Founders lose rooms by reciting facts. Learn to shape the same material into a story that holds a stage, a podcast feed, and an investor's attention.
You can have the better product and still lose the room, because the room remembers stories and forgets bullet points.
Most founders pitch the way they think: features, traction, the chronology of how the company came to be. That order is true and it is also forgettable. An audience leans in when there is a hero with a problem and a turn that changes everything, and most decks bury that turn under proof points nobody asked for yet.
This course rebuilds the same material into a story that works live. You learn to put the customer in the hero seat instead of the company, to find the single turn your narrative pivots on, and to make every metric earn its place by serving the plot. Then you stress-test it across three rooms: the short version that survives a hallway, the long thread of a podcast, and the arc of a keynote. The last move is making the story repeatable, so it lands the same whether you have ninety seconds or forty minutes.
Founders raising or selling: you have the facts and the traction but watch investors and customers nod politely and forget you by the next meeting.
Operators going on stage or on mic: you get keynote slots and podcast invites and want a narrative that holds attention instead of a list of talking points.
Marketers and founding teams: you shape the company message and need one repeatable story the whole team can tell across formats without it shrinking.
8 lessons to get you from zero to confident. Start at your own pace.