I spent 10 years finding all the decks (Which "inspired" all the resources). BI started posting mktg slides so you can find more decks, but they aren't real.<p>SaaS typically has the best decks. I used to recommend looking at the Front decks. I have commentary on them. I would look a the LinkedIn s-b deck as there is a lot of commentary to get your thinking a bit more expansively.<p>List of decks (filter for saas): <a href="https://www.alexanderjarvis.com/resources/collections/startup-pitch-deck-collection/" rel="nofollow">https://www.alexanderjarvis.com/resources/collections/startu...</a>
You can search by slide type (I manually indexed 10k... to update but is a lot of work1): <a href="https://www.alexanderjarvis.com/resources/collections/pitch-deck-slides-collection/" rel="nofollow">https://www.alexanderjarvis.com/resources/collections/pitch-...</a><p>Below: Haje made a list of 100 'teardowns' of blogs. They are available as the TC premium service shut down. I indexed them here in a table you can click on: <a href="https://www.alexanderjarvis.com/pitch-deck-reviews-from-techcrunch/" rel="nofollow">https://www.alexanderjarvis.com/pitch-deck-reviews-from-tech...</a><p>The issue is most of the decks are sht. So you might get an idea of slides, but you will come back to your narrative aka making a good deck.<p>When I help do decks you do from scratch and the ball ache is figuring out your narrative, business model, what to share etc.<p>You will look at slides and they might hurt you by distracting you as you see slides and try together rather than thinking about your business...<p>I made some collections from HFs, mgmt consulting, M&A to help educate.<p>Happy to give some free feedback to the community if you have questions.
Techcrunch does deck reviews every now and then, over time they gathered a sizeable bunch: <a href="https://techcrunch.com/tag/pitch-deck-teardown/" rel="nofollow">https://techcrunch.com/tag/pitch-deck-teardown/</a> (Assorted startups, not only SaaS)