Pitch Deck Examples: What Each Slide Must Prove to Investors

Pitch Deck Examples: What Each Slide Must Prove to Investors - hero image

Most pitch deck exam­ples you’ll find online teach you the wrong les­son. They show you Airbn­b’s ten slides, Uber’s mar­ket math, and a gallery of beau­ti­ful tem­plates, then leave you to reverse-engi­neer the design. The design was nev­er the point. A pitch deck is not a slideshow — it is an argu­ment, and every slide is a claim you have to back with evi­dence. When you study pitch deck exam­ples, the ques­tion to ask is not “what does this look like?” but “what is this slide prov­ing, and what num­ber makes the proof cred­i­ble?”

That dis­tinc­tion mat­ters more for a SaaS com­pa­ny than for almost any oth­er busi­ness. Your busi­ness is a stack of recur­ring-rev­enue mechan­ics, and an investor who has seen a hun­dred decks reads your slides as a series of unit-eco­nom­ics asser­tions. Get the sto­ry right and a mediocre design still rais­es mon­ey. Get the design per­fect and the eco­nom­ics wrong, and you’ve built a hand­some doc­u­ment nobody funds.

This guide walks through the slides that actu­al­ly car­ry weight, what each one must prove, and the met­rics that turn a slide from dec­o­ra­tion into evi­dence. Where it helps, I’ll show you the math the way an investor will run it in their head while you’re still talk­ing.

Why Most Pitch Deck Examples Mislead You

The famous decks cir­cu­lat­ing online — the ones every “pitch deck exam­ples” roundup reprints — share a sur­vivor­ship prob­lem. They raised mon­ey, so we assume the deck caused the out­come. In real­i­ty, those com­pa­nies often raised on trac­tion, founder rep­u­ta­tion, or a mar­ket moment that the slides mere­ly doc­u­ment­ed. Copy­ing the slide order from a deck that closed a round in 2009 tells you almost noth­ing about what will con­vince a 2026 investor eval­u­at­ing your num­bers.

There’s a sec­ond, sub­tler prob­lem. Gener­ic exam­ples opti­mize for the wrong read­er. A con­sumer mar­ket­place deck and a B2B SaaS deck answer fun­da­men­tal­ly dif­fer­ent ques­tions. The mar­ket­place investor wants to see net­work effects and take-rate. The SaaS investor wants to see whether your cus­tomers stay, expand, and cost less to acquire than they’re worth over their life­time. If you bor­row a mar­ket­place deck­’s struc­ture, you’ll spend three slides on the wrong sto­ry.

So treat exam­ples as a vocab­u­lary, not a script. Learn the slide types that exist and what each is for. Then build the spe­cif­ic argu­ment your busi­ness can actu­al­ly defend with data.

The Ten Slides That Carry the Argument

Across the strongest pitch deck exam­ples, the same ten slide types recur. Not because there’s a mag­ic tem­plate, but because an investor’s eval­u­a­tion fol­lows a pre­dictable log­ic: Is this a real prob­lem? Does this solve it? Is the prize big enough? Can these peo­ple cap­ture it? The slides exist to answer those ques­tions in order.

Here is the sequence, and the sin­gle ques­tion each slide must answer:

#SlideThe Question It Answers
1ProblemIs this a real, urgent, expensive problem?
2SolutionDoes your product actually solve it?
3MarketIs the prize big enough to matter?
4ProductDoes it work, and is it differentiated?
5Business ModelHow do you make money, and is it recurring?
6TractionIs there evidence the market wants this?
7Unit EconomicsDoes each customer make you money?
8CompetitionWhy won't a better-funded rival crush you?
9TeamAre these the people who can pull it off?
10The AskHow much, and what does it buy?

The order can flex — many founders move Trac­tion ear­li­er when it’s strong — but the log­ic is fixed. Each slide builds on the last. A weak slide does­n’t just fail on its own; it under­mines every slide after it, because the investor stops trust­ing the argu­ment.

Let’s go through the ones that decide SaaS rounds.

The Problem Slide: Make It Expensive

The most com­mon mis­take on a prob­lem slide is describ­ing an incon­ve­nience and hop­ing the investor reads it as a cri­sis. “Teams strug­gle to coor­di­nate” is an incon­ve­nience. “Mid-mar­ket finance teams spend 40 hours a month rec­on­cil­ing data across six sys­tems, and errors cost the aver­age com­pa­ny six fig­ures a year” is a prob­lem some­one will pay to make dis­ap­pear.

The best prob­lem slides quan­ti­fy the pain. They attach a dol­lar fig­ure or a time fig­ure to the sta­tus quo, because that num­ber becomes the ceil­ing on what your cus­tomer will pay you. If the prob­lem costs your cus­tomer $100,000 a year and your prod­uct costs $20,000, you’ve framed a 5× return before you’ve described a sin­gle fea­ture.

For a SaaS com­pa­ny, tie the prob­lem to a work­flow your buy­er already owns a bud­get for. Investors fund painkillers, not vit­a­mins, and the fastest way to prove you’re a painkiller is to show the line item the cus­tomer is already spend­ing mon­ey on to cope.

The Market Slide: Where Founders Lie to Themselves

The mar­ket slide is where the most pitch deck exam­ples go wrong, and where investors are most skep­ti­cal, because it’s the slide founders most often inflate. The clas­sic error is the top-down Total Address­able Mar­ket (TAM) claim: “The glob­al soft­ware mar­ket is $700 bil­lion, and if we cap­ture just 1%, that’s a $7 bil­lion busi­ness.” Every investor has seen this slide a thou­sand times, and the “just 1%” fram­ing is a tell that you haven’t thought hard about who actu­al­ly buys.

The cred­i­ble ver­sion builds the mar­ket from the bot­tom up. Take your Ide­al Cus­tomer Pro­file (ICP), count how many com­pa­nies match it, mul­ti­ply by what each would real­is­ti­cal­ly pay per year, and you have a Ser­vice­able Obtain­able Mar­ket (SOM) you can defend in a fol­low-up ques­tion.

Here’s the con­trast on a worked exam­ple. Sup­pose you sell to mid-mar­ket B2B finance teams.

ApproachCalculationResult
Top-down (weak)$700B software market × 1%$7B "opportunity"
Bottom-up (strong)40,000 target companies × $25,000 ACV$1B serviceable market

The bot­tom-up num­ber is small­er, and that’s exact­ly why it’s more cred­i­ble. An investor would rather fund a defen­si­ble $1 bil­lion mar­ket than a hand-waved $7 bil­lion one, because the $1 bil­lion num­ber sur­vives the ques­tions that fol­low it. If you want to go deep­er on siz­ing the prize cor­rect­ly, I’ve writ­ten sep­a­rate­ly about how to cal­cu­late TAM and how to present it clean­ly on TAM slides.

Use the stan­dard three-lay­er fram­ing — Total Address­able Mar­ket (TAM), Ser­vice­able Address­able Mar­ket (SAM), and Ser­vice­able Obtain­able Mar­ket (SOM) — but lead with the SOM. The investor cares most about the mar­ket you can real­is­ti­cal­ly win in the next few years, not the the­o­ret­i­cal uni­verse.

Three nested rings showing a focused obtainable market within a larger field

The Business Model Slide: Recurring Beats Everything

For a SaaS com­pa­ny, the busi­ness mod­el slide does heav­ier lift­ing than most founders real­ize, because it’s where you estab­lish the sin­gle most valu­able prop­er­ty your rev­enue can have: that it’s con­trac­tu­al­ly recur­ring.

Con­trac­tu­al­ly recur­ring rev­enue earns the high­est val­u­a­tion mul­ti­ples in soft­ware, and the rea­son is sim­ple — it’s pre­dictable and it’s legal­ly oblig­at­ed. A buy­er pay­ing $200,000 a year on a mul­ti-year con­tract is worth far more to an acquir­er than a cus­tomer who might or might not place anoth­er order next quar­ter. When you present your mod­el, make the recur­ring per­cent­age explic­it. “92% of rev­enue is annu­al recur­ring con­tracts; 8% is one-time onboard­ing” tells an investor your rev­enue base is durable.

This is also the slide where you state your pric­ing motion clear­ly — per-seat, usage-based, tiered, or a hybrid. Investors don’t need you to have the per­fect pric­ing mod­el yet; they need to see that you under­stand the trade-offs. If you want a deep­er treat­ment of the options, I’ve bro­ken down the major SaaS pric­ing mod­els and how each one affects expan­sion rev­enue.

The mis­take to avoid: bury­ing a pile of non-recur­ring rev­enue inside an “ARR” claim. If you’re count­ing imple­men­ta­tion fees, pro­fes­sion­al ser­vices, or can­cellable month-to-month deals as Annu­al Recur­ring Rev­enue (ARR), a com­pe­tent investor will find it in dili­gence and dis­count every­thing else you said. Annu­al­ize only rev­enue that gen­uine­ly recurs.

The Traction Slide: The One That Closes Rounds

If you have trac­tion, this is the slide that rais­es the mon­ey. Num­bers per­suade where nar­ra­tive can­not, and a clean growth chart does more for your cred­i­bil­i­ty than any oth­er sin­gle slide in the deck.

The strongest trac­tion slides among real pitch deck exam­ples show a met­ric that’s going up and to the right, on a clear­ly labeled axis, with no gaps that invite ques­tions. For SaaS, the head­line met­ric is almost always Month­ly Recur­ring Rev­enue (MRR) or ARR over time. A con­sis­tent month-over-month growth curve is the most fund­able image you can put in front of an investor.

But raw growth isn’t enough — the investor imme­di­ate­ly asks what kind of growth. Growth from new cus­tomers is good. Growth from your exist­ing base expand­ing is bet­ter, because it proves the prod­uct gets stick­i­er and more valu­able over time. That’s why Net Rev­enue Reten­tion (NRR) belongs on or near your trac­tion slide.

NRR mea­sures how much rev­enue you keep and grow from exist­ing cus­tomers, before count­ing any new ones:

NRR = (Start­ing MRR + Expan­sion MRR − Con­trac­tion MRR − Churned MRR) / Start­ing MRR × 100%

Here’s why investors fix­ate on it. Con­sid­er a com­pa­ny that starts a peri­od with $1,000,000 in MRR from its exist­ing base. Over the next twelve months that base expands by $250,000 (upsells and seat addi­tions), con­tracts by $50,000 (down­grades), and churns away $80,000 (can­cel­la­tions).

NRR = (1,000,000 + 250,000 − 50,000 − 80,000) / 1,000,000 × 100% = 112%

An NRR of 112% means that even if this com­pa­ny acquired zero new cus­tomers, its rev­enue would still grow 12% a year on its own. That’s the prop­er­ty investors pay a pre­mi­um for, because it means the busi­ness com­pounds with­out burn­ing acqui­si­tion dol­lars. Any­thing above 100% sig­nals the base is grow­ing; below 100% sig­nals decay you have to out­run with new sales. For a full bench­mark table, see my break­down of what NRR is in SaaS.

NRRWhat an Investor Reads
< 90%Leaky bucket — you're losing ground
90–100%Stable, but no growth from the base
100–110%Healthy — the base grows on its own
110–130%Strong — expansion engine working
> 130%Elite — significant upsell motion

The Unit Economics Slide: Where SaaS Decks Are Won

This is the slide gener­ic pitch deck exam­ples almost always skip, and it’s the one that sep­a­rates a fund­able SaaS com­pa­ny from a hope­ful one. You can nev­er out­grow bad unit eco­nom­ics — they define the ceil­ing on how big your busi­ness can get. So an investor will look hard at whether each cus­tomer actu­al­ly makes you mon­ey.

Two num­bers car­ry this slide: the ratio of Cus­tomer Life­time Val­ue (LTV) to Cus­tomer Acqui­si­tion Cost (CAC), and the CAC pay­back peri­od.

LTV is the total gross prof­it you earn from a cus­tomer over their life­time:

LTV = ARPA × Gross Mar­gin % × Aver­age Cus­tomer Lifes­pan

where ARPA is Aver­age Rev­enue Per Account and aver­age lifes­pan is 1 divid­ed by your month­ly churn rate.

CAC is the ful­ly loaded cost of acquir­ing a cus­tomer:

CAC = Total Sales & Mar­ket­ing Spend / Num­ber of New Cus­tomers Acquired

Let’s run a real­is­tic exam­ple for a mid-mar­ket SaaS com­pa­ny. Say your ARPA is $1,000 per month, your gross mar­gin is 80%, and your month­ly cus­tomer churn is 2%, which means the aver­age cus­tomer stays 1 / 0.02 = 50 months.

LTV = $1,000 × 0.80 × 50 = $40,000

Now sup­pose you spent $600,000 on sales and mar­ket­ing last quar­ter and acquired 40 new cus­tomers:

CAC = $600,000 / 40 = $15,000

LTV/CAC = $40,000 / $15,000 = 2.7×

That 2.7× is just below the healthy bench­mark of 3.0×, which tells an hon­est investor you’re close but should either lift reten­tion or sharp­en acqui­si­tion effi­cien­cy before pour­ing in cap­i­tal. Show­ing this math — and show­ing that you know you’re at 2.7× rather than pre­tend­ing you’re at 5× — builds more trust than a rosier num­ber you can’t defend.

The com­pan­ion met­ric is CAC pay­back, which answers how fast you recov­er the cost of land­ing a cus­tomer:

CAC Pay­back Peri­od = CAC / (ARPA × Gross Mar­gin %)

CAC Pay­back = $15,000 / ($1,000 × 0.80) = $15,000 / $800 = 18.75 months

Just under 19 months sits at the edge of the “accept­able if reten­tion is strong” band. Here’s the bench­mark grid investors car­ry in their heads:

MetricWeakHealthyStrong
LTV/CAC< 2.0×3.0×> 3.0×
CAC Payback> 24 months12–18 months< 12 months
Gross Margin< 60%70–80%> 80%
NRR< 100%100–110%> 110%

One more dis­ci­pline that ele­vates this slide: present unit eco­nom­ics by seg­ment, not just com­pa­ny-wide. In prac­tice, there are almost always sig­nif­i­cant vari­ances between seg­ments — one chan­nel or ver­ti­cal qui­et­ly sub­si­dizes a mon­ey-los­ing one, and the blend­ed num­ber hides it. An investor who sees you’ve seg­ment­ed your LTV/CAC by acqui­si­tion chan­nel knows you under­stand your own busi­ness at the lev­el they do. If you want the full mechan­ics, I’ve writ­ten a deep­er guide on SaaS unit eco­nom­ics and a focused walk­through of cal­cu­lat­ing LTV for SaaS.

The Rule of 40 Slide: The One-Sentence Filter

If your com­pa­ny is at any mean­ing­ful scale, there’s one com­pos­ite met­ric worth its own slide or at least a promi­nent call­out: the Rule of 40. It’s the sin­gle-sen­tence fil­ter investors use to gauge whether you’re bal­anc­ing growth and prof­itabil­i­ty well.

Rule of 40 = Rev­enue Growth Rate (%) + EBITDA Mar­gin (%)

If the sum is 40% or high­er, you pass. The ele­gance is that it does­n’t care how you get there — you can be a high-growth, cash-burn­ing com­pa­ny or a slow­er-growth, prof­itable one, as long as the com­bi­na­tion clears the bar.

Growth RateEBITDA MarginSumPass?
50%−10%40%Yes
30%10%40%Yes
15%25%40%Yes
20%10%30%No

If you pass the Rule of 40, say so in your first sen­tence on the slide — it’s a strong sig­nal and an investor will lean in. If you don’t, don’t hide it; show which lever you’re pulling to get there. For the full treat­ment, see my guide to the Rule of 40.

The Competition Slide: Prove You’re Hard to Copy

Investors don’t fund com­pa­nies that are easy to repli­cate. The com­pe­ti­tion slide isn’t about claim­ing you have no com­peti­tors — that claim reads as naïve, since every real mar­ket has incum­bents and sub­sti­tutes. It’s about prov­ing you have a durable advan­tage that a bet­ter-fund­ed rival can’t sim­ply buy their way past.

The sharpest test I know is this: could a com­pe­tent team repli­cate your busi­ness with $10 mil­lion in cap­i­tal and two years of effort? If the answer is yes, you don’t yet have a real com­pet­i­tive advan­tage, and your val­u­a­tion will reflect it. The strongest SaaS moats come from becom­ing a sys­tem of record — the place where your cus­tomer’s crit­i­cal data and work­flows live, such that switch­ing away is gen­uine­ly painful. That stick­i­ness shows up lat­er as the high NRR on your trac­tion slide, which is why the slides rein­force each oth­er.

A use­ful com­pe­ti­tion slide maps you against alter­na­tives on the two dimen­sions that mat­ter most for your buy­er, and lands you in a cor­ner nobody else occu­pies. Avoid the fea­ture-check­list matrix where you’ve con­ve­nient­ly cho­sen the rows you win — investors see through it. For more on build­ing defen­si­bil­i­ty, I’ve writ­ten about build­ing a moat and mar­ket dif­fer­en­ti­a­tion.

The Team Slide: Reduce the Perceived Risk

The team slide answers a ques­tion investors rarely ask out loud: what’s the chance these spe­cif­ic peo­ple fail to exe­cute? Risk is the gap between the fore­cast in your deck and what actu­al­ly hap­pens, and the team is one of the largest sources of that gap in an ear­ly-stage com­pa­ny.

So this slide should reduce per­ceived risk, not just list résumés. The strongest ver­sion con­nects each founder’s back­ground direct­ly to why this team is unusu­al­ly like­ly to win this mar­ket — domain exper­tise, a pri­or exit in the space, a tech­ni­cal edge that’s hard to hire for. “We’ve spent ten years inside the exact work­flow we’re now automat­ing” de-risks the bet far more than a logo parade of past employ­ers.

For SaaS specif­i­cal­ly, investors are also read­ing for whether the founder can make the tran­si­tion from intu­itive builder to sys­tem­at­ic oper­a­tor as the com­pa­ny scales. You don’t have to solve that on a slide, but sig­nal­ing that you under­stand the dif­fer­ence — and that you’re build­ing a team that fills your gaps — is reas­sur­ing. I’ve writ­ten more on the founder-to-CEO skill gap for those nav­i­gat­ing it.

The Ask Slide: Be Specific About What the Money Buys

The final slide states how much you’re rais­ing and, cru­cial­ly, what it buys. A vague ask (“rais­ing $5M to grow the busi­ness”) sig­nals you haven’t thought through the plan. A spe­cif­ic one (“rais­ing $5M to extend run­way 24 months, reach $10M ARR, and hit the met­rics that sup­port a Series B”) sig­nals you know exact­ly what mile­stones this cap­i­tal is meant to unlock.

Tie the ask to the met­rics else­where in your deck. If your unit eco­nom­ics slide showed an LTV/CAC of 2.7×, your use-of-funds might include the reten­tion invest­ment that lifts it past 3.0×. That con­nec­tion — mon­ey in, spe­cif­ic met­ric out — is what a dis­ci­plined investor wants to see, because it shows you treat cap­i­tal as a tool to move num­bers, not just fuel to burn. As a sales motion matures, rais­ing cap­i­tal increas­ing­ly becomes a cap­i­tal-allo­ca­tion ques­tion rather than a growth-hope ques­tion.

A Side-by-Side: Weak Slide vs. Strong Slide

To make the dif­fer­ence con­crete, here’s how the same three slides read in their weak and strong ver­sions:

SlideWeak VersionStrong Version
Problem"Coordination is hard for teams.""Finance teams lose 40 hrs/month to manual reconciliation, costing six figures a year."
Market"$700B market — we'll take 1%.""40,000 target accounts × $25K ACV = $1B SOM."
Unit Economics(omitted)"LTV/CAC 2.7×, payback 18.75 months, NRR 112% — here's the path to 3.0×."

The strong ver­sions aren’t bet­ter designed. They’re bet­ter argued, backed by num­bers an investor can ver­i­fy. That’s the les­son the famous pitch deck exam­ples can’t teach you by their lay­out alone — the per­sua­sion lives in the evi­dence, not the aes­thet­ics.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many slides should a pitch deck have?

Most effec­tive decks run 10 to 15 slides for the main pre­sen­ta­tion. The famous pitch deck exam­ples that cir­cu­late — Airbn­b’s, for instance — are often around ten slides, and even insti­tu­tion­al ref­er­ences like the NVCA pitch deck tem­plate keep the core nar­ra­tive tight. The dis­ci­pline mat­ters more than the exact count: each slide should answer one investor ques­tion and earn its place. A longer appen­dix with detailed finan­cials, cohort data, and unit-eco­nom­ics break­downs is fine and expect­ed; it just should­n’t clut­ter the core nar­ra­tive.

What’s the single most important slide in a SaaS pitch deck?

For an ear­ly-stage SaaS com­pa­ny with trac­tion, it’s the trac­tion or unit-eco­nom­ics slide — the one that proves the busi­ness works mechan­i­cal­ly. Investors fund evi­dence over nar­ra­tive. A clean MRR growth chart paired with a defen­si­ble LTV/CAC ratio does more to close a round than any oth­er slide. If you have no trac­tion yet, the team and mar­ket slides car­ry more weight, because the investor is bet­ting on your abil­i­ty to cre­ate the evi­dence.

Should I copy a famous pitch deck template?

Use famous decks to learn slide types and the log­ic of the sequence, but don’t copy their struc­ture slide-for-slide. A con­sumer mar­ket­place deck answers dif­fer­ent ques­tions than a B2B SaaS deck. Bor­row the vocab­u­lary; build the argu­ment your own data can defend. The worst out­come is a beau­ti­ful­ly designed deck telling a sto­ry your num­bers don’t sup­port — that gets exposed in dili­gence.

What financial metrics do investors expect to see?

For SaaS, expect to show MRR or ARR growth, Net Rev­enue Reten­tion (NRR), gross mar­gin, LTV/CAC ratio, and CAC pay­back peri­od at min­i­mum. At scale, add the Rule of 40. Investors will men­tal­ly run these cal­cu­la­tions while you present, so the num­bers must be inter­nal­ly con­sis­tent — if your stat­ed ARR does­n’t square with your MRR growth chart, you lose cred­i­bil­i­ty instant­ly.

How do I size my market without inflating it?

Build it bot­tom-up. Count the com­pa­nies that match your Ide­al Cus­tomer Pro­file, mul­ti­ply by a real­is­tic annu­al con­tract val­ue, and present that as your Ser­vice­able Obtain­able Mar­ket. Lead with that defen­si­ble num­ber rather than a top-down “1% of a huge mar­ket” claim. A cred­i­ble $1 bil­lion mar­ket beats a hand-waved $7 bil­lion one every time, because the small­er num­ber sur­vives the fol­low-up ques­tions.

The Bottom Line

The best way to use pitch deck exam­ples is to stop study­ing their design and start study­ing their argu­ment. Every slide is a claim, and for a SaaS com­pa­ny the strongest claims are numer­i­cal: a defen­si­ble mar­ket built bot­tom-up, recur­ring rev­enue you can prove, trac­tion that’s going up and to the right, and unit eco­nom­ics that show each cus­tomer makes you mon­ey. Get those right, and the deck prac­ti­cal­ly writes itself — because you’re no longer dec­o­rat­ing slides, you’re pre­sent­ing evi­dence.

Build the argu­ment your data can defend, show the math before the investor has to ask for it, and let the num­bers do the per­suad­ing. That’s what sep­a­rates a deck that gets a polite “keep us post­ed” from one that gets a term sheet.


Relat­ed Read­ing:

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author avatar
Vic­tor Cheng
Author of Extreme Rev­enue Growth, Exec­u­tive coach, inde­pen­dent board mem­ber, and investor in SaaS com­pa­nies.

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