case studies. You fill in the specifics; the AI keeps you honest.
Iterate until the deck reads the way you would want an investor to read it. Export to PDF, share a live link, or move on to the business plan and legal documents.
Most pitch deck advice is recycled from the same handful of blog posts. Our case studies break down the actual decks behind some of the most successful early-stage rounds in startup history — slide by slide, with the lessons that still apply.
Common questions from founders putting together their first investor-ready deck.
Start with the structure, not the slides. MyPitchDecks asks for your stage, sector and round, then returns a slide-by-slide skeleton with prompts. You fill in the specifics; the prompts keep you honest about what each slide is meant to do.
Seed decks lead with vision and team because there is no traction to lead with. Series A decks lead with traction and unit economics because there is. MyPitchDecks structures each differently and gives you the prompts that match.
Export to PDF and slide decks (PPTX) is on the paid plans. The free tier covers structure and drafting; the paid tier covers export, business plan output, and the legal templates.
It writes a strong first draft of every slide based on your inputs, but you should still rewrite the parts only you can — vision, founder story, why-this-team. The AI gets the deck eighty percent of the way; you finish the last twenty.
The legal template library is UK-drafted and includes SAFE agreements, term sheets, NDAs, employment agreements, IP assignment, ESOP, shareholder and partnership agreements, all reviewable by your solicitor before signing.
Three things: who you are, what you are building, and why it could be a meaningful business. The first three slides should answer those questions in plain language. Anything that delays those answers — long bios, dense market charts, abstract vision statements — costs you the meeting.
Yes. The pitch deck generator is geography-agnostic and the structural conventions it follows are global. The legal template library is UK-specific; founders elsewhere typically use the deck and business plan output and skip the legal section, or use it as a starting reference for their local solicitor.
The platform generates a short cold-outreach template based on the deck content, with the framing investors expect — one sentence on the company, one on traction or wedge, one on the ask. The hard part of cold outreach is still finding the right investors and writing the personalised line at the top, which the platform leaves to you.
Founders elsewhere in the UK using MyPitchDecks for their pitch deck and business plan.
See all 150 pitch deck locations →Pick your stage. Generate the structure. Iterate until the deck reads the way an investor would want to read it. That is the loop.
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