Access unique fundraising materials for investment firms
We provide unparalleled access to the pitch decks and fundraising memos of investment firms that have collectively closed billions in capital.

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Spacecadet Ventures’ deck outlines a $15M pre-seed/seed fund positioning itself as “The Marketing VC.” Led by founders Wiz Abdulla and Daniel Eckler, the firm helps startups sharpen their narrative through “story sprints” to drive growth, hiring, and fundraising.
Worklife Fund II is a $20M early-stage fund led by Brianne Kimmel, backing repeat founders and early builders from breakout companies like Zoom, Slack, and Webflow. With 7 unicorns from a $10M debut fund, Worklife built a repeatable sourcing engine through SaaS School—a program that converts high-intent operators into founders. See how the fund wins competitive allocations by being first money in, often pre-product, and surrounding founders with a network of top-tier angels and early hires.
This is the deck Shrug was using to raise their fund.
This is the deck HackFund was using to raise their fund.
This is the fundraising deck used by Seedcamp.

This GP fundraising deck from Awesome People Ventures presents a $20M Web3-focused fund led by Julia Lipton, following a fully deployed $1.5M Fund I. It opens with a thesis on decentralized VC, introduces the GP, and outlines Fund II’s strategy, check sizes, and community carry model. The middle section highlights what sets the fund apart—especially its DAO-driven ops and talent engine. It uses real case studies from Fund I to show how the GP sources and supports early-stage deals.

Earl Grey Capital outlines Fund II, a ~$20M early-stage fund led by the Clearbit founding team. They position themselves as “new school” founder-operators, preferred by early-stage startups over traditional VCs. The deck focuses on their technical edge and strategy to invest in the programmatic infrastructure of the internet—APIs, platforms, and protocols across Web2 and Web3. Strong case studies and backing from top operators bolster their credibility and access.

Long Journey Ventures presents Fund II, a $30M early-stage fund led by a tight-knit team of repeat founders and early angel investors. The deck positions LJV as a high-conviction, hands-on partner that backs founders early—often pre-revenue—and helps them scale through product strategy, growth, and fundraising support. Their thesis emphasizes investing in resilient, customer-obsessed founders from trusted networks, with a focus on value creation over flashy trends. The narrative leans heavily on real-world case studies, strong founder testimonials, and demonstrated outcomes from a $10M pilot fund to build credibility and momentum with LPs.

This GP fundraising deck from Not Boring Capital introduces a $5M early-stage fund led by Packy McCormick, leveraging the flywheel of his popular tech newsletter. The pitch is built around a differentiated thesis: storytelling as an edge in sourcing, evaluating, and supporting startups. Packy shares info on his access through audience reach, public investment memos, and a growing syndicate, with early investments in companies like Ramp, Pipe, and Stytch. Their fund aims to turn content and community into venture returns.

This is the fundraising material Precusor used to raise their fund.

Todd and Rahul used this deck to raise their Angel Fund.

Weekend Fund introduces Fund 3.0, an $18M early-stage fund led by Product Hunt founder Ryan Hoover and Vedika Jain. The team positions itself as founder-first, leveraging deep community roots, a trusted personal brand, and a history of helping startups like Deel and Pipe from the earliest stages. They focus on fast access, strategic support, and a collaborative approach that makes them a preferred partner—even in competitive or off-cycle rounds.

This is the fundraising deck of Notation Capital.

Alpha Bridge Ventures raised Fund I with a bold approach: be radically transparent and show LPs—and the public—the actual pitch deck, annotated slide-by-slide by LP Chris Douvos. The fund positioned itself around founder mental health, cultural impact, and building a differentiated founder support platform (Atlas), well before these became industry talking points. The pitch leans into personal vulnerability, deep founder alignment, and a repeatable way to win allocation through empathy and services.

This is the fundraising deck of Capital X.
Susa Ventures is raising a $100M Seed Fund IV and a $200M Opportunity Fund II, building on a decade of top-tier performance with early bets on Robinhood, Flexport, Viz.ai, and Stord. The firm combines a "family-first" ethos with a barbell strategy—leading at seed, doubling down at growth. Susa makes the case for concentrated ownership in breakout companies. Their in-house Venture Fellows program and hands-on founder experience underscore a long-term commitment to building not just companies—but the next generation of VCs too.