By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Home
  • News
  • Technology
  • Games
  • Review
Reading: Pitch Deck Teardown: StudentFinance’s $41M Series A deck
Share
Notification Show More
Latest News
Pitch Deck Teardown: StudentFinance’s $41M Series A deck
March 16, 2023
Everything you need to get caught up on the SVB crisis
March 16, 2023
Leak shows unannounced Sony XM5 earbuds from the inside and out
March 16, 2023
Artifact co-founder Kevin Systrom on the SVB crisis, its further impacts and future of tech
March 16, 2023
‘The Goliath is Amazon’: after 100 years, Barnes & Noble wants to go back to its indie roots
March 16, 2023
Home
Search
  • News
  • Technology
  • Games
  • Review
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
News /

Pitch Deck Teardown: StudentFinance’s $41M Series A deck

Published March 16, 2023
Last updated: 2023/03/16 at 11:03 AM
Share

There’s no shortage of “upskilling” startups out there, but it’s rare to see one raise a $41 million round. That’s what Spanish startup StudentFinance pulled off a couple of weeks ago. Today, we are taking a closer look at the pitch deck the company used to make that happen.

Contents
Slides in this deckThree things to loveClear, bold missionA clearly formulated problem spacePromising early metrics

We’re looking for more unique pitch decks to tear down, so if you want to submit your own, here’s how you can do that. 

Slides in this deck

StudentFinance shared a slightly redacted slide deck; it removed sensitive revenue, cost and unit economics slides. Everything else is as pitched.

Cover slide
Mission slide
Opportunity slide
Problem slide
Solution slide
Value proposition slide part 1
Value proposition slide part 2
Business model slide
Technology slide
 Metrics slide
 Road map slide (labeled “expansion” slide)
 Geographic expansion slide (labeled “expansion” slide)
 Growth history and trajectory slice (labeled “expansion” slide)
 Team slide
 Contact slide

Three things to love

To raise a $41 million round, a company needs solid traction and a huge market. I’m unsurprised to see that those parts of the story, in particular, were very well covered.

Clear, bold mission

[Slide 2] Off to a solid start. Image Credits: StudentFinance (opens in a new window)

Company-building is future-building, and being able to have a clear vision for the future is a crucial part of that. StudentFinance’s second pitch deck slide sets the tone for what’s about to come: It’s a BHAG, as it’s called in the industry —a big, hairy, audacious goal. StudentFinance has great clarity about what they are building and who they are building it for, and it really helps investors co-dream with the founders.

This slide invites investors to join the journey, something all startups should do when pitching. What is the big goal, the big change you want to see in the world? Bring that to life, and you’ve made a great first impression.

A clearly formulated problem space

[Slide 4] Gotta love a clear problem. Image Credits: StudentFinance

The company goes from a great mission to discussing what the opportunity looks like. From there, it moves on to this slide, talking about the three big problems getting in the way of a global, comprehensive approach to upskilling. Having a clear, well-articulated problem statement goes a long way toward helping an investor get a feeling for how big, how serious and how urgent the problem is. Ideally, it should also hint at how prevalent the problem is (i.e., how many people are experiencing it).

Breaking down the problem into three easy-to-grasp segments like this is particularly elegant. Funding is an obvious one‚ people are worried about money — but finding jobs and getting career guidance are less obvious slices of this challenge at first glance. Bringing it to life by using the short example questions underneath helps humanize the problem. All very well done.

Promising early metrics

For a company raising more than $40 million, I would have expected pretty beefy metrics. Of course, I have nothing to benchmark it against, so I don’t know if these metrics are actually good or great, but the investors must have seen something. The win here, though, is identifying and reporting on metrics that seem key to the company:

[Slide 10] Metrics, metrics, metrics. Image Credits: StudentFinance

Some crucial numbers are missing here, and in any other circumstance, I would give the founders a hard time.

You can tell a lot from a company’s metrics — both the KPIs themselves, of course, but also the figures that a company believes are key to its growth. StudentFinance overlaps these metrics on the UN sustainable development goals, which is a great way to signal how it can be a force for good in the world. Again, elegantly done.

The number of people reskilled and the value of tuition fees are both crucial numbers (although I can’t figure out what ISA stands for, so perhaps there’s an opportunity for a tweak there). Job creation, salary generation and finding that half of the folks who go through the program land jobs are all key indicators that make a lot of sense.

Some crucial numbers are missing here, and in any other circumstance, I would give the founders a hard time, but the team already let me know that “sensitive revenue, cost and unit economics slides” had been removed — and those are exactly the type of metrics that I would like to see here.

In the rest of this teardown, we’ll take a look at three things StudentFinance could have improved or done differently, along with its full pitch deck!

Pitch Deck Teardown: StudentFinance’s $41M Series A deck by Haje Jan Kamps originally published on TechCrunch

You Might Also Like

Everything you need to get caught up on the SVB crisis

Leak shows unannounced Sony XM5 earbuds from the inside and out

Artifact co-founder Kevin Systrom on the SVB crisis, its further impacts and future of tech

‘The Goliath is Amazon’: after 100 years, Barnes & Noble wants to go back to its indie roots

Cast AI raises $20M to help companies reduce cloud spend

March 16, 2023
Share
Previous Article Everything you need to get caught up on the SVB crisis
Keyboard Apps Suited for Android Devices
Technology
MGCOOL Explorer 2, built-in gyroscope to achieve image stabilization
Technology

© Giplay News Network. All Rights Reserved.

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?