1) Feedback - you'll get feedback whiplash. Some investors will give you some advice. Others will give the opposite...
If it's just once, feel free to ignore.
Other entrepreneurs who are pitching will also brag, so don't sell yourself short.
Figure out what that 1-2 things are and lead with that. That captures attention right away. Investors tend to lose interest.
This may "sound" like it went well, but you really have no idea.
You can use a deck or not, but make sure it is a conversation. It's as much about you learning about the investor as them learning about you.
YOU need to drive the conversation to hit all your points even if an investor makes it wander. That is YOUR job as a founder.
If you didn't get to talk about cust acq -- that's on YOU.
Obv each is a slightly diff pitch with differing amnts of detail.
But that's impt to figure out. Use whatever time you have wisely.
VCs tend to look for ROI -- max ROI possible, not just positive ROI. & FAST growth.
Angels also want strong ROI but some ppl may be more mission oriented.
Find the right fit. A ding doesn't mean you have a bad biz. It means a bad investor-fit.
It takes a while to fill the holes in your story. And to find the right investor.
It unfort just takes a LOT of mtgs.