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Competition slide in a pitch deck

What it is, why it matters, and how to write it so investors trust you know the game you're playing.

Last updated: 2025-10-08

What is the competition slide?

The competition slide shouldn't be just a grid with vague variables. It's where you show investors you understand the market you're entering and why you have a real shot at winning.

Your job is to:

  • Map the competitive landscape (not just logos)
  • Show your actual edge - what you do better
  • Prove that your advantage is hard to copy (defensible over time)
  • Clarify your positioning in the market

Skip this, and investors assume you don't know what you're up against or that you're naive.

What investors look for

These are the exact criteria Pitchkit uses to evaluate your competition slide:

  1. Competitive landscape awareness - Who else is solving this problem? Be honest.
  2. Clear competitive advantage - What are you doing differently or better: feature, price, channel, model?
  3. Sustainable competitive advantage - Is that edge defensible? Will it last when others notice?
  4. Clear market positioning - Are you the premium tool, the fast one, the budget option, or the all-in-one?

Investors don't need you to kill every competitor. They need to believe you've carved a wedge.

Good vs. bad examples

✅Strong
"We're entering a $4B category dominated by legacy tools built pre-AI. Our wedge is API-first automation for growth teams. Competitors focus on enterprise; we win speed + self-serve."
  • Shows awareness of market
  • Clear point of entry
  • Real moat: API + self-serve
❌Weak
"No real competitors. We're the only ones doing this."
  • Never true
  • Red flag for lack of research
  • Makes you sound delusional

Common mistakes

  • Fake 2x2s: Slapping logos on a chart with you in the top-right doesn't prove anything.
  • Saying you have no competition: That just tells investors you didn't look hard enough.
  • Listing features instead of positioning: "We're faster and cheaper" isn't a strategy.

Best practices

  • Acknowledge strengths in others: It builds credibility.
  • Focus on what you don't do: Great positioning is as much about what you're avoiding.
  • Use language like an analyst: "We win in XYZ scenarios" > "Our tool is better."

Your slide should show you've studied the market and chosen your battles wisely.

How Pitchkit helps

Pitchkit's competition slide builder helps you:

  • Map key players with more than just logos
  • Articulate your unique and defensible edge
  • Position clearly in the minds of investors
  • Avoid the most common founder mistakes

You'll also get investor lens feedback: If they'd question your moat, you'll see it before you send the deck.

FAQs

Do / Don’t

Do

  • Map categories and buyer segments precisely.
  • Explain where you win and where you intentionally don’t play.
  • Back claims with brief proof (speed metrics, CAC edge, data access).

Don’t

  • Say “no competitors”.
  • Use fake 2×2 charts with made‑up axes.
  • Claim “better, faster, cheaper” without mechanism.

Related links

Market slideGo-to-market slideTeam slidePitch deck examples by industry
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On this page
  • What is it
  • What investors look for
  • Good vs bad examples
  • Common mistakes
  • Best practices
  • How Pitchkit helps
  • FAQs
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