Most filmmakers build pitch decks around the movie they want to make. But an investor is looking at your project through a completely different lens:
How do I get my money back—and what protects my downside?
In Episode 57 of Off The Lot, Ken Kabatoff and Anthony Furey break down what an effective indie film investor deck actually needs to accomplish.
We discuss:
• The difference between a creative pitch deck and an investor deck
• What private film investors actually need to understand
• How to explain your budget, finance plan, tax credits, and recoupment waterfall
• Why cinematography and concept art should not dominate the presentation
• How cast, comparable films, timing, and market positioning help reduce perceived risk
• Whether filmmakers need their own marketing plan
• Why your deck should inspire a conversation—not replace one
• The legal risks of publicly soliciting film investment
• How to make financial information clear without making the deck feel dry
A good investor deck does more than make your film look exciting. It demonstrates that you understand how the project will be financed, completed, sold, and positioned to return capital.
If you are trying to privately finance an independent feature, this episode provides a practical framework for building the document that may open the door.
Subscribe for candid conversations about financing, producing, directing, selling, and building independent films outside the studio system.
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