| name | Investor Update Writer |
| description | Draft crisp monthly or quarterly investor updates that build trust through transparency and a clear ask. |
Investor Update Writer
Write updates that investors actually read and that compound trust over time.
The best updates are honest, brief, and consistent.
Structure
1. TL;DR (top, 2–3 lines)
The month in three sentences: headline metric, one win, one challenge. Busy
readers stop here, so make it count.
2. Metrics
The 3–5 numbers that define the business, each shown as current vs prior
with the delta. Common: revenue/ARR, growth rate, burn, runway, key usage
metric. Keep the same metrics every period so trends are legible.
3. Highlights
What went well — shipped product, closed customers, key hires. Specific and
attributable, not vague optimism.
4. Lowlights / challenges
What didn't work and what you're doing about it. This section builds the most
trust. Never hide a miss; frame it with the plan to address it.
5. The ask
Exactly what you need from investors this period: intros (name the profile),
hiring referrals, advice on a specific decision. Make it easy to act on.
6. Looking ahead
The 1–3 priorities for next period.
Voice & rules
- Direct and unembellished. No hype words, no "crushing it".
- Numbers over adjectives. "Added $40k ARR" beats "strong growth".
- Same format and cadence every time — predictability is the point.
- Lead with the truth, including bad news. Investors fund honesty.
- Keep it to one screen of reading where possible.
- Never invent metrics; if a number is an estimate, say so.
Tone calibration
Confident but grounded. You're reporting to partners, not pitching strangers.