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LearnBy business modelMarketplace

Marketplace pitch deck guide

How to build a compelling pitch for two-sided platforms. Liquidity, network effects, and what investors scrutinize.

What changes for marketplaces

Marketplaces are fundamentally different from other business models. You are building two businesses at once, and the value comes from the network, not the product alone.

Chicken-and-egg problem is real

You need supply to attract demand, and demand to attract supply. Investors want to see you have cracked this.

Liquidity is everything

A marketplace without liquidity is just a listing site. Show that matches happen consistently.

Network effects create moats

The more participants, the more valuable the platform. Show how your network effects compound.

Take rate defines business

Your cut of each transaction determines unit economics. It must be defensible and fair.

Metrics that matter

Marketplace investors evaluate different metrics than SaaS. Know these and be ready to discuss them.

GMV

Gross Merchandise Value. Total value of transactions on your platform.

Monthly GMV, growth rate, and seasonality patterns.

Take rate

Your percentage of GMV. This is your actual revenue.

10-30% for services, 5-15% for goods, varies by vertical.

Liquidity rate

Percentage of listings that result in transactions. Measures marketplace efficiency.

Match rate, time to first match, conversion funnel.

Supply/demand balance

Ratio of supply to demand. Imbalances hurt liquidity.

Active supply, demand searches, match success rate.

Repeat rate by side

How often buyers and sellers return. Retention differs by side.

Supply retention, demand frequency, cross-side referrals.

CAC by side

Cost to acquire supply vs demand. Often very different.

Blended CAC, channel breakdown, organic vs paid mix.

Slides under extra scrutiny

Marketplace investors focus heavily on these slides. Make them bulletproof.

Traction slide

This is where marketplace decks are judged. Investors need to see:

  • GMV trajectory and growth rate
  • Liquidity metrics: time to first match, match rate
  • Supply-side retention and activity
  • Demand-side frequency and NPS
Traction slide guide
Go-to-market slide

How you acquire both sides is critical:

Marketplace pitch deck structure

Use this structure as your base. Each slide should answer: "Is this becoming the default place for X to happen?"

Executive summary

Slide 1

What the marketplace is, for whom, and current GMV/liquidity metrics.

Problem

Slide 2

What friction exists in current matching? Manual work, low transparency, high fees.

Solution

Slide 3

Your core promise: better matching, price discovery, access, or speed.

Product

Slide 4

How suppliers onboard, how buyers browse/book, trust and safety mechanisms.

Market

Slide 5

The vertical, segments on both sides, fragmentation or lack of dominant player.

Competition

Slide 6

Status quo, direct/indirect competitors, your defensible wedge.

Traction

Slide 7

GMV, liquidity rate, supply retention, demand frequency. Even early traction matters.

Common marketplace deck mistakes

No liquidity metrics

User signups mean nothing if they are not transacting. Show match rates and transaction velocity.

Unclear who pays whom

Business model must be crystal clear. Take rate from which side? What triggers payment?

"Build it and they will come"

Launching a marketplace requires aggressive GTM on both sides. No growth plan = no investment.

Treating demand like SaaS

Marketplace demand is often episodic, trust-based, or seasonal. Retention metrics must reflect this.

Ignoring disintermediation risk

What stops users from going direct after the first match? Address this explicitly.

Real example snippets

Problem slide - good
"Over 60% of local pet service providers rely on Facebook groups and text messages for scheduling. Pet owners have no price transparency or trust guarantees."
Traction slide - good
"Monthly GMV grew 3x in last quarter. Average time to first booking: 12 minutes. 45% of demand users return within 7 days. 78% supply-side 90-day retention."
GTM slide - good
"Supply acquired via direct outreach + referral from booked providers. Demand via SEO ('dog walking in [city]') with 12% conversion from visit to booking."

How Pitchkit helps marketplace founders

Pitchkit helps you focus your narrative around what investors expect in marketplace businesses:

Slide guidance on liquidity, GMV, and acquisition loops
Templates for match rates, user retention, CAC by side
Investor lens that flags weak network effects arguments
Two-sided business model prompts
Build your marketplace pitch deck

Related guides

All business model guidesSeed stage pitch deckTraction slide guideHow investors read decks
On this page
  • What changes for marketplaces
  • Metrics that matter
  • Slides under extra scrutiny
  • Marketplace pitch deck structure
  • Common marketplace deck mistakes
  • Real example snippets
  • How Pitchkit helps marketplace founders
  • Related guides
  • Supply acquisition: outbound, partnerships, referrals
  • Demand acquisition: SEO, paid, integrations
  • Which side you lead with and why
  • How the initial flywheel starts
  • Go-to-market slide guide
    Competition slide

    Marketplaces are often winner-take-most. Show your edge:

    • Status quo: offline, legacy, fragmented
    • Direct and indirect competitors
    • Your wedge: location, niche, UX, trust
    • Why you will not be outspent by incumbents
    Competition slide guide

    Go to market

    Slide 8

    How you acquire each side cheaply and scalably. Break down supply vs demand.

    Business model

    Slide 9

    Take rate, subscription, transaction + add-ons. Margins, payout cycles, pricing defensibility.

    Team

    Slide 10

    Experience in supply/demand ops, vertical credibility, marketplace building experience.

    Ask

    Slide 11

    How much funding, what it unlocks: supply growth, liquidity milestone, demand expansion.