pitchhero.co

(Free template inside—no email hoops, just help)


Last Thursday night I got a WhatsApp from Tom, a London founder I’d met once at a meet-up:

Tom: “Mate, investor loved my elevator pitch in the lift at Level39. Asked for a deck by Monday. I’ve got… zero slides.”

We jumped on a video call. Tom looked fried—hoodie, empty mug, toddler toys in the background. Very human, very real. He read me the pitch that had hooked the investor:

“City retailers lose £2 bn a year to last-mile delivery failures. We cut that by half.”

Thirty seconds of gold. Trouble is, you can’t email an elevator. You need a deck—fast—and you need to stand up with it, even faster.

Step 1 – Stretch the spark

I asked Tom to breathe, then write his one-liner across the top of a blank slide deck. Under it we pencilled five sticky notes:

  1. Problem – the £2 bn pain.
  2. Solution – his clever routing API.
  3. Benefit – happier customers, lower costs.
  4. Proof – pilot data from three shops in Soho.
  5. Ask – £1.2 m for 18 months.

That’s the spine. We built the rest around it with my FREE Pitch Deck Template (grab it here—direct link, no forms).


Step 2 – Pick the right coaching lane

Tom thought “coaching” meant generic pep-talks. I broke down Pitch Hero’s six tracks:

  • Investor Presentation Coaching – his obvious fit: deck, narrative, brutal finance Q&A.
  • Pitch Deck Creation – From content strategy to slide design
  • Start-Up Pitch Coaching – Demo Day drills for first-time founders.
  • Executive Coaching & Media Training – TV lights, board squabbles, crisis calls.
  • Conference Speaker & Panel Prep – making subject-matter geeks shine on stage.
  • Pitch Training for Companies – getting whole teams to sing the same song.

“Investor track, please,” Tom said. “But can we borrow some media tricks? I babble when I’m nervous.” Done.

Step 3 – Make it breathe

We swapped rainbow charts for one clean graph, ditched jargon, kept two fonts and three colours. White space became our friend; clutter got the boot.

Suddenly Tom saw his own idea—clear, sharp, fundable.

Step 4 – Rehearse without the bravado

Friday night we practised in ten-minute bursts between his toddler’s bedtime stories. I threw curve-balls:

  • “What if Amazon builds this tomorrow?”
  • “Why isn’t Royal Mail doing it already?”

Tom learned to pause, smile, and steer back to the slide that answered the fear. His shoulders dropped; his sentences shortened. Confidence isn’t loud—it’s settled.

The Monday meeting

Tom went in with eleven slides, a quiet grin, and our breathing routine in his pocket. He rang me afterwards:

“Alan, they’re drafting the term sheet. Said the deck told the story and the rehearsal showed I can run the ship.”

That’s the bit people forget: slides open doors, but the human behind them seals the deal.

Your turn

  1. Download the free template—same one Tom used.
  2. Map your five sticky notes onto it tonight.
  3. Need a second pair of eyes? Book a FREE 20-min Deck Audit; 
  4. Choose your lane if you want deeper coaching—investor, sales, media, keynote, or team.

You already have the spark. 

Let’s stretch it into a deck—and a story—that moves real humans to say “yes.”

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