A deck gets opened once and forgotten in an inbox. A link gets opened on a phone, in a meeting, on the way to the next one. When you're raising money, the easiest thing to share is often the thing that travels best — a clean, single page that says exactly why your company is worth backing.
The investor one-pager does that. You give it your real details — what you do, the problem, your traction, your ask — and it builds a sharp, structured fundraising page with the sections investors actually look for, plus auto-generated charts from your numbers. It lives behind one link and one QR code, so you can drop it in a chat, print it on a leave-behind, or open it live across the table.
What goes on an investor one-pager
Investors skim in a fixed order. A good one-pager answers their questions before they ask:
- The problem — what's broken, quantified
- The solution — what you built, in one breath
- Why now — the shift that makes this the moment
- Market — the size of the opportunity
- Traction — the proof it's working
- Business model — how you make money
- Team — why you're the ones to do it
- The ask — how much you're raising and what it buys
The page lays these out in a numbered, editorial brief — readable on a phone, credible on a screen-share.
Charts from your numbers — never invented
Numbers are what move investors, so the page turns them into visuals automatically. Paste your figures and it builds KPI tiles for your headline metrics and a revenue chart from any real series you provide (say, FY23–FY26).
The one rule that matters: it uses only the numbers you give it. It never fabricates traction, revenue, market size or a raise amount — because invented figures are exactly what kill a fundraise in diligence.
If a number isn't there, the page makes the point without it. Nothing on the page is a guess.
A comparison table and customer logos
Two things make a one-pager feel inevitable instead of hopeful:
A competitor comparison — your company set against the named alternatives, with clean ticks for what you have and they don't. It's the slide every founder wishes they had, built from the comparison you describe.
A customer logo wall — the names you already work with, shown as a quiet "trusted by" strip. Social proof an investor recognises in a second.
Why a link beats a PDF
A PDF is static the moment you send it. A one-pager link is live: update a number after a good month, fix a line before the next meeting, and everyone who opens it sees the current version. Print the QR code on your leave-behind and the paper version always points to the latest page.
| Pitch deck PDF | Investor one-pager | |
|---|---|---|
| Opens on a phone | Clumsy | Designed for it |
| Always current | No | Yes — edit anytime |
| Built-in charts | You make them | Auto from your numbers |
| Share | Attachment | One link + QR code |
Build yours
You don't need a designer or a data team. Paste your deck or your details, let it draft the sections and the charts, edit anything, and publish. You get a polished investor page with its own link and QR code, free to start.
Create your investor one-pager and share your raise the way it actually travels — one scan, one link, always up to date.
