Investor Pitch Email Templates

Browse best-performing investor pitch email templates for cold outreach to angels and VCs, covering what to include, how to get attention in a crowded inbox, and what separates a pitch that gets a reply from one that gets archived.

Catégories
6 templates d'emails
Angel opportunity: [[your company]], [[category]]

Hi {{first_name}},

I'm raising a small angel round for [[your company]] and your experience in [[their area of expertise or industry]] is why I wanted you on the cap table specifically.

[[Your company]] is [[one sentence on what the business does]]. We're at [[early traction]] and raising [[amount]] from [[number]] angels to [[use of funds]].

Your operational expertise in [[their specific background]] would be as valuable as the capital. Would 20 minutes work?

[[Your name]], Founder at [[your company]]

[[Your company]]: [[traction metric]], raising [[round size]]

Hi {{first_name}},

[[Your company]] helps [[target customer]] [[what you do for them]].

The numbers: [[key metric 1, e.g., "$80K ARR"]]. [[Key metric 2, e.g., "40% month-over-month growth"]]. [[Key metric 3, e.g., "12 paying customers, 3 enterprise pilots"]].

We're raising [[round size]] at [[terms if sharing]]. Deck here: [[link]].

Worth a conversation?

[[Your name]], Founder at [[your company]]

Following up: [[your company]], [[category]]

Hi {{first_name}},

Following up on the note I sent last week about [[your company]]. Since then, [[one new traction update: e.g., "we closed our first enterprise contract" or "MRR crossed $50K"]].

Happy to share the deck if that would be helpful. Would 20 minutes work?

[[Your name]], Founder at [[your company]]

[[Mutual connection]] suggested I reach out: [[your company]]

Hi {{first_name}},

[[Mutual connection name]] suggested I reach out about [[your company]]. We're a [[one sentence description]] at [[traction metric]], raising [[round size]].

[[Mutual connection]]'s view was that [[brief reason for the intro: e.g., "this fits your thesis on developer tools" or "the B2B go-to-market is similar to several of your portfolio companies"]].

Would a 30-minute call work this week? Deck is attached.

[[Your name]], Founder at [[your company]]

Pre-seed round: [[your company]], [[category]]

Hi {{first_name}},

I'm building [[your company]], a [[one-sentence description]]. We're pre-revenue but have [[early traction signal: waitlist size, pilot customers, LOIs, notable design partners]].

We're raising a [[round size]] pre-seed to [[use of funds]]. I've been following your investments in [[their focus area]] and think there's a strong alignment with what we're building.

Deck attached. Would 20 minutes work for a conversation?

[[Your name]], Founder at [[your company]]

[[Your company]]: [[category]], [[traction metric]]

Hi {{first_name}},

[[Your company]] is [[one sentence on what the business does]]. We're at [[key traction metric: ARR, MRR, growth rate, customer count, or notable pilot]] and growing [[growth rate]] month-over-month.

We're raising [[round size]] to [[specific use of funds, e.g., "expand the sales team and launch in the US market"]]. Your portfolio in [[relevant category or stage]] is why I'm reaching out specifically.

Would a 30-minute call make sense?

[[Your name]], Founder at [[your company]]

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Frequently asked questions

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Investors read hundreds of cold emails per month. A pitch that requires more than 90 seconds to understand will get skimmed and archived. One sharp sentence on what the business does, one traction number that creates credibility (ARR, growth rate, customer count, or a notable pilot), what you're raising and why now, and a defined ask such as a 30-minute call. If the reply comes, the deck explains everything else.

Subject lines that name the company, the category, and either the traction or the stage get better results. "[Company]: [Category], [Traction Metric]" gives the investor the key information in the preview line. "Pre-seed round: [Company], [Category]" is clean and tells them immediately what you're looking for.

Avoid subject lines that try to create mystery or urgency. "Opportunity you won't want to miss" reads like spam to someone receiving fifty pitches a week. Investors are pattern-matching for genuine traction and a clear business, not for creative subject lines.

Under 200 words. Many successful cold pitches are under 150. Investors read enough pitches to form an initial view quickly, and a long email doesn't add more credibility. It tells them you haven't done the work of distilling the business to its essential points.

If you have a deck, attach it or include a link. A short email gets the investor interested. The deck makes the full case. Trying to pack both into one message produces something too long to scan and too shallow to convince.

Send one follow-up about a week after the initial pitch. Keep it shorter than the original: "Following up on the note below in case it got buried. Happy to share the deck if that would be helpful." Two sentences. If the pitch was worth reading the first time, that's enough to get a reply.

Don't follow up more than twice on a cold pitch to the same investor. A non-response is usually a soft no, and continuing to follow up after two emails creates a negative association with your name before the relationship has even started. If a particular investor is a strong target, a warm introduction through a mutual connection is a far better path than repeated cold follow-ups.

An email that opens with "$45K MRR, growing 20% month-over-month, two enterprise pilots in progress" tells an investor the company is real and moving. An email that opens with "We're solving a trillion-dollar problem" tells them the founder doesn't yet understand what investors respond to. Honest traction and crisp positioning are what get replies.

The second differentiator is investor fit. Cold pitching a VC whose portfolio is entirely enterprise SaaS when you're building a consumer app tells the investor you didn't do the research. Investors who see a pitch that fits their stated thesis and stage are more likely to reply, even to cold emails, than investors who receive an interchangeable pitch that could have been sent to anyone.

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