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fundraising-narrative

guia-matthieu
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This skill helps founders craft compelling fundraising narratives using proven structures from top investors and founders. It assists in developing stories for pitch decks, investor meetings, cold outreach, and pivots. Developers can use it to build tools that guide founders through creating persuasive capital-raising narratives.

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/plugin add https://github.com/guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills
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在 Claude Code 中复制并粘贴此命令以安装该技能

技能文档

Fundraising Narrative

Craft the story that makes investors say "I want in." Master the narrative structure that Reid Hoffman, Sequoia, and top founders use to raise capital.

When to Use This Skill

  • Preparing to fundraise to develop your story before the deck
  • Investor meetings to structure conversations that convert
  • Pitch practice to refine your narrative arc
  • Cold outreach to write compelling investor emails
  • Pivoting to reframe your story after a change
  • Demo Day to create a memorable 2-minute pitch

Methodology Foundation

AspectDetails
SourceReid Hoffman (LinkedIn/Greylock), Sequoia Capital, YC partner advice
Core Principle"Investors don't fund companies—they fund narratives about the future they believe in. Your story must be inevitable and urgent."
Why This MattersData alone doesn't convince. Investors see hundreds of decks with good metrics. The story is what makes them remember you and want to be part of your future.

What Claude Does vs What You Decide

Claude DoesYou Decide
Structures production workflowFinal creative direction
Suggests technical approachesEquipment and tool choices
Creates templates and checklistsQuality standards
Identifies best practicesBrand/voice decisions
Generates script outlinesFinal script approval

What This Skill Does

  1. Structures your narrative - Beginning, middle, end that builds belief
  2. Identifies your unique angle - What makes your story different
  3. Creates urgency - Why now, why this matters
  4. Addresses skepticism - Pre-empts investor concerns
  5. Builds emotional connection - Makes investors feel something
  6. Differentiates from competitors - Positions you as the winner

How to Use

Build Your Fundraising Narrative

Help me build my fundraising narrative:
Company: [description]
Stage: [Pre-seed/Seed/A]
Key metrics: [if any]
What's unique: [your insight/advantage]

Prepare for Investor Meeting

I have an investor meeting with [firm/person].
Here's my company: [description]
Help me structure the conversation and prepare for tough questions.

Write Investor Cold Email

Write a cold email to [investor type] for my startup:
[Company description]
Why they specifically would be interested: [reason]

Instructions

Step 1: Understand the Narrative Structure

## The Fundraising Narrative Arc

### The Classic Structure

**Act 1: The Setup (Problem + Insight)**
"The world is like THIS... but there's a hidden truth..."

**Act 2: The Solution (Your Company)**
"We discovered/built THIS... and it works..."

**Act 3: The Future (Vision + Ask)**
"This leads to THIS future... and here's how to get there..."

### The Core Elements

1. **The Insight** - What do you know that others don't?
2. **The Inevitability** - Why is this future certain?
3. **The Urgency** - Why must this happen now?
4. **The Why You** - Why are you the ones to do this?
5. **The Opportunity** - How big is this if it works?

### Reid Hoffman's Formula

"I believe the world is moving toward [thesis].
The evidence is [proof points].
Most people don't see this because [hidden truth].
We're positioned to capture this because [unfair advantage].
If we're right, the prize is [huge outcome]."

Step 2: Develop Your Insight

## Finding Your Insight

### What Makes a Good Insight

| Strong Insight | Weak Insight |
|----------------|--------------|
| Non-obvious truth | Common wisdom |
| Based on evidence | Based on hope |
| Actionable | Merely interesting |
| Creates advantage | Doesn't explain why you win |

### Insight Sources

**1. Market Insight:**
"We see a shift happening that others don't..."
Example: "Enterprise software buyers now demand consumer-grade UX"

**2. Technology Insight:**
"New technology makes X possible for the first time..."
Example: "AI can now generate code at production quality"

**3. Behavioral Insight:**
"Customers behave differently than people assume..."
Example: "Gen Z doesn't want to own—they want access"

**4. Timing Insight:**
"Now is the moment because..."
Example: "Remote work created permanent demand for async tools"

**5. Regulatory/Structural Insight:**
"Rules are changing that enable..."
Example: "Open banking APIs unlock fintech innovation"

### Questions to Find Your Insight

1. What do you believe that most people disagree with?
2. What did you learn building this that surprised you?
3. What's obvious to you that isn't to outsiders?
4. What's changing that creates a window?
5. Why didn't this work before but will now?

### Insight Template

"Most people believe [common belief].
But the truth is [contrarian insight].
This matters because [implication].
We discovered this through [evidence/experience]."

Step 3: Structure the Narrative

## Narrative Framework: "The Inevitable Future"

### Opening: State the Thesis (30 seconds)
"The world is moving toward [future state].
[Big companies/trends] have already proven [early evidence].
But the biggest opportunity hasn't been captured yet."

### Problem: Make It Visceral (1 minute)
"Today, [customer] struggles with [problem].
They [painful workaround].
This costs them [quantified impact].

This isn't just inconvenient—it's [bigger implication].
[Specific story or example that makes it real.]"

### Insight: Reveal the Truth (30 seconds)
"Most people try to solve this by [conventional approach].
That doesn't work because [why conventional fails].

We discovered [insight].
[Brief evidence that proves the insight.]"

### Solution: Show the Breakthrough (1 minute)
"[Company] is [one-line description].

We [how it works briefly].
The result: [key benefit/metric].

[Demo or proof point showing it works.]"

### Traction: Prove It's Real (30 seconds)
"We're not just theorizing—this is working.
[Key metric] growing at [rate].
[Social proof: customers, testimonials, logos].

More importantly: [retention/engagement metric]—people love this."

### Market: Show the Prize (30 seconds)
"The opportunity is massive.
[Market size] today, growing [trend].
[Comparable company] built a [$Xbn] business on [adjacent opportunity].
Our slice: [SAM] with a path to [bigger vision]."

### Why Now: Create Urgency (30 seconds)
"The window is opening.
[Timing factor 1] just happened.
[Timing factor 2] is accelerating.
The next [X years] will determine who wins this space."

### Why Us: Establish Credibility (30 seconds)
"We're built for this.
[Founder background relevant to problem].
[Early accomplishment that proves capability].
[Unfair advantage: team, technology, customers]."

### Vision: Paint the Future (30 seconds)
"If we execute, in 5 years [vivid description of future].
We become the [category/comparison].
This is a [$ outcome] opportunity."

### Ask: Make It Clear (15 seconds)
"We're raising [$X] to [milestones].
This gets us to [next proof point].
We want partners who believe in [thesis]."

Step 4: Tailor for Audience

## Audience-Specific Adjustments

### By Investor Type

**Angels:**
- Personal story matters more
- Explain market more (they may not know it)
- Emphasize founder passion and hustle
- Shorter on technical details
- Connection to their portfolio or interests

**Seed VCs:**
- Lead with team and insight
- Traction matters but early is OK
- Show thinking, not just metrics
- Explain "why now" clearly
- Focus on PMF potential

**Series A VCs:**
- Lead with metrics and growth
- Prove unit economics work
- Show scalable GTM
- Less founder story, more machine
- Path to $100M revenue

### By Investor Background

**Former Operators:**
- Speak to execution challenges
- Show operational sophistication
- Be honest about hard parts
- Emphasize team's ability to adapt

**Finance/Banking Background:**
- Lead with numbers
- Clear unit economics
- Comparables and multiples
- Risk/return framing

**Technical Background:**
- Explain technical differentiation
- Why this approach is better
- Technical debt/scalability
- Team's engineering depth

### By Fund Thesis

**Before the meeting:**
1. Read their website thesis
2. Look at portfolio for patterns
3. Find relevant blog posts/tweets
4. Identify why YOUR company fits THEIR thesis

**In the narrative:**
"I know [Fund] believes in [thesis from their materials].
[Your company] is an expression of that thesis because..."

Step 5: Handle Tough Questions

## Anticipating Investor Questions

### The Standard Tough Questions

**Competition:**
Q: "What about [big competitor]?"
A: "Great question. Here's why we win:
[Positioning difference]
[Customer quote about why they chose you]
[Metric showing you win head-to-head]"

**Market Size:**
Q: "Isn't this market small?"
A: "Today, yes. But here's what's changing:
[Market expansion thesis]
[Comparable company that grew a small market]"

**Defensibility:**
Q: "What stops Google/Amazon from doing this?"
A: "They could try. Here's why it's hard for them:
[Structural reason they can't/won't]
[Speed advantage you have]
[Customer relationships they can't replicate]"

**Team:**
Q: "Have you done this before?"
A: "Not exactly this. But here's what we have done:
[Relevant experience]
[Proof of ability to execute]
[Key hires we've made/will make]"

**Traction:**
Q: "Why isn't this growing faster?"
A: "Fair. Here's what we've learned:
[What slowed growth]
[What we're doing differently]
[Evidence new approach works]"

### Turning Questions into Opportunities

**Don't:** Be defensive
**Do:** Use questions to reinforce your thesis

Example:
Q: "This seems like a crowded space."
A: "It's crowded with bad solutions. That's actually our opportunity—customers are frustrated and switching. [Customer quote about switching from competitor]."

### Questions to Ask Them

End with questions that show sophistication:
- "What would make this a clear yes for you?"
- "Who in your portfolio might be strategic partners?"
- "What do you see as the biggest risk?"
- "What would you need to see in 6 months?"

Examples

Example 1: Complete Fundraising Narrative

Input:

"Build my fundraising narrative. We're building AI that writes sales emails. Seed stage, $15K MRR, growing 30% MoM. I spent 8 years at Salesforce."

Output:

Fundraising Narrative: [SalesAI]

The Thesis

"The era of generic sales outreach is ending.

Every rep sends 100+ emails a day. Response rates are below 2%. The emails all sound the same because they ARE the same—templates with mail merge.

Buyers have adapted. They instantly recognize and ignore templated emails. The only outreach that works is deeply personalized. But personalization takes time that reps don't have.

This creates a paradox: To succeed in sales, you need personalization. To scale, you need automation. You can't have both.

Until now."

The Insight

"Most people try to solve this with better templates or more data appending.

That doesn't work because the fundamental problem isn't data—it's writing. You can know everything about a prospect and still write a generic email. And a great writer could have no data and write something that resonates.

We discovered that AI can now write like a great sales rep. Not just filling templates—actually understanding context and crafting unique messages.

We trained our model on millions of emails and their response rates. We know what works."

The Solution

"SalesAI writes personalized emails in seconds.

You give us a LinkedIn profile. Our AI reads their background, recent company news, and shared connections. It writes an email that could only be for that person.

Not a template. Not mail merge. A unique email that sounds like it took 5 minutes to write—but took 5 seconds.

The result: Our users see 2-3x higher response rates. They can send 100 personalized emails in the time it used to take to write 5."

The Traction

"We're not theorizing—this is working.

$15K MRR, growing 30% month over month. 50 paying customers, including reps at [notable companies]. 4.2% average response rate vs. 2% baseline.

More importantly: retention. 95% monthly retention. They try it, it works, they stay.

[Insert customer quote: 'I can't go back to writing emails manually.']"

The Market

"This is a massive opportunity.

The sales engagement market is $4.5B and growing 20% annually. There are 3+ million SDRs in the US alone. Each one is worth $500-2000/year in software.

Outreach and Salesloft proved this market exists—they're billion-dollar companies. But they're infrastructure. We're the intelligence layer on top.

The AI writing market alone will be $5B by 2027."

Why Now

"The timing is perfect.

GPT-4 crossed the quality threshold last year—AI can finally write at human level. Every sales team is looking for efficiency—buyers won't tolerate more reps, so reps must be more productive. The data is available—LinkedIn, company data, news feeds are all accessible.

The next 24 months will determine who owns AI sales writing. We intend to be that company."

Why Us

"We're built for this.

I spent 8 years at Salesforce, the last four running their SMB sales product. I know what sales teams need.

My co-founder built AI products at [AI company]. He knows how to make AI actually work in production.

We've already built relationships with 10 sales leaders who are advising and buying. We have an unfair advantage in this market."

The Vision

"In five years, no sales rep writes their own emails.

Every personalized touchpoint—emails, LinkedIn messages, call scripts—is AI-generated, trained on what actually works.

We become the intelligence layer for outbound sales. Like Salesforce for CRM, but for sales content.

This is a billion-dollar outcome."

The Ask

"We're raising $2M to get to $1M ARR.

Use of funds:

  • 50% Product: Improve AI, build integrations (Outreach, Salesloft, Salesforce)
  • 30% GTM: First sales hire, marketing to SDR community
  • 20% Operations: Runway to prove the model

With this round, we prove AI sales writing at scale. That positions us for Series A at $1M+ ARR."


Example 2: Investor Cold Email

Input:

"Write a cold email to a Series A investor who focuses on SaaS and has B2B sales experience."

Output:

Subject: AI sales writing—$15K MRR, 30% MoM growth

Hi [Name],

I've followed your work at [Fund]—your piece on [relevant topic] shaped how we think about [related area].

We're building SalesAI: AI that writes personalized sales emails in seconds. Not templates—unique emails that sound human.

Quick numbers:

  • $15K MRR, growing 30% MoM
  • 4.2% response rates (vs. 2% baseline)
  • 95% monthly retention

I spent 8 years at Salesforce and watched every SDR struggle with the same thing: personalization doesn't scale. AI finally makes it possible.

We're raising $2M Seed to get to $1M ARR. Given your thesis on [relevant theme from their portfolio], I thought this might fit.

Would you be open to a 20-minute call next week?

Best, [Name] [LinkedIn]

P.S. [Mutual connection] thought we should connect—happy to be introduced that way if preferred.


Example 3: Handling "Why Now" Skepticism

Input:

"Investors keep asking 'Why hasn't this worked before?' How do I address this?"

Output:

Handling "Why Now" Skepticism

The Real Question

When investors ask this, they're really asking:

  • "What's different this time?"
  • "Why will you succeed where others failed?"
  • "Is the timing right?"

Framework for Answering

Step 1: Acknowledge the history "You're right to ask. People have tried [similar things] before."

Step 2: Explain what was missing "It didn't work because [specific reason]."

Step 3: Show what changed "What's different now is [new factor]."

Step 4: Provide evidence "We can see this in [proof point]."

Example Responses

Technology Shift: "Three years ago, AI couldn't write at production quality. We know—we tried it. The outputs were obviously robotic.

GPT-4 changed that. For the first time, AI can write emails that sound human. Not 'pretty good for AI'—actually good.

The evidence: our response rates beat human-written emails. That wasn't possible before."

Market Shift: "Sales teams always wanted this, but didn't prioritize it. Reps were cheap—you could always hire more.

COVID changed the math. Companies cut headcount but kept revenue targets. Suddenly, rep productivity became essential, not optional.

The evidence: Our customers are companies that downsized but need to hit the same numbers."

Business Model Shift: "Previous attempts charged per email, which created weird incentives. Teams would avoid using it to save money.

We charge per seat, monthly. Unlimited usage. Use it more, get more value.

The evidence: Our users send 5x more personalized emails than before—and they're happy to pay monthly."

Common "Why Now" Categories

CategoryStructure
Tech"Technology X just crossed quality threshold"
Market"Buyer behavior shifted because of Y"
Regulatory"New rules create opportunity Z"
Infrastructure"Platform/API now exists that enables"
Economic"Cost structure changed—now this makes sense"

Checklists & Templates

Narrative Development Checklist

## Fundraising Narrative Checklist

### Core Elements
□ Insight is non-obvious and defensible
□ Thesis is clear and compelling
□ Problem is visceral and quantified
□ Solution clearly addresses the problem
□ Traction proves early PMF
□ Market size is credible
□ "Why now" is specific
□ Team is credible for this problem
□ Vision is ambitious but believable
□ Ask is specific

### Story Quality
□ Flows logically from setup to ask
□ Each section builds on the previous
□ Specific examples, not generalities
□ Emotional, not just rational
□ Memorable hook or phrase

### Preparation
□ Anticipated tough questions
□ Know investor's thesis/portfolio
□ Have follow-up materials ready
□ Clear next steps defined

Meeting Structure Template

## Investor Meeting (45 minutes)

### Opening (5 min)
- Thank them for time
- Quick background on you
- "Here's what we're building..."

### Core Narrative (15 min)
- Problem + Insight
- Solution + Demo
- Traction
- Market + Why Now
- Team

### Discussion (20 min)
- Their questions
- Go deep on areas of interest
- Address concerns

### Close (5 min)
- Recap key points
- State the ask
- Clear next steps
- "What would make this a yes?"

Skill Boundaries

What This Skill Does Well

  • Structuring audio production workflows
  • Providing technical guidance
  • Creating quality checklists
  • Suggesting creative approaches

What This Skill Cannot Do

  • Replace audio engineering expertise
  • Make subjective creative decisions
  • Access or edit audio files directly
  • Guarantee commercial success

References

  • Hoffman, Reid. "Masters of Scale" podcast - Blitzscaling principles
  • Sequoia Capital. "Writing a Business Plan" - Classic narrative structure
  • Tan, Garry (YC). "How to Pitch" - YC partner advice
  • Rabois, Keith. "How to be a Great Board Member" - Investor perspective
  • Dalton, Michael (YC). "Startup School Lectures" - Narrative construction

Related Skills


Skill Metadata

  • Mode: cyborg
name: fundraising-narrative
category: startup
subcategory: fundraising
version: 1.0
author: MKTG Skills
source_expert: Reid Hoffman, Sequoia Capital, YC
source_work: Masters of Scale, Sequoia Business Plan
difficulty: advanced
estimated_value: $15,000 fundraising coaching
tags: [fundraising, narrative, pitching, investors, storytelling, YC, startup]
created: 2026-01-25
updated: 2026-01-25

GitHub 仓库

guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills
路径: skills/startup/fundraising-narrative
0
ai-skillsanthropicclaude-codeclaude-skillsmarketingmcp-server

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