Pitching - using a deck or not?
Robin P.
6 replies
Applies to both pitching to investors or a sales pitch. What do you prefer, using a deck to pitch or go more freestyle opening up a dialogue?
Replies
Benson Gao@bensongao
The presentation is meant to highlight key points, clarify thoughts, and deliver a strong response to others.
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I prefer not using slides and just having an authentic conversation, but a few simple visuals on cards or a whiteboard can help clarify key points. The goal is to connect with the audience, not just present at them. Though in more formal settings, a minimal, well-designed deck can add polish and keep things on track. Depends on the context and your presentation style. What matters most is knowing your stuff cold and adapting to the audience!
It really depends on the situation, but I find decks are most useful when pitching something complex that benefits from visuals, data, or a structured narrative. When it's more of an informal chat about an early idea, a deck can feel too rigid and formal. The key is reading the room and adapting your approach to your audience. And of course, practice makes perfect when it comes to pitching, with or without a deck!
I prefer using a deck for pitches. It helps keep the convo focused and provides visuals to drive key points home. That said, know your stuff cold so you're not just reading the slides and can adapt on the fly. But yeah, deck > no deck imo for most pitches. Thoughts?
@amandanicoleharris My approach is typically focused on getting the counterparty to interact and I feel like it's easiest without a deck especially in a first call where it's a mutual qualification call in a sense. With a deck it quickly becomes a monologue because the counterparty becomes the "audience" and presentation fatigues is a real thing. That said, I'd always have the presentation ready either for supportive visual clarification or in the rare case when they insist on seeing a presentation.