7 Pitch Deck Mistakes Indian Founders Make (And How to Fix Them)
Indian founders are building some of the most interesting startups in the world. But many of them are killing their fundraising before the conversation even begins — with pitch decks that confuse, overwhelm, or bore investors.
Here are the seven most common mistakes, drawn from watching hundreds of decks.
1. Starting with the company, not the problem
Most decks open with "We are [Company Name], a [category] startup." Nobody cares yet.
Fix: Open with one sentence that makes the investor feel the problem. "Every year, 80,000 Indian workers die in workplace accidents that could have been prevented with better safety data." Now they're listening.
2. The solution slide is a product tour
Founders go straight into feature lists — "Our platform has X, Y, Z, and an AI-powered dashboard."
Fix: Your solution slide should answer one question: how does your thing make the problem go away? One sentence. One visual. No feature bullets until much later.
3. No clear business model
"We'll monetize later" or burying the revenue model on slide 11.
Fix: Slide 4 or 5. Clearly state: who pays, how much, and why they keep paying. Indian SaaS pricing is usually ₹X/seat/month or ₹Y/month flat. Say it plainly.
4. TAM numbers that nobody believes
Founders write "Our TAM is ₹50,000 crore" — calculated by multiplying everyone in India by some average spend. Investors roll their eyes.
Fix: Use a bottom-up approach. "There are 3 million SMEs in India spending ₹2,000/month on manual accounting. That's ₹720 crore in our direct addressable market." Credible and specific beats huge and vague.