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Pitch Decks in the AI Era — Why Story Still Wins

What’s Inside

  • Patrick Mebus on why pitch decks may be “on the way out”

  • Charles Hudson on why sameness is the real risk with AI-generated decks

  • How AI tools are reshaping but not replacing founder storytelling

Programming Note: Media Shot is a regular post on media training and storytelling for founders and investors. On Mondays, I’ll share one sharp lesson on how to communicate your story more clearly, from pitch decks to interviews to real-world examples drawn from my work as a media training consultant and longtime journalist.


While reporting my story on AI on Both Sides of the Table, I kept circling back to the same question: If AI is changing how startups raise capital, what’s going to happen to the pitch deck?

Patrick Mebus, co-founder of TechTrust.ai, didn’t hesitate. He told me he believes the pitch deck itself is on the way out.

“Once AI makes it trivial to generate 20 polished slides, the real interaction will happen elsewhere,” he said.

That line stuck with me. As AI tools make decks easier to create, their value inevitably drops. They risk becoming relics in an AI-powered process. The real action shifts outside the slides: to narrative, conversation and credibility.

And yet, the tools keep coming. AI-powered services promise instant design, sharper messaging and slide-by-slide feedback.

Popular platforms like Beautiful.AI, Canva, Decktopus AI, Prezi, Slidebean, Tome and Upmetrics are making polished slides faster and cheaper to produce

Founders are leaning on them to move faster and look more polished. On the surface, it feels like the end of pitch deck Anxiety.

But not everyone’s convinced. In a conversation that didn’t make it into my previous story, Charles Hudson, founder of Precursor Ventures, cautioned that AI-generated decks don’t just risk inaccuracies, they risk sameness.

If every founder uses the same templates and prompts, then every company starts to look the same, with the same thesis on the exact same market.

“The only thing that seems to differentiate these companies is the names of the founders. There isn’t much true differentiation,” Hudson said.

Hudson pointed out that this is more than a deck problem. It mirrors a broader investor conundrum.

With so many undifferentiated AI companies presenting similar-looking pitch decks, VCs will either ride the wave and hope they’ve picked the right deals, or they will look elsewhere. For founders, this means that relying too heavily on AI tools may only add to that sameness.

That’s where narrative comes in. A slick AI-generated deck can’t cover up a fuzzy story.

And in my reporting, I keep coming back to the same finding: investors spend more time on the team slide and the key narratives than any other part of the deck.

Anyone can spin up slides. But not everyone can tell a story that shows why this team, with this conviction and this fit, is the one worth betting on. In other words, storytelling is still key.

Advice for Founders

As more AI tools change how decks are quickly made, it’s good to remember to not confuse polish with persuasion.

Here are four ways to use AI deck tools without losing your story:

🔶 Lead with your team — say why you are uniquely qualified
🔶 Don’t blend in — sameness is a killer in investor meetings
🔶 Use AI as an accelerator, not a substitute
🔶 Own your story — AI can’t explain founder–market fit for you


That’s your Media Shot for this week. Make yours count.

I work with founders and investors to sharpen pitch decks, prep for media interviews and build stronger stories for customers and backers. If that’s on your plate, let’s talk.

Alastair Goldfisher Independent Journalist

I’m an independent journalist and podcaster focused on startup and venture capital trends, as well as storytelling and how AI is reshaping business and work. I host "The Venture Variety Show" and "The AI Cognitive Shift" podcasts, and I write "The Venture Lens" newsletter on Substack and Medium. I’ve spent 30 years in business journalism, covering Silicon Valley and beyond for outlets like Venture Capital Journal, Reuters, PEHub and Silicon Valley Business Journal. Today, I also help founders and investors sharpen their stories through media training and content consulting. I live in the San Francisco Bay Area, stay curious about tech and people, and I always welcome a good conversation.

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