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Learnexamplessaas-pre-seed

SaaS pre-seed example

What investors expect from an early-stage B2B SaaS pitch.

Context

Stage
Pre-seed
Business model
B2B SaaS
Typical raise
$250K - $1M
Instrument
SAFE

At pre-seed, you are selling a bet on the team and the problem. Product-market fit is not expected. Investors are looking for founders who deeply understand a real problem and have the skills to solve it.

Investor mindset

Pre-seed investors know most things will change. They are not evaluating your business plan. They are evaluating:

Problem depth

Do you understand the problem better than anyone else?

Founder-market fit

Why are you the right person to solve this problem?

Execution signals

Have you done anything to validate demand? Waitlist, interviews, pilots?

Coachability

Are you open to feedback and iteration?

Slide-by-slide requirements

Problem

Critical

Evidence needed: Personal experience or customer discovery interviews (10-20 minimum)

Must show you deeply understand the pain. First-hand experience is strongest.

Solution

Critical

Evidence needed: Clear product vision, mockups or early prototype

Focus on the core value proposition. Avoid feature lists.

Market

Important

Evidence needed: Bottom-up TAM calculation, specific target segment

Niche is good at pre-seed. Show you know exactly who you are building for.

Traction

Important

Evidence needed: Waitlist, LOIs, pilot customers, or strong engagement signals

What works at pre-seed

  • Personal story - Show why this problem matters to you
  • Customer quotes - Direct evidence of pain from interviews
  • Specific target - "HR managers at 50-200 person companies" beats "SMBs"
  • Waitlist or LOIs - Any signal of demand before product
  • Clear milestones - What will you prove with this money?

Common mistakes

  • Overbuilt financial projections

    5-year revenue forecasts are fiction at pre-seed. Focus on use of funds.

  • Feature-focused solution

    Listing features instead of explaining the core value proposition.

  • Massive TAM claims

    "The global HR software market is $50B" says nothing useful.

  • No competition slide

    "No direct competitors" is a red flag, not a strength.

  • Vague ask

    "We are raising $500K-$1M" shows you have not done the math.

SaaS-specific considerations

Metrics that matter (even early)

  • Waitlist size and conversion rate
  • Pilot customer engagement (if any)
  • Customer interview count
  • Time from first contact to pilot commitment

Pricing at pre-seed

You do not need final pricing, but show you understand the value. "We plan to charge $X/seat based on conversations with Y customers" is credible.

Technical differentiation

If you have technical moat (AI, data, integrations), explain it simply. Avoid jargon. Focus on customer benefit.

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Related guides

Pre-seed stage guideSaaS pitch deck guideProblem slide guideTeam slide guideInvestor perspective
Back to ExamplesNext: Marketplace Seed
On this page
  • Context
  • Investor mindset
  • Slide requirements
  • What works
  • Common mistakes
  • SaaS specifics
  • Build with Pitchkit
  • Related guides

Revenue not expected. Demand signals matter more.

Team

Critical

Evidence needed: Relevant experience, founder-market fit, complementary skills

This is often the deciding factor at pre-seed. Why you?

Competition

Moderate

Evidence needed: Honest competitive landscape, clear differentiation

Show awareness, not dismissiveness. Explain your wedge.

Business Model

Moderate

Evidence needed: Pricing hypothesis, target customer segment

Directional is fine. Show you have thought about monetization.

Financials

Low

Evidence needed: Use of funds, 18-month runway calculation

Detailed projections not expected. Focus on capital efficiency.

Ask

Critical

Evidence needed: Specific amount, clear use of funds, milestone targets

Typically $250K-$1M. Know your runway and next milestones.