Stage-aware structure, slide-by-slide guidance and case study breakdowns — built for founders raising your first cheque from Tamworth and the wider UK.
Start Building Your Deck See the 12-slide structure →A deck does one job: get the next meeting. MyPitchDecks turns your stage, sector and round into a slide-by-slide structure investors expect to read — backed by case study breakdowns of decks that actually closed early-stage rounds.
If you are a marketplace founder near Tamworth planning a pre-seed angel round, you are most likely pitching to Series A leads who diligence cohort retention, payback periods and pipeline coverage. The cheque-writers vary, but the bar does not: the deck has to argue from evidence in the first three slides, not the last three.
Marketplace founders need to prove liquidity on at least one side before talking platform. Investors want frequency, take rate, and a real-world path to network effects rather than aspirational network-effects language pasted onto a TAM slide.
Most founders here will be at Series A — cohort retention, payback periods and a board-ready financial plan. The templates inside MyPitchDecks adjust slide emphasis automatically once you pick your stage, so the work you do is on the content, not the scaffolding.
This is the structure the AI generates for you. Most Tamworth founders keep it close to this; a few rearrange the middle. The first and last three slides almost never change.
Company name, one-line value proposition, and a positioning sentence that tells an investor exactly what you do in five seconds.
A specific problem with a specific person attached. Quotes, behaviour data, or a moment of pain — not a generic industry observation.
What you have built and why your approach is meaningfully better. Screenshots or a product visual carry most of the weight.
TAM, SAM and SOM with assumptions an investor can follow. Bottom-up first, top-down second — never the other way round.
Revenue, users, retention, pilots, LOIs, waitlist — whatever proves momentum. Strongest signal first, no exceptions.
How you make money, pricing, expected contract value, gross margin, and a sentence about why that mix is durable.
The one channel you have proved, the next one you will test, and the unit economics from the first that justify scaling.
Where you sit in the landscape and why you win — product depth, distribution, data, brand, or network effects.
Founders and key hires with the one-line proof they execute: prior exits, domain expertise, data access, or unfair distribution.
A high-level three-year view, unit economics, runway, and the two or three KPIs that matter in your category.
How much you are raising, instrument (SAFE, note, priced equity), current commitments, and exactly where the capital goes.
Macro tailwinds, timing argument, and a confident closing slide that invites a follow-up meeting rather than a yes/no on the spot.
The same 12-slide spine, calibrated three ways. Pick your stage and the AI rewrites the emphasis — pre-seed leans on story, seed leans on growth, Series A leans on cohort math.
Story-driven, founder-led, designed for the round where you have vision and signal but not yet revenue. Emphasis on problem clarity, founder-market fit, and proxy traction like pilots, LOIs and prototype usage.
Growth-first ordering with traction on slide two, early unit economics surfaced before the product walkthrough, and a credible plan for the next twelve months of capital efficiency.
Cohort retention, payback periods, GTM repeatability and a board-ready financial plan that holds up under serious diligence. Less story, more proof.
Saying "we are going after a fifty-billion-pound market" without showing how you arrive there reads as someone who has not actually mapped their customers. Stack the numbers from the bottom: number of buyers, willingness to pay, realistic capture, and let those produce the SAM.
Most pitch deck advice is recycled from the same handful of blog posts. Slide-by-slide breakdowns of decks that actually closed real rounds will teach you more in twenty minutes than most courses do in a week.
Slide-by-slide breakdowns of the decks that closed real rounds — from Airbnb's eleven-slide minimalism to Reid Hoffman's annotated Series B masterclass. Worth twenty minutes more than most fundraising courses.
The most-cited example of pitch deck minimalism. Eleven plain slides, almost no jargon, and one honest claim per slide. It works because every assumption is either evidenced or stated as one.
Read the breakdown →Heavier than Airbnb's because the founders had to convince investors a regulated category was attackable. The deck spends real time on regulatory strategy and unit economics — the slides most early founders skip.
Read the breakdown →Unique because it led with traction. By the time investors reached the team and market slides, they had already seen real revenue, real users, and real growth. Live numbers beat projections every time.
Read the breakdown →Reid Hoffman published his Series B deck along with annotated commentary explaining what each slide was meant to do. The clearest masterclass on pitching a network-effects business where today's metrics underrate tomorrow's value.
Read the breakdown →A textbook example of pitching a category-creation play. Mathilde Collin frames email as fundamentally broken for teams, then positions Front not as a better inbox but as a different category entirely. Strong narrative beats feature lists.
Read the breakdown →Tinder's original pitch (then "Matchbox") shows how to sell a consumer product investors might dismiss as a feature or a fad. The deck leans on a fictional persona to walk you through the product the way an actual user would experience it.
Read the breakdown →A different kind of case study. Drew Houston pitched with a product demo video instead of a slide deck — the demo went viral, beta signups exploded, and the traction did the rest of the talking. Sometimes the deck is not the deck.
Read the breakdown →Aaron Patzer's Mint deck is unusually long — but every slide earns its place. Mint pitched a regulated, trust-heavy product by spending real time on the security model and user trust strategy. If your product touches money or health, study this one.
Read the breakdown →Sequoia's published pitch framework is the closest thing the industry has to a default template. It is not a deck — it is a checklist of what every deck should answer. Most successful decks above map cleanly onto this skeleton.
Read the breakdown →Each breakdown is a full slide-by-slide read-through with annotations — view the full case studies index →
A great deck gets you the meeting. The paperwork is what gets the money in the bank, the team in the building, and the IP in the company. MyPitchDecks gives you both halves of the journey.
AI-generated, stage-aware structure with slide-by-slide prompts. Export to PPTX, PDF or Google Slides when ready.
Mutual NDA before investors see your numbers. Letter of Intent or Memorandum of Understanding to anchor early commitments.
Term Sheet, SAFE, Convertible Note or Subscription Agreement — whichever instrument fits the round — ready to drop into the email thread.
Employment Agreements, Stock Option Plan, IP Assignment and Advisor Agreements lined up so the first hires sign on day one.
At Series A the round is bigger, the diligence is deeper and the governance gets formal. The document set reflects that step-up. Each template below is hand-drafted, founder-readable, and exports to PDF, Word and Google Docs.
The same library founders in Tamworth use to close rounds, hire teams, lock in IP and draft commercial agreements. Nine categories, drafted for the UK and adaptable elsewhere.
Free to start. Pay only when you are ready to export a deck or download a legal template. No subscription required for one-off use.
One-off pitch deck export.
Three exports for iterative drafting.
Iterate without limits across rounds.
A handful of one-off legal templates.
Mix and match across deal types.
All current and future templates.
The work is not the scaffolding. The work is your numbers, your story and your screenshots. MyPitchDecks gives you everything else.
Common questions from founders in Tamworth and across the UK.
A 2026 pitch deck is short, visually quiet, and ordered for an investor reading in scanning mode. Strong proof goes early, the market-size argument is built bottom-up rather than top-down, and the financials section is precise rather than ambitious. MyPitchDecks bakes this structure into every template so you do not have to rebuild it from scratch.
For first-touch investor outreach, aim for ten to fifteen slides. Detailed financials, technical diagrams and customer case studies belong in an appendix that you only show once an investor has asked. The main deck has to make sense in three minutes.
Yes. MyPitchDecks switches frameworks based on the stage you select. Pre-seed mode emphasises founder story and proxy traction, seed mode emphasises growth and unit economics, and Series A mode emphasises cohort retention and pipeline coverage.
Yes. You can export to PPTX, PDF and Google Slides, then edit branding, copy and numbers freely before any investor meeting.
The frameworks behind the templates are inspired by structures used by funds like Sequoia and YC, which most investors will already recognise as a logical flow. The actual slide content is generated for your specific business, so the deck reads as a serious, considered deck rather than a recognisable theme.
Yes. The pitch deck generator is free to start. Paid plans cover export, the business plan builder, the legal templates library and the investor network. Pricing is on the prices page.
Pitch deck exports start at £19.99 for a single download (Pitch Deck Starter), £59.99 for three downloads (Pitch Deck Value Pack), or £99.99 for ten downloads (Pitch Deck Power Pack). Buy whichever fits how often you expect to iterate.
Every legal template is available as a high-quality PDF, an editable Word document, and a Google Docs file. You download all three formats with each purchase, so you can edit in whichever tool your team uses and share the PDF for signature.
Yes. The Legal Bundle (£7.99 for ten downloads) lets you mix and match across all nine categories — investment, governance, employment, equity, IP, partnerships, sales, advisory and digital. You are not limited to one category per pack.
Yes. One MyPitchDecks account gives you access to the deck generator, the business plan builder, the case study library and the full legal template library. You only pay for the exports and downloads you actually use.
The AI helps tighten language, remove jargon, and clarify the story for international investors. You can edit phrasing freely afterwards so the deck still sounds like you.
Start with a stage-tailored deck structure, then pick up the legal templates you need to seal the deal — from one MyPitchDecks account.
Start Building Your Pitch Deck