How to Read a Crowdfunding Pitch Deck Like a Skeptic (Not a Sucker)
2026 m. birželio 17 d.
A crowdfunding pitch deck is not a love letter. It’s a sales tool. And if you read it like a skeptic—not a sucker—you’ll save yourself from bad investments.
Here’s how to dissect a pitch deck like a pro.
Slide 1: The Problem (Is It Real?)
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What to look for: A clear, specific problem that affects a defined audience.
- Bad example: "People need better ways to connect." (Vague, generic, meaningless.)
- Good example: "Small farmers lose 30% of their crops due to poor storage. Our solution cuts that loss to 5%."
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Red flag: If the problem is too broad or hard to quantify, the solution probably is too.
Slide 2: The Solution (Does It Work?)
- What to look for:
- Proof it works. (Pilot data? Customer testimonials? Revenue?)
- Simplicity. If you can’t explain it in one sentence, neither can they.
- Red flag: Words like "disruptive," "revolutionary," or "first of its kind" without evidence.
Slide 3: The Market (Is It Big Enough?)
- What to look for:
- Total Addressable Market (TAM): Is it realistic? (A 10B euro market for a niche product is a red flag.)
- Competition: If they say "no competitors," they’re lying or clueless.
- Red flag: No named competitors or overly optimistic market size.
Slide 4: The Business Model (How Do They Make Money?)
- What to look for:
- Revenue streams: Subscriptions? One-time sales? Ads?
- Margins: Are they profitable or just growing?
- Red flag: "We’ll figure it out later."
Slide 5: The Team (Can They Execute?)
- What to look for:
- Relevant experience. (A fintech founder with no finance background is a red flag.)
- Skin in the game. Are the founders investing their own money?
- Red flag: All advisors, no operators. (Who’s actually doing the work?)
Slide 6: The Ask (Is It Reasonable?)
- What to look for:
- Funding goal: Is it realistic for their stage?
- Use of funds: Where’s the money going? (Marketing? Product? Salaries?)
- Red flag: Vague allocations like "growth" or "scaling."
Slide 7: The Traction (Do They Have Any?)
- What to look for:
- Revenue? (Even small amounts are a good sign.)
- Users/customers? (Are they paying or just "engaged"?)
- Red flag: No traction beyond "we launched last month."
The Skeptic’s Checklist
Before investing, ask:
- Is the problem real and urgent?
- Is the solution simple and proven?
- Is the market big but not oversaturated?
- Is the business model clear and profitable?
- Does the team have the skills to execute?
- Is the ask reasonable and transparent?
If any of these are "no," walk away.
Final Thought:
A good pitch deck answers questions. A bad one raises them. Be the investor who demands answers.