Pitch Components
Business Model

Explain who pays, how much they pay, and how the business makes money.

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What it is

In a spoken pitch, the business model section answers a simple question: how do you make money? It should explain who pays, how much they pay, and how often they pay. Michael Seibel advises founders to own a simple business model instead of listing multiple monetization options. In live delivery, this matters even more. If the audience cannot repeat your model back after one sentence, it is still too muddy.

Before & after

Before

We plan to monetize through a combination of SaaS subscriptions, marketplace fees, enterprise licensing, and potentially advertising once we reach scale.

After

Teams pay $49/seat/month. Average contract is 12 seats, or $7,000 ARR per customer. Our gross margin is 82% and LTV:CAC is 4.2x. We sell bottom-up: developers adopt the free tier, then their team lead upgrades.

When you’ll use it

Presenting the business model slide in a pitch deck

Answering 'How do you make money?' from an investor

Explaining your pricing strategy to a potential partner

Justifying unit economics in a Series A diligence process

Comparing your model to analogous successful companies

Pro tip

One model, one sentence. If the listener cannot repeat it back, simplify again.

Questions & answers

2 questions

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Practice sessions

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Audio examples

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Audio Examples

Listen to clear demonstrations of business model with before/after examples and guided explanations.

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