Four Ways to Prepare Your Pitch — Each One Stands on Its Own
Most founders assume PresenterPrep is a sequence: upload the deck, get the analysis, practice with the coach, record a take, send the share link. That’s one way to use it — the full loop, if you’re three weeks from a meeting and want to cover every angle.
But each step is also a standalone tool. You don’t have to do all four. You don’t have to do them in order. If the problem today is “I don’t know what’s missing from my deck,” solve that problem and stop. If you already have a recording and just need a clean investor-facing link with view tracking, start at step four. The tools connect — but they don’t depend on each other.
Here’s what each entry point does, who it’s for, and when stopping at that step is the right call.
Get your deck reviewed
→ How to Get Your Pitch Deck Reviewed Before You Pitch →
Upload a PDF. Get back a structural gap analysis: what’s present, what’s missing, what’s structurally weak across the sections investors actually check — problem, solution, market size, business model, traction, team, the ask, why now, competition. The review also extracts a full summary of your deck — company description, ICP, positioning, team — so you can see what a cold reader actually takes away, and edit anything the deck is saying wrong.
Stop here if you want a cold read before you polish further. Most founders have looked at their own slides too many times to see the gaps. The market-size logic that feels airtight to you — because you’ve been living inside it for six weeks — looks hand-wavy to someone reading it cold. The review finds that before the room does.
You don’t need to practice, record, or share anything to use this step. Upload the deck, take the feedback, fix the obvious gaps, close the tab.
Practice your pitch out loud
→ How to Practice Your Pitch With a Voice AI Coach →
A voice AI coach listens to your pitch, follows your slides on command, and interrupts — the way an investor does — when you skim the competition slide, when the market math doesn’t hold up, when the ask is vague and you’re hoping no one notices. You can also practice free-form, with no deck, if you want to rehearse the verbal story before the slides exist or just work through Q&A in conversation.
Stop here if your problem is delivery — pacing, fluency, handling hard questions. A pitch you’ve read fifty times in your head will often fall apart the first time you say it aloud in real time. Practice is the fix for that, and it only takes one or two sessions to find where the pitch breaks.
You don’t need to record or share. The session logs in your account; nothing goes anywhere.
Record your pitch
During a practice session, press Record. The coach captures voice, slides advancing in sync, and optionally webcam. Multiple takes land in a gallery — you review them, pick the best one, and that’s what goes onto a pitch page or gets sent to an advisor. If you already have a recording from Zoom, Loom, or your phone, you can upload it directly and skip in-app capture entirely.
Stop here if you want a recording you can watch back or share with a co-founder or mentor. Hearing yourself pitch is different from reading your slides. The slide where your voice drops; the moment you rush through the ask because you’re not sure of the number — a recording surfaces all of it. Capture the take. Decide later whether to publish it.
You don’t need to create a pitch page or send it to investors.
Share with investors and track the open
→ How to Share Your Pitch With Investors and Track If They Opened It →
Take a recording — in-app or your own — and publish it as an investor-facing pitch page: company description, team bios, and the recording, one link. Send one link per investor. See when they open it, whether they watched through, and when to follow up. Links are private — unguessable, never indexed, never visible on the web. You choose per investor whether the link opens immediately or requires an email first. Revoke any link from the dashboard without affecting the others.
Stop here if you already have a recording and just need a trackable way to send it to investors. You don’t need to have practiced in the app to use this step. Bring your own recording, build the pitch page, and start tracking.
The full loop
The four steps connect: review surfaces the deck’s structural gaps before rehearsal; practice gets you fluent and ready for hard questions; recording captures the take worth sending; the share link puts it in front of investors with view tracking so you know who engaged.
But you don’t need everything at once. Pick the problem you’re solving today — the gap in the deck, the delivery that needs work, the recording to capture, the link to track. The rest is there when you need it.