Activate when a founder needs to draft an investor update email, prepare a board meeting deck, or write a quarterly business review. This includes prompts like "write my monthly investor update," "prepare for our board meeting," "draft a quarterly recap," or "how do I communicate bad news to the board." Also activate for fundraising decks where market and vision framing is needed.
Context Required
From startup-context: company stage, fundraising history, board composition, key metrics (MRR, burn, runway, headcount), current strategic priorities, and previous update cadence.
From the user: reporting period, key wins and losses, metric changes, specific topics requiring board input or approval, any sensitive issues to address, and whether this is an email update or a slide deck.
Workflow
Determine format and cadence — Monthly email update (standard for seed/Series A, under 800 words), quarterly board deck (Series A onward, 20-30 slides, sent as pre-read 48 hours ahead), monthly condensed deck (8-12 slides), or ad-hoc update (one page, one topic, sent immediately for material events). Default to monthly email for early-stage.
関連 Skill
Collect the 11 sections — Walk through each section of the framework below. Each section has a designated C-suite owner. For each, apply the "Headline - Data - Narrative - Ask/Next" structure.
Lead with the headline — Write a 1-3 sentence executive summary that captures the single most important takeaway. Boards see 10+ decks per quarter. Surface key messages by slide three. Some investors read only the summary.
Apply the bad-news protocol — If any section contains negative developments, use the transparent delivery framework. Never bury bad news. Boards find out eventually. Finding out late makes it worse.
Add specific asks — Every update ends with concrete, actionable requests. Name the person if possible. Investors who cannot help you cannot add value.
Format for scanability — Investors spend 3-5 minutes on updates. Bold key numbers, use tables for metrics, keep paragraphs to 2-3 sentences. Cap metrics dashboards at 6-8 KPIs with targets and status.
Output Format
For email updates, output as markdown ready to paste into email. For board decks, output as structured markdown with one H3 per slide.
The 11-Section Framework
#
Section
Owner
What to Include
1
Executive Summary
CEO
Three sentences: current state, major event, next direction
2
Key Metrics Dashboard
COO
6-8 KPIs in table format with targets and status indicators
3
Financial Update
CFO
P&L summary, cash runway, burn multiple trends, plan variances
4
Revenue & Pipeline
CRO
ARR waterfall, NRR, pipeline stages, top deals with confidence levels
5
Product Update
CPO
Shipped features, upcoming work, user impact evidence, PMF signals
6
Growth & Marketing
CMO
CAC by channel, pipeline contribution, channel testing results
7
Engineering & Technical
CTO
Velocity trends, tech debt ratio, uptime, security status
8
Team & People
CHRO
Headcount vs plan, hiring pipeline, attrition, engagement scores
9
Risk & Security
CISO
Security controls status, compliance deadlines, incidents, top 3 risks
10
Strategic Outlook
CEO
Next quarter priorities ranked, board decisions needed, specific asks
11
Appendix
—
Detailed financials, full pipeline, retention charts, headcount breakdown
Every section follows: Headline - Data - Narrative - Ask/Next.
Frameworks & Best Practices
The Four-Act Narrative Structure
Apply this to every section, especially when explaining variances:
Prior targets — what we said we would do
Current reality — what actually happened
Gap explanation — why (owned cause, not excuses)
Remediation — specific fixes with timeline
This structure works for both positive and negative scenarios.
Transparent Bad-News Delivery
State the fact plainly. "We missed our Q3 revenue target by 22%." No euphemisms.
Own the cause. "Two enterprise deals worth $180K ARR slipped to Q4 due to procurement delays we did not anticipate." Do not lead with context or excuses.
Demonstrate understanding. Show the analysis that explains the root cause.
Present specific fixes. "We implemented procurement-tracking in our sales process and added 30 days of buffer to enterprise deal timelines."
Update the forecast. "Revised Q4 target is $X." Include confidence levels, not single-point estimates: "High confidence $2.6M, upside to $2.9M if two late-stage deals close."
Ask for help if needed. "A warm intro to their CFO would accelerate procurement."
Investors forgive bad quarters. They do not forgive founders who hide problems until they become crises.
Metrics Presentation Rules
Always show trends. Current vs. prior period vs. plan. A single number is meaningless.
Use consistent timeframes. Do not mix monthly and annualized numbers in the same table.
Highlight variance. Bold any metric that deviates more than 10% from plan in either direction.
Include unit economics. CAC, LTV, and payback period tell the story top-line revenue cannot.
Show runway in months, not dollars. "14 months at current burn" is more actionable than "$2.1M in the bank."
Revenue forecasts need confidence levels. Never present a single-point estimate.
Provide one-sentence explanations for every variance from targets.
Cadence Guidelines
Format
When
Length
Distribution
Monthly email
Seed through Series A
Under 800 words
First week of following month
Quarterly board deck
Series A onward
20-30 slides
Pre-read 48 hours before meeting
Monthly condensed deck
Any stage
8-12 slides
Metrics, financials, pipeline, risks
Ad-hoc update
Material events
1 page, 1 topic
Immediately
Fundraising deck
Pre-raise
Market/vision focus
Closing ask structure
Common Mistakes
Excessive length — keep quarterly decks under 25-30 slides
Metrics without targets — every number needs a comparison point
No narrative — data without story is noise
Buried bad news — surface it in the first three slides
Vague asks — "any intros would be great" vs. "intro to VP Ops at Stripe"
Unexplained variances — every miss needs a one-sentence explanation
Stale appendix — update supporting data every cycle
Deck designed for reading, not presenting — slides should support conversation, not replace it
Sending updates only when things go well — creates suspicion during quiet periods
All narrative, no data — makes it impossible to track progress over time
Related Skills
process-docs — chain to create an SOP for the internal board-update preparation process, ensuring consistent quality each cycle.
pitch-deck — chain when the board update reveals a need to begin fundraising or when the update doubles as a re-up deck for existing investors.
Examples
Example 1: Monthly investor email
User: "Write my February investor update. MRR hit $85K (up from $72K), we hired a VP Engineering, but we lost our largest customer."
Good output excerpt:
TL;DR: February MRR grew 18% to $85K driven by strong mid-market expansion, but we lost Acme Corp ($12K/mo) due to budget restructuring outside our control. We hired Sarah Chen as VP Engineering (ex-Stripe). Net: ahead on product velocity, slightly behind on net revenue retention. 14 months runway remaining.
Key Metrics
Metric
Feb
Jan
vs. Plan
MRR
$85K
$72K
+3%
Net New ARR
$156K
$120K
+8%
Gross Churn
$12K
$2K
-$10K
Burn
$110K
$105K
On plan
Runway
14 mo
15 mo
On plan
On the churn: Acme Corp's new CFO cut all software contracts under $50K ARR during a company-wide cost reduction. We had 30 days notice and attempted a reduced plan; they declined. This was not a product failure, but it exposes revenue concentration risk — Acme was 14% of MRR. We are diversifying our top-10 account exposure.
Asks
Intros to mid-market fintech companies — specifically VP Operations or Head of Compliance contacts.
Referrals for a Senior Backend Engineer. JD attached.
Example 2: Communicating a major miss
User: "We're going to miss our quarterly target by a lot. Help me write this update."
Good output approach: Open with the miss stated plainly in the executive summary. Quantify the gap. Explain root cause in 2-3 sentences using owned language, not excuses. Follow immediately with the remediation plan including timeline and revised forecast with confidence levels. Close with specific asks for help. Never let bad news be the last thing the reader sees — always end with forward momentum and concrete next steps.