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Pitch Deck Storyteller

Craft a compelling narrative arc for your investor pitch deck that hooks, convinces, and closes.

A custom GPT by @strategistai for business & entrepreneurship tasks. Available in the ChatGPT GPT Store with a Plus, Team, or Enterprise subscription.

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Pitch Deck Storyteller is a custom GPT built by @strategistai for craft a compelling narrative arc for your investor pitch deck that hooks, convinces, and closes. It is available in the ChatGPT GPT Store under the Business & Entrepreneurship category and requires a ChatGPT Plus subscription to access.

About this GPT

Pitch Deck Storyteller is part of the Business & Entrepreneurship category in OpenAI's GPT Store. Custom GPTs are specialized versions of ChatGPT that have been configured with specific instructions, knowledge bases, and capabilities by their creators. This GPT was designed by @strategistai to help users with craft a compelling narrative arc for your investor pitch deck that hooks, convinces, and closes.

Unlike prompting a general-purpose ChatGPT, this GPT comes pre-configured with the context, tone, and expertise needed for business & entrepreneurship-related tasks. This means you spend less time explaining what you need and more time getting useful results.

To use this GPT, you need an active ChatGPT Plus ($20/month), Team, or Enterprise subscription. Once subscribed, you can find it by searching for "Pitch Deck Storyteller" in the GPT Store or browsing the Business & Entrepreneurship category.

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Business & EntrepreneurshipBy @strategistaiChatGPT GPT Store

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FAQ

Common questions about Pitch Deck Storyteller and how to use it effectively.

01

What if my startup does not fit the classic 'hero's journey' story arc?

Not every company has a dramatic origin story, and the GPT does not force one where it does not exist. It works with what you have — a boring-but-important industry insight, a technical breakthrough that emerged from years of research, or a market gap nobody else noticed. The narrative structure flexes to fit the raw material rather than stretching the material to fit a Hollywood template. A deep industry insight can be just as compelling as a founder's personal struggle if it is framed to show why you saw what others missed.

02

How does it handle the competitive landscape slide without sounding defensive?

It frames competition as validation of the market rather than a threat to your existence. The GPT helps you build a competition slide that says 'look how big this opportunity is, and here is the specific wedge where we win' instead of 'here is why everyone else is terrible.' It structures the slide as a positioning map with axes that favour your strengths, plus a feature-comparison grid that highlights what you do uniquely well without trashing competitors in ways that make investors question your judgment.

03

Can it help me practise the actual verbal delivery, not just the slides?

Yes — it can generate speaker notes for each slide with pacing cues, transition phrases, and emphasis markers. It also writes multiple versions of each talking point: a 30-second version, a 2-minute version, and a detailed version, so you can adapt your delivery on the fly depending on investor engagement. For the most critical slides, it suggests the precise emotional tone to aim for — matter-of-fact for the problem slide, restrained excitement for the traction slide, calm confidence for the ask.

04

What if my business model is genuinely complicated — does it simplify or obscure?

It simplifies for communication without obscuring the truth. The trick is layering: the main slide shows a clean, intuitive visual of how money flows, while the appendix holds the detailed unit economics for investors who ask deeper questions. The GPT helps you find the 'first-order explanation' that is accurate enough to be honest and simple enough to be understood in 30 seconds. Complicated does not mean confusing, and the GPT polishes until the complexity feels elegant rather than overwhelming.

05

How does it handle the team slide — beyond just listing logos of past employers?

It pushes you to answer the only question investors care about on the team slide: why are these specific people uniquely qualified to win this specific market? Past employers only matter if they connect to relevant expertise. The GPT helps you frame each founder as the answer to a specific business risk — the technical co-founder derisks execution, the industry-veteran co-founder derisks distribution, the repeat founder derisks fundraising. It tells a capability story, not a CV dump.

06

Can it craft different versions of the deck for different lengths — 5-minute pitch vs. 30-minute meeting?

It builds a modular deck structure where each section has a 'core slide' with the essential point and optional 'expansion slides' for deeper dives. The 5-minute version uses only the core slides; the 30-minute version includes all expansions. It also suggests which slides to cut if the investor interrupts with questions and you need to skip ahead while still landing the key points.

07

Does it help with data visualisation advice for charts and graphs in the deck?

It will not draw the chart for you, but it gives specific visualisation guidance: which chart type suits which message, what labels and annotations the slide needs to be self-explanatory, and which data points to highlight with colour or callouts. It also flags common chart sins — truncated axes that exaggerate growth, pie charts with indistinguishable segments, dual-axis charts where the scales are cherry-picked. The advice is practical enough that a non-designer can execute it in PowerPoint or Google Slides.

08

What is the single most common pitch deck mistake it catches?

Starting with the product instead of the problem. The GPT relentlessly pushes the problem slide to the front and insists it be framed in the customer's words, not the founder's. A deck that opens with 'our AI-powered platform uses NLP to...' has already lost the room; a deck that opens with 'small business owners spend 12 hours a week on manual invoicing' has the room leaning forward. The GPT restructures decks around this insight automatically.