AI Fundraising Advisor | Free Pitch Deck & Capital Raising Help | Fundraising Copilot AI Copilot | Professional Automation | Copilotly
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AI Fundraising Advisor

Free AI fundraising advisor for pitch decks, term sheet analysis, cap table modeling, and investor outreach. Get expert capital raising guidance 24/7.

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What Fundraising Copilot Does

The Fundraising Copilot guides you through every stage of raising capital, from pre-seed rounds through Series A and beyond. It helps you build compelling pitch decks, model term sheets and understand their implications, create and manage cap tables, develop targeted investor outreach strategies, and prepare for due diligence. This is the strategic guidance that fundraising advisors charge $10,000 to $50,000 for, plus a 2-5% success fee on capital raised.

The fundraising landscape is both massive and brutally competitive. According to PitchBook-NVCA's Venture Monitor, US venture capital investment totaled approximately $170 billion across roughly 15,000 deals in 2024. Yet the National Venture Capital Association (NVCA) reports that less than 1% of startups that seek venture capital funding successfully raise it. The Kauffman Foundation's research shows that the median time to close a seed round is 12-16 weeks, during which founders spend 30-40% of their time on fundraising rather than building their product.

Most founders lose months because they approach fundraising without a system: generic cold emails that get ignored, bloated decks that bury the key metrics, and term sheets they sign without understanding the long-term dilution impact. The Y Combinator Startup School teaches that the most common fundraising mistakes are raising too little money, raising at the wrong valuation, and accepting terms that create misaligned incentives. The copilot provides the frameworks used by top accelerator alumni who have collectively raised billions.

Pitch deck creation goes beyond templates. The copilot crafts narrative arcs calibrated for your stage and audience. A seed-stage deck for angels looks very different from a Series A deck for institutional VCs. According to DocSend's fundraising research, investors spend an average of 3 minutes and 44 seconds reviewing a pitch deck, making every slide critical.

Cap table modeling is where founders make their most expensive mistakes. Taking a $500,000 seed at a $3 million pre-money with 2x liquidation preference can leave founders with less than 20% after a Series A. The SEC's Office of Small Business Policy provides regulatory guidance for private capital raises, and the copilot ensures your fundraise complies with applicable securities exemptions (Regulation D, Regulation CF, Regulation A+). For entity setup, the Business Formation Copilot covers Delaware C-Corp formation, which is the standard structure VCs require. For financial projections, the Business Plan Copilot builds investor-grade models. For a broader look at how our AI copilots work across all domains, visit our How It Works page.

fundraising  - Dilution Impact
fundraising - Dilution Impact

Example Conversation

Live Example

Here is a real example of Fundraising Copilot helping a SaaS founder prepare for a seed round:

You
I have a B2B SaaS product with $15,000 MRR, 12 paying customers, and 85% gross margins. We are 3 co-founders. I want to raise a seed round. How much should I raise and at what valuation?
Copilot

Good metrics for a seed stage B2B SaaS. According to Wing VC's Benchmarks Report, a B2B SaaS company with your profile is well-positioned for seed funding. Let me frame the fundraising strategy:

Copilot

$15,000 MRR = $180,000 ARR

12 customers = $1,250 average MRR per customer

85% gross margins (strong for SaaS; the Bessemer Cloud Index benchmark is 70-80%)

Recommended raise: $1.5M to $2.5M

Here is the logic: You want 18-24 months of runway to reach Series A metrics. Series A investors in 2024-2025 typically want to see $1M-$2M ARR, 100%+ net revenue retention, and consistent month-over-month growth of 10-15%. According to Carta's State of Private Markets report, the median seed round size was $3.5 million in 2024, but your pre-money traction supports a more capital-efficient raise. Your current burn rate and hiring plan determine the exact amount.

Valuation range: $6M to $10M pre-money

At $180K ARR with strong margins and B2B positioning, a 33x to 55x ARR multiple is reasonable for seed-stage SaaS. PitchBook data shows seed-stage SaaS valuations ranging from $5M to $15M pre-money, with the median around $8M. This range gives you:

At $8M pre-money, raising $2M: investors get 20% ownership ($10M post-money)

At $6M pre-money, raising $1.5M: investors get 20% ownership ($7.5M post-money)

You
What should my pitch deck include? I have been told to keep it to 10-12 slides.
Copilot

Correct, 10-12 slides is the target. Sequoia Capital's pitch deck framework is the gold standard. Here is the structure optimized for B2B SaaS seed rounds:

Slide 1: Title. Company name, one-line description, contact info. Make the one-liner specific: not "We help businesses grow" but "AI-powered contract analysis that reduces legal review time by 80%."

Slide 2: Problem. Specific pain point with quantified cost. Use customer quotes if possible. The Harvard Business School teaches that the strongest problem slides quantify the cost of the status quo.

Slide 3: Solution. Product in 2-3 sentences with one screenshot. Show, do not tell.

Slide 4: Traction. MRR growth chart, customer count, key metrics (gross margin, NRR, CAC payback). This is the most important slide at seed stage. According to First Round Capital's research, traction slides receive 2x more time from investors than any other slide.

Slide 5: Market size. TAM/SAM/SOM with bottom-up calculation. Top-down market sizing ("The global X market is $50B") is useless. Build from unit economics: number of potential customers multiplied by your annual contract value.

Slide 6: Business model. Pricing tiers, ACV, unit economics (LTV:CAC ratio). Show that your economics work at scale.

Slide 7: Competition. 2x2 positioning matrix showing defensible positioning. Never say "we have no competition." It tells investors you have not done your homework.

Slide 8: Go-to-market. Current and scaled customer acquisition strategy with CAC by channel.

Slide 9: Team. Photos, relevant experience, why this team wins. Highlight domain expertise and any previous exits.

Slide 10: Financials. 3-year projections showing path to $1.5M-$2M ARR. Include key assumptions.

Slide 11: The ask. Amount, use of funds breakdown (engineering, sales, marketing), key milestones this capital enables.

Slide 12: Appendix. Detailed financials, product roadmap, customer case studies, and competitive detail.

You
I have a term sheet from an angel group offering $500K on a convertible note with a $5M cap and 20% discount. Is this good?
Copilot

Let me break down each component using frameworks from Y Combinator's SAFE primer and the NVCA model term sheet:

Copilot

This is below the $6-10M range I recommended based on your traction. At a $5M cap, if your Series A is at a $15M pre-money, these investors convert at $5M, getting 3x more equity than Series A investors per dollar. On $500K, they would get 10% of your company at conversion rather than the 3.3% they would get at the Series A price.

Copilot

Standard range is 15-25%, so 20% is market. This means if there is no cap or the cap does not apply, they convert at a 20% discount to the Series A price.

Copilot

The cap is too low given your traction. Counter-offer options:

Ask for a $7M-$8M cap with the same 20% discount

Propose a SAFE (Simple Agreement for Future Equity) instead of a convertible note to avoid interest accrual and maturity date pressure. The Y Combinator SAFE is now the standard instrument for pre-seed and seed rounds.

If they insist on $5M cap, negotiate for a lower discount (10-15%) or request a Most Favored Nation (MFN) clause

Copilot

They accrue interest (typically 4-8% annually) and have a maturity date (usually 18-24 months). If you have not raised a priced round by maturity, the noteholders can demand repayment, which according to Cooley's Startup Legal Guide, can create a crisis for early-stage companies. SAFEs avoid both issues and are now preferred by most accelerators and angel groups. The Startup Copilot can help you with broader company-building decisions alongside your fundraise.

Common Use Cases

Use CaseWhat You GetTypical Advisor Cost
Pitch deck creation10-12 slide deck with narrative arc and data presentation$3,000-$8,000 (pitch deck consultants)
Term sheet analysisClause-by-clause breakdown with dilution impact modeling$5,000-$15,000 (startup attorney)
Cap table modelingPre and post-money scenarios across multiple rounds$2,000-$5,000 (attorney or CFO service)
Investor targetingCurated list by stage, sector, check size, and thesis fit$5,000-$10,000 (fundraising advisor retainer)
Due diligence preparationData room organization and document checklist$3,000-$8,000 (attorney)
SAFE vs. convertible note analysisComparison with scenario modeling for each structure$2,000-$5,000 (startup attorney)
Valuation benchmarkingComparable analysis using recent funding rounds in your sector$5,000-$15,000 (valuation firm)
Regulation D complianceSecurities exemption selection and filing requirements$3,000-$10,000 (securities attorney)

Pitch deck quality directly impacts meeting-to-term-sheet conversion. According to DocSend's fundraising research, the average successful seed raise involves sending the deck to 58 investors, taking 40 meetings, and receiving 3-4 term sheets. Polished, data-driven decks convert at 5-10% from meeting to term sheet versus 1-2% for generic decks. The copilot builds decks that follow the frameworks taught at Y Combinator, Techstars, and 500 Global.

Term sheet analysis is the highest-stakes use case. A participating preferred liquidation preference means investors get their money back first and then share in remaining proceeds, significantly reducing founder returns on moderate exits. The NVCA's model legal documents provide standard term sheet templates, and the copilot explains how each clause compares to these industry standards. It models the difference between 1x non-participating preferred (founder-friendly) and 2x participating preferred (investor-friendly) using your specific numbers.

Cap table modeling prevents the dilution surprises that derail founder economics. The SEC requires accurate capitalization records for securities compliance, and the copilot builds cap table models that track founder equity, ESOP allocation, convertible instruments, and projected dilution across future rounds. According to Carta's data, the average founder retains approximately 30% equity at Series A and 15-20% at Series B, but these numbers vary significantly based on the terms of each round.

Investor targeting is where most founders waste the most time. The Angel Capital Association (ACA) reports that angel groups invest in only 3-5% of deals they review. The NVCA tracks VC fund sizes and investment theses. The copilot helps you identify investors whose stage focus, sector expertise, check size, and geographic preference match your company, dramatically improving your hit rate. For startup leadership and team-building during growth, the Executive Coaching Copilot provides complementary coaching.

fundraising  - Median Round Size
fundraising - Median Round Size

How It Works

Step 1: Define your fundraising parameters. Tell the copilot your business stage, current metrics (revenue, users, growth rate), how much you want to raise, and what type of investors you are targeting (angels, VCs, strategic investors, crowdfunding). The copilot calibrates all advice to your specific situation and stage. A pre-seed founder with a prototype needs a fundamentally different fundraising approach than a Series A company with $1.5M ARR. The National Venture Capital Association categorizes fundraising stages distinctly, and the copilot aligns its guidance to the expectations of investors at each stage.

Step 2: Build your fundraising materials. The copilot helps you create a pitch deck with the right narrative arc for your audience, develop a financial model that withstands investor scrutiny (following frameworks from Sequoia Capital and a16z), prepare an executive summary for cold outreach, and organize a data room with the documents investors will request during due diligence. According to First Round Capital, the most common data room requests include cap table, financial statements, customer contracts, key employee agreements, and IP documentation.

Step 3: Develop your investor strategy. The copilot helps you identify the right investors by stage, sector, check size, and geographic focus. It helps you craft personalized outreach messages that reference the investor's portfolio and thesis (generic "Dear Investor" emails have a 1% response rate versus 15-20% for personalized outreach, per SaaStr research). It coaches you on meeting structure, follow-up cadence, and creating competitive dynamics among interested investors to improve your negotiating position.

Step 4: Navigate terms and close. When you receive term sheets, the copilot provides detailed analysis of every clause using the NVCA model term sheet as a benchmark. It models the dilution impact across future rounds, showing you what your ownership looks like not just after this round but after Series A and B as well. It explains the practical implications of provisions that seem standard but can be costly: board composition, information rights, drag-along provisions, anti-dilution mechanisms, and option pool sizing. The copilot helps you negotiate better terms while maintaining the relationship with your incoming investors. Visit our How It Works page to learn more about the technology behind all our copilots.

fundraising  - Pitch Deck Time
fundraising - Pitch Deck Time

Why Fundraising Copilot Beats ChatGPT

ChatGPT

Pitch deck structureGeneric 10-slide template without stage differentiation
Term sheet analysisDefinitions without practical implications or modeling
Cap table modelingCannot perform cap table calculations
Valuation guidanceGeneric valuation method descriptions
Investor targetingGeneral advice to "find the right investors"
Negotiation strategyTheoretical negotiation frameworks
Securities complianceNo awareness of securities regulations
Data room preparationBasic list of "things investors want to see"

Fundraising Copilot

Pitch deck structureStage-specific frameworks (pre-seed vs. seed vs. Series A) with slide-by-slide guidance
Term sheet analysisClause-by-clause with dilution modeling and negotiation tactics benchmarked to NVCA standards
Cap table modelingMulti-round scenarios showing founder dilution, ESOP impact, and liquidation waterfalls
Valuation guidanceBenchmarked to recent rounds by stage, sector, and geography using PitchBook and Carta data
Investor targetingCriteria-based filtering by thesis, stage, check size, and portfolio fit
Negotiation strategySpecific counter-offer tactics with fallback positions and BATNA analysis
Securities complianceRegulation D, CF, and A+ exemption guidance
Data room preparationComprehensive checklist with document templates and organization standards

Fundraising is one of the most consequential activities a founder undertakes, and the gap between good and generic advice is measured in millions of dollars of dilution. ChatGPT can explain what a SAFE agreement is but cannot model whether a $6M cap or $8M cap is better for your specific situation given your projected Series A timing and valuation. It cannot calculate how much of your company you will own after three rounds of funding with different term structures.

The Fundraising Copilot provides the quantitative analysis that fundraising decisions require. It models scenarios, calculates dilution waterfalls using the NVCA model methodology, benchmarks valuations against actual recent rounds tracked by PitchBook and Crunchbase, and explains the practical implications of every term sheet clause based on what actually happens in practice, not just what the legal language says.

The SEC imposes strict requirements on private capital raises, and the copilot helps you understand which securities exemption applies to your situation (Rule 506(b) for raises from accredited investors without general solicitation, Rule 506(c) for raises with general solicitation but verified accreditation, Regulation CF for equity crowdfunding up to $5M). ChatGPT has no awareness of these regulatory requirements, which can expose founders to serious legal liability. See the full comparison across all categories, or explore our complete copilot directory.

fundraising  - Round Success Rates
fundraising - Round Success Rates

Who Fundraising Copilot Is For

First-time founders raising their first round. If you have never raised venture capital before, the fundraising process can feel opaque and intimidating. The Kauffman Foundation reports that first-time founders raise 40% less capital on average than repeat founders, partly because they lack the networks and institutional knowledge that come with experience. The copilot demystifies everything: what investors actually look for, how to structure your ask, what terms are market standard according to the NVCA, and how to avoid the mistakes that first-time founders commonly make.

Startup founders preparing for Series A. The jump from seed to Series A is where most startups fail in fundraising. According to Carta's data, only approximately 20% of seed-funded startups successfully raise a Series A. Institutional VCs have higher bars for metrics (typically $1-2M ARR for SaaS), due diligence is more rigorous (expect 4-8 weeks of deep analysis), and term sheets are more complex (with governance provisions, board seats, and protective provisions). The copilot helps you hit Series A benchmarks and prepare for institutional-grade scrutiny.

Small business owners seeking growth capital. Not every business fits the VC model. The copilot covers SBA loans (7(a), 504, microloans), revenue-based financing from providers like Clearco and Pipe, and strategic partnerships for businesses that want to grow without giving up equity. According to the Federal Reserve's Small Business Credit Survey, 45% of small businesses applied for financing in the past year, with SBA-backed loans being the most sought-after product.

Social entrepreneurs and impact founders. The copilot understands impact metrics, B-Corp certification benefits documented by B Lab, and the ecosystem of impact investors tracked by the Global Impact Investing Network (GIIN). The GIIN estimates the impact investing market at over $1.2 trillion globally, with growing interest from institutional investors.

Nonprofit founders exploring social enterprise. The copilot covers hybrid structures like L3Cs and benefit corporations, program-related investments (PRIs) from foundations, and recoverable grants. The Council for Advancement and Support of Education tracks philanthropic giving trends that inform nonprofit funding strategy. For traditional nonprofit fundraising, the Nonprofit Copilot covers grants, donor development, and annual fund campaigns.

Related Copilots

Explore specialized copilots for startup and business needs:

Business Plan Copilot - Build the detailed financial projections, market analysis, and competitive positioning that investors scrutinize during due diligence and that SBA lenders require for loan approval.

Business Formation Copilot - Set up your Delaware C-Corp structure, authorize shares, file your 83(b) elections, and handle the legal entity requirements before you can issue equity to investors.

Executive Coaching Copilot - Develop the leadership presence, communication skills, and strategic thinking that help you close investor meetings and build a strong founding team.

Nonprofit Copilot - For mission-driven organizations exploring grants, donor development, major gifts, and philanthropic funding sources.

Grant Writing Copilot - If your startup qualifies for SBIR/STTR grants or other non-dilutive funding from the NSF, NIH, DoD, or DOE, get help with federal grant applications.

Startup Copilot - Broader company-building guidance beyond fundraising, including product-market fit, hiring, and go-to-market strategy.

Looking for help in a different area? Browse our complete copilot directory or see how Copilotly compares to ChatGPT across all domains.

Pricing and Value

Free Plan: Get basic fundraising guidance, understand the differences between funding types (SAFE, convertible note, priced round, revenue-based financing), and receive high-level pitch deck feedback. Includes limited conversations per month. No credit card required.

Pro Plan ($29/month): Unlimited conversations, detailed pitch deck creation and refinement with slide-by-slide coaching, term sheet analysis with dilution modeling benchmarked to NVCA standards, cap table scenarios across multiple rounds, investor targeting criteria, due diligence preparation with data room checklists, securities compliance guidance, and negotiation coaching. At $29/month during a typical 3-6 month fundraising process, the total cost is $87-$174, compared to $10,000-$50,000 for a fundraising advisor.

Enterprise: Solutions for accelerators, incubators, venture studios, and university entrepreneurship programs that help portfolio companies and student founders raise capital. Contact us for pricing.

The Cost of Bad Fundraising Advice: According to the Angel Capital Association, the average angel deal involves $340,000 in invested capital and takes 74 days to close. The NVCA reports that the average seed round is $3.5M with 20-25% dilution. Getting your valuation, terms, and dilution wrong at the seed stage compounds through every subsequent round. Fundraising advisors charge $5,000-$15,000 retainers plus 2-5% of capital raised (on a $2M raise, that is $40,000-$100,000). Startup attorneys charge $5,000-$15,000 for term sheet review. Pitch deck consultants charge $3,000-$8,000. At $29/month, the Pro plan provides strategic depth at a fraction of the cost.

Important: Fundraising Copilot provides educational guidance and analytical frameworks. It does not constitute legal advice or investment advice. Consult a securities attorney for Regulation D compliance, and consult a startup attorney before signing any term sheet or investor agreement. The SEC provides free resources for understanding securities regulations.

See all pricing details or get started for free. Browse all 131 copilots, explore task guides, or find copilots for your industry.

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