I will write a persuasive business plan and pitch deck copy for investors
About this gig
I will write a persuasive, investor-ready business plan and matching pitch deck copy that turns your idea into a fundable story — clear numbers, sharp narrative, zero filler.
What you get
- A complete written business plan in editable Google Docs and Word (.docx) format, structured for investor and lender review.
- Pitch deck copy (slide-by-slide text) you can drop into PowerPoint, Google Slides, Keynote, or hand to a designer — headlines, body copy, and speaker notes for each slide.
- An executive summary written to stand on its own, because it is the page most investors actually read.
- A problem and solution narrative that frames your market pain and why your offering wins.
- Market opportunity sections: target customer, market size framing (TAM/SAM/SOM language using your figures), and competitive positioning.
- Business model and revenue explanation: how you make money, pricing logic, and unit economics described in plain language.
- Go-to-market and traction sections that translate your progress into momentum a reader can believe.
- A team section that positions founders and key hires as the right people to execute.
- Narrative framing for your financial projections — I write the story and assumptions around the numbers (the financial model spreadsheet itself is not included unless we agree otherwise).
- A funding ask and use-of-funds section that states what you need and exactly how it will be deployed.
- An appendix outline and risk/mitigation framing where relevant.
- Clean, consistent, professional tone throughout, free of jargon and padding.
Plans
| Feature | Basic | Standard | Premium |
|---|---|---|---|
| Executive summary | Included | Included | Included |
| Full written business plan | Condensed (core sections) | Full-length, all sections | Full-length, all sections |
| Pitch deck copy | Outline only | 10-12 slides | 12-15 slides + speaker notes |
| Market & competitor positioning | Light | Detailed | Detailed + narrative depth |
| Use-of-funds / funding ask | Included | Included | Included |
| Financial assumptions narrative | Basic | Standard | In-depth |
| Revision rounds | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| Delivery formats | Docs + Word | Docs + Word | Docs + Word + slide-ready text |
| Kickoff call available | No | Optional | Yes |
How it works
- You place the order and share your brief. I send a short questionnaire covering your concept, target customers, business model, traction, team, financial figures, and how much you're raising and why.
- We align on scope. I confirm which sections matter most for your audience — whether you're approaching angel investors, a VC, a bank, a grant committee, or an accelerator — and flag anything I need before I start.
- I draft the executive summary and plan structure first. You get an early look at the spine of the document so we lock the narrative direction before I build out every section.
- I write the full plan and pitch deck copy. Each section is written to be specific to your business, using your real numbers and positioning rather than generic templates.
- You review and request revisions. I incorporate your feedback within the revision rounds in your plan, refining tone, emphasis, and detail.
- I deliver the final files in editable formats so you, your co-founders, or your designer can update them anytime.
Why choose this
This is copywriting built specifically for raising money and earning a yes. A business plan is not a formality to file away — it is a persuasion document, and most plans fail because they read like a list of facts instead of a reason to invest. I write to the decision the reader has to make: is this worth their capital, their risk, and their attention?
I keep the writing honest. I will not invent traction, inflate a market, or promise hockey-stick growth your assumptions can't support, because experienced investors see through that instantly and it costs you credibility. Instead I make your real strengths land harder and frame your gaps as managed risks rather than red flags.
I also write the plan and the deck as one coherent story. Too often the document and the slides contradict each other — different numbers, different positioning, a different headline message. When the same narrative runs through both, your pitch feels deliberate and trustworthy, and you can present from the deck while the plan backs up every claim.
Finally, you get editable files you actually own. Funding rounds move; numbers change; you'll iterate. Everything is delivered in formats you can update yourself without coming back for every small tweak.
Who it's for / use cases
- First-time founders who have a strong idea but need it shaped into the language investors expect.
- Startups raising a pre-seed, seed, or angel round who need a plan and deck copy that match.
- Small business owners applying for a bank loan, line of credit, or SBA-style financing that requires a formal plan.
- Applicants to accelerators, incubators, and pitch competitions who need a polished written narrative on a deadline.
- Founders seeking grants or non-dilutive funding where a clear, structured plan is mandatory.
- Immigration and visa applicants (such as business or startup visa categories) who need a credible, well-organized business plan as supporting documentation.
- Existing businesses pivoting or launching a new line that need to re-articulate the opportunity to stakeholders.
- Anyone with a finished financial model but weak written story who needs the narrative and copy to carry the numbers.
FAQ
Q: Do you create the financial model or spreadsheet with projections? I write the narrative, assumptions, and use-of-funds around your numbers, and I'll structure the financial section clearly. The actual spreadsheet model with formulas is not included by default — if you need one built, message me first so we can scope it.
Q: I don't have all my numbers yet. Can you still help? Yes. I'll work with what you have and flag where estimates or placeholders are needed. I can guide you on what figures investors typically expect, but I won't fabricate data — the financial decisions stay yours.
Q: Will you design the actual slides? I deliver the pitch deck copy — every headline, body line, and speaker note, slide by slide. You or a designer drop it into your template. I focus on the words that persuade, not the visual design.
Q: How long does it take? Turnaround depends on the tier and complexity, and I confirm a delivery date with you before starting. Sharing a complete brief up front is the single biggest factor in getting it back quickly.
Q: Can you write for a specific audience, like a bank versus a VC? Absolutely. A lender wants repayment confidence and stability; a VC wants scale and upside. Tell me your audience and I'll tune the emphasis, structure, and tone accordingly.
Q: Is my information kept confidential? Yes. Your idea, figures, and documents stay private. I'm happy to work under an NDA if you provide one.
Q: What do you need from me to start? Your completed questionnaire: the concept, target market, business model, any traction, team background, available financials, and your funding goal. The more specific you are, the more specific and persuasive the writing will be.
Q: What if the draft isn't quite right? That's what the revision rounds are for. Send focused feedback and I'll refine the narrative, emphasis, and detail until it reflects your business and reads the way you want it to.
Reviews★4.8(4)
- @hana7★★★★★5
He nailed the tone for investors, the executive summary alone was worth it and the slide-by-slide copy flowed perfectly. Will definitely come back for our next round.
- @finn_writes★★★★★5
Turned my messy notes into a clean, convincing plan and tightened every slide of the deck. Couldn't be happier.
- @ninafx★★★★★5
The business plan he wrote was incredibly persuasive and the pitch deck copy made our value proposition finally click. Investors actually told us the deck read like it was written by someone who understood our market.
- @noracodes★★★★★4
Solid pitch deck copy and a well-structured plan, though I had to ask for a couple of tweaks on the financial narrative before it felt right. Once revised it was exactly what I needed.