This skill should be used when the user asks about "pitch deck", "fundraising story", "investor pitch", "VC narrative", "pitch narrative", "fundraising deck", "pitch structure", "Sequoia format", "why now slide", "market size slide", "TAM SAM SOM", "earned secret", "value hypothesis", "product-market fit", "founder-market fit", or discusses how to tell their company story to investors. Provides first-principles guidance for crafting compelling VC fundraising narratives.
This skill provides first-principles guidance for crafting compelling fundraising narratives that resonate with venture capitalists, grounded in frameworks from Sequoia, a16z, Benchmark, Floodgate, NFX, and YC.
"The money flows as a function of the story." -- Don Valentine, Sequoia Capital
The narrative is not decoration on top of the business -- it IS the business case. Every element of a pitch must serve the narrative arc, and the story must be retellable in 30 seconds by a VC champion to their partnership.
Your pitch narrative = your business case. Ben Horowitz: "The company story IS the company strategy." If your VC champion can't retell your story in 30 seconds to their partners, you won't get funded.
The most differentiating element: a non-obvious, non-consensus insight earned through direct experience. Peter Thiel: "What important truth do very few people agree with you on?" Mike Maples: The key word is -- discovered through experimentation, not read in a report.
Mike Maples' Three Slides: The minimum viable pitch: (1) What you do, (2) Your non-obvious insight, (3) Proof validating the insight.
Every great pitch answers why this moment is uniquely suited. Must be a specific inflection point, not a gradual trend. Three categories: technology shifts, regulatory changes, behavioral/cultural shifts.
Concrete inflection examples: Uber (smartphones + GPS + mobile payments converging), telehealth (post-COVID regulation change). Use the pattern: "In January 2024, API costs dropped 90%, making our solution profitable for the first time."
Andy Rachleff: "The only way you can succeed is if you serve someone who's desperate." Show desperate customers and organic pull before discussing scaling. The cardinal sin: testing growth before proving value.
Rachleff's Law: "When a great team meets a lousy market, market wins. The #1 company-killer is lack of market." Counterintuitive insight: "You don't iterate on the what, you iterate on the who." If your value hypothesis isn't working, change the target audience, not the feature set.
Frame the narrative so the customer is transformed by your solution. You are the mentor (Gandalf, Obi-Wan), not the protagonist. Stories activate more brain areas than facts, triggering trust (oxytocin).
The Adapted Hero's Journey for Pitches:
Bottom-up credibility + top-down ambition. Best founders show how they expand the market, not just capture share. Avoid the "1% of China" fallacy. Present both top-down and bottom-up.
Sequoia values "clarity of thinking" over beautiful slides. The Heading Test: slide headings alone should tell the complete story. Paul Graham: "Convince yourself first, then explain clearly using plain language."
NFX: "Use a number in 100% of your sentences." Replace vague claims with specific metrics. 10%+ MoM growth for 6+ months signals Series A readiness.
Optimize not for the partner meeting you attend, but for the IC meeting you don't. Include clear investment thesis on slide 1 (3-8 bullet points). Address risks proactively to arm your champion.
Mark Suster: "Lines, Not Dots." Monthly updates create the line investors extrapolate from. Start VC relationships 12+ months before raising.
| Stage | Core Question | Focus | Evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Seed | "Is this worth exploring?" | Earned secret + inflection | Founder-market fit |
| Seed | "Does this idea work?" | Problem severity + unique insight | Early users, qualitative signals |
| Series A | "Does this business work?" | PMF + unit economics | 6+ months of 10%+ MoM growth |
| Series B | "How big can this get?" | Scalable ops + category leadership | Proven economics, expansion |
| Growth | "Will this be the winner?" | Market dominance + excellence | Revenue scale, moats |
Every VC decision is shaped by two forces. The best pitches create both simultaneously:
Conviction ("This could be a fund-returner"):
Urgency ("I can't afford to miss this"):
The balance: Conviction without urgency creates admiration but no action. Urgency without conviction feels like pressure. The best pitches combine genuine belief in an enormous outcome with a legitimate reason to decide now.
| Narrative Beat | Builds Conviction | Creates Urgency |
|---|---|---|
| Hook | A striking data point about market size or growth | A shift or trend that signals timing matters |
| Problem | The scale of unmet demand (how many people suffer) | What happens if this problem goes unsolved |
| Earned Secret | "We see something nobody else sees" | "Others are starting to figure this out" |
| Why Now | The inflection makes the opportunity dramatically larger | First-mover advantage has a window |
| Traction | Growth trajectory that looks like the early days of breakout companies | Momentum is accelerating -- the business is working now |
| The Ask | "This capital will unlock [massive milestone]" | "We have a clear timeline for this process" |
Warning: Manufactured urgency without substance backfires permanently. Artificial scarcity, fabricated interest, or dishonest process signals will destroy your reputation. The urgency must be authentic: genuine traction acceleration, genuine investor interest, genuine market timing. VCs talk to each other constantly -- dishonesty spreads through the network within hours.
This skill produces stronger outcomes when combined with structured thinking frameworks from the thinking-skills plugin:
| Framework | Application to Fundraising Narratives |
|---|---|
| First Principles | Decompose the earned secret to fundamental, irreducible truths |
| Systems Thinking | Map the problem ecosystem to show interconnected pain points |
| Jobs to Be Done | Frame the VC's investment decision -- what "job" are they hiring this investment for? |
| Feedback Loops | Identify and narrate the business flywheel that creates compounding defensibility |
| Second-Order Thinking | Trace cascading effects of the "Why Now" inflection beyond the obvious |
| Leverage Points | Identify where narrative emphasis has maximum impact on investor conviction |
When these frameworks are available, apply them naturally within the narrative construction process rather than as separate analytical steps.