Investors Spend 90 Seconds on Your Pitch Deck. Here’s How to Win – Carl Fudge
Investors spend 90 seconds on your pitch deck. Most founders waste the first 30. So how do you grab their attention fast? And what separates the startups that raise millions from the ones investors dismiss in the first 30 seconds?
In this episode of Insight Out, I sit down with Carl Fudge, founder of Presentation Mode, to break down the anatomy of pitch decks that raise capital. Carl combines psychology, strategy, and design, drawing from experience at McKinsey, IDEO, and venture-backed startups to help founders cut through investor noise.
Carl explains why most founders misunderstand storytelling. A pitch is not a fairy tale. It’s an argument. Investors are reviewing hundreds of opportunities and funding only a few, so founders must present a compelling case backed by both narrative and evidence.
We explore why the first three slides can determine whether an investor keeps reading, why traction should never be buried deep in the deck, and how frameworks like Insight–Tension–Action transform scattered information into a persuasive story.
Carl also discusses the role of visual design in storytelling, the credibility signals investors look for, and how domain expertise strengthens a founder’s narrative.
From Spotify’s origin story to Apple’s iconic marketing philosophy, Carl shares vivid examples of what makes ideas stick.
If you’re raising capital or trying to communicate a bold idea, this conversation will change how you think about pitching your vision.
In this episode, we discuss:
-
[00:00] Introduction to Carl Fudge
-
[02:07] Story as argument, not fairy tale
-
[08:37] The lightbulb moment: becoming “the pitch deck guy”
-
[11:15] The Friday night email that changed everything
-
[18:37] Why the first three slides decide your fate
-
[22:05] Different types of hooks and how to choose the right one
-
[24:47] The personal story hook (and the promotion that wasn’t)
-
[28:01] The insight/fact hook (and playing to FOMO)
-
[31:13] The shift hook (AI and security)
-
[39:30] Threading emotion without becoming fluffy
-
[40:48] Why facts alone fail (the telephone game)
-
[45:28] The three-step process for crafting story
-
[49:02] Spotify case study
-
[53:24] The Tesla/PayPal mafia effect
-
[57:30] The role of design in storytelling
-
[01:02:00] Presentation Mode: what they do and how to work with them
-
[01:04:16] Closing remarks
Notable Quotes
-
[02:18] “Out of every 100 pitch decks an investor sees, maybe one or two get funded.” – Carl
-
[18:56] “ An investor’s kind of only looking at a deck for about 90 seconds. So you just don’t have that much time.” – Carl
-
[19:03] “ What absolutely must be true is that you have found a way to capture their attention In that first 30 seconds.” – Carl
-
[19:26] “ I don’t think you can necessarily win a pitch in the first three slides, but I think you can sure as hell lose one.” – Carl
-
[38:30] “ You don’t have to agree with the conclusion. But as a founder, your job is to lay out your point of view unequivocally to to leave no room for doubt” – Carl
-
[57:55] “ Design doesn’t matter as much as story. However, I would also say that design is highly fundamental to elevating stories” – Carl
Resources and Links
Carl Fudge
-
Website: https://www.presentationmode.co/
-
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/carl-fudge-storytelling
Billy Samoa Saleebey
-
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/billysamoa/
-
Email: billy@podify.com and saleebey@gmail.com
Insight Out
-
Website: https://www.insightoutshow.com/