| name | investor-relations |
| description | This skill should be used when the user asks about "investor update", "board deck", "board meeting", "investor communication", "monthly update", "quarterly update", "investor email", "bad news investors", "pivot communication", "crisis communication investors", "investor ask", "warm intro", "VC relationship", "fundraising timeline", or discusses managing ongoing relationships with existing or prospective investors. Provides frameworks for effective investor communication and relationship management. |
| version | 1.0.0 |
Investor Relations Skill
This skill provides frameworks for effective ongoing investor communication and relationship management, grounded in best practices from Sequoia, Bain Capital Ventures, Y Combinator, and leading operators like Brian Chesky, Stewart Butterfield, and Elad Gil.
Core Philosophy
"Investors don't fund potential -- they fund momentum. If they're not seeing regular progress, they assume there is none."
Investor relations is not a periodic activity -- it's a continuous narrative that builds trust, enables help, and pre-sells future fundraising rounds.
Monthly Investor Update Framework
The 5-15 Format (recommended)
Takes 5 minutes to read, 15 minutes to write.
Required Sections
- TL;DR (2-3 sentences) -- The headline of your month
- Key Metrics -- 3-5 KPIs with month-over-month trends (MRR, growth rate, burn, runway, users)
- Highlights -- 2-3 wins (be specific with numbers)
- Lowlights -- 1-2 challenges (be transparent, show self-awareness)
- Where I Need Help -- 3-5 specific, actionable asks
- Key Hires / Team Updates -- New additions, open roles
The "Where I Need Help" Section
This section always gets responses. Structure asks as:
- Customer intros: Name specific companies and people
- Hiring: Specify role, experience level, target comp
- Fundraising intros: Name specific investors and firms, explain why they're a fit
- Strategic advice: Frame specific decisions you're wrestling with
- Product feedback: Share specific features needing input
The Spreadsheet Method: For target intros, create a spreadsheet with name, title, company, LinkedIn profile. Send to investors and ask them to mark which contacts they can reach.
Critical Rules
- Consistency > perfection. A mediocre update sent on time builds more trust than a polished update sent sporadically.
- Never go dark. Slumping numbers shock investors if they haven't tracked progress.
- Send to prospective investors too. Regular updates to warm leads pre-sell your next round.
- Monthly during normal ops, bi-weekly during active raise.
Board Deck Framework (Sequoia)
Recommended 3-Hour Structure
| Section | Duration | Purpose |
|---|
| Big Picture | 15 min | CEO narrative update, highlights, challenges, help needed |
| Calibration | 45-60 min | Tell the company story through fewest, most important metrics |
| Company Building | 30 min | Org chart, product roadmap, growth KPIs |
| Working Session | 30 min/topic | Deep dives on strategic challenges |
| Closed Session | 15 min | Founder feedback and formalities |
Key Principles
- Send materials 48-72 hours before the meeting on a collaborative platform
- Start with qualitative "state of the union" -- no slides, big-picture narrative (30 min)
- Plan 1-2 deep-dive topics -- functional or strategic
- Never skip the closed session -- get candid board feedback
- Start preparation 4+ weeks in advance
- Use the fewest number of correct metrics -- adding charts is easy; picking the right ones is hard
- Board decks don't have to be decks -- Amazon-style memos work too
Storytelling Frameworks for Board Presentations
- SCQA (McKinsey): Situation, Complication, Question, Answer -- best for strategic challenges
- Situation-Opportunity-Resolution: Best when inspiring action and showcasing growth
Delivering Bad News
Framework (Visible.vc)
- Lead with the bad news immediately -- do not bury it
- Walk through your decision-making process -- people empathize with poor results if they understand the process
- Show your recovery plan -- specific actions to address the issue
- Open the floor -- let investors debate, ask questions, contribute
- Assign specific tasks -- leverage investor strengths
The Brian Chesky Crisis Communication Playbook
- Personal transparency (first-person, "I am truly sorry")
- Comprehensive business context (specific numbers)
- Clear strategic rationale
- Specific, generous provisions
- Career transition support for affected people
- Emotional resonance connecting to company mission
- Wait for completeness -- "transparency of only partial information can make matters worse"
Key principle: "The faster things change, the more you need to communicate the change."
Framing Pivots
The Stewart Butterfield Approach (Glitch to Slack)
- Create a complete pitch for the new direction BEFORE announcing the pivot
- Make the core team feel it was a joint decision
- Acknowledge the human cost honestly
- Focus the narrative on what was learned, not what failed
Building VC Relationships Pre-Raise
Timing (Elad Gil)
- 12+ months before: Start building relationships with 4-5 target partners
- 6 months before: Start monthly updates to warm leads
- 2-3 months before: Skip the "relationship tour" -- wait to talk when you actually raise
- 1-2 months before: Too late for relationship building
Elad Gil's Warning: "Do NOT try to 'build relationships' 1-2 months before fundraising. This almost always turns into a half-hearted pitch."
Key Rules
- Choose your partner carefully. The first person you meet becomes your point of contact, often permanently.
- Be selective. 4-5 people max, meeting every 6-12 months.
- Understand the VC's perspective. They meet 150-250 companies per year. Default assumption: every meeting is a pitch.
Leveraging Investors for Future Rounds
- 68% of seed rounds start with warm intros
- Companies introduced by a trusted referrer are 13x more likely to receive funding
- Investor-facilitated warm intros convert 40% more than cold outreach
The Forwardable Email
- Identify targets on your investor's LinkedIn connections
- Create a target list (max 20) with name, title, company, LinkedIn
- Ask investor which contacts they're comfortable reaching out to
- Prepare forwardable emails they can send in 15 seconds
- Follow double opt-in strategy
Transparency vs. Spin
Transparency wins. 58% of investors say they're more likely to invest in a transparent founder. Concealing challenges prevents help and erodes trust permanently.
The Practical Balance:
- Report difficult and positive updates in the same communication
- Acknowledge missed goals with what you learned
- Present challenges alongside plans to address them
- Provide context without excuses
Cross-Cutting Principles
- Transparency beats spin. 58% of investors prefer transparent founders. Concealing challenges prevents help and erodes trust permanently.
- Specific asks drive action. "Can you intro me to the VP of Sales at [Company]?" gets results. "Let me know if you can help" does not.
- Consistency beats perfection. A mediocre monthly update sent on time builds more trust than a polished update sent sporadically.
- Crisis communication requires speed + plan. Lead with bad news, explain your process, present recovery plan, open the floor.
- Board meetings are discussions, not presentations. Send materials 48-72 hours in advance. Spend meeting time on strategic debate, not slide reading.
Enhanced Analysis with Thinking Frameworks
This skill produces stronger outcomes when combined with structured thinking frameworks from the thinking-skills plugin:
| Framework | Application to Investor Relations |
|---|
| Systems Thinking | Show how business metrics interconnect in updates -- don't report MRR, churn, and CAC as isolated numbers |
| Feedback Loops | Narrate growth drivers as reinforcing loops (e.g., customer referral flywheels) |
| Second-Order Thinking | Show implications of metric changes, not just the changes themselves |
| Inversion | Frame challenges by showing consequences of inaction, making recovery plans feel urgent |
When these frameworks are available, apply them naturally within the communication drafting process.