Deck narrative risk check

Find the questions your deck will trigger before the room does.

A polished deck can still break when the questions begin. DeckNarrator stress-tests the logic, sequence, and narrative pressure points behind your presentation before investors, clients, leadership, or a board start challenging it.

Core $29 · Private · Confidential · Not design feedback
Narrative risk Where the story loses the room.
Exposed claims Where proof, logic, or sequence feels weak.
Defense prep What you need to answer under pressure.
DeckNarrator deck analysis interface

See where the deck may break.

The risk check looks underneath visual polish and focuses on the argument your deck asks people to believe.

Logic gaps Claims, jumps, or assumptions that make the audience work too hard to follow the story.
Sequence pressure Slides that appear too early, too late, or without enough support from the surrounding narrative.
Defensibility The questions investors, clients, leadership, or a board are likely to ask when the room gets serious.

Useful before you send or present.

Use it before the deck reaches someone who will challenge the logic, not only judge the layout.

Pitch decks Before investor outreach, demo day, pre-seed, seed, or a partner meeting.
Sales decks Before a strategic client presentation, enterprise meeting, or high-value proposal.
Board and strategy decks Before leadership, board, internal strategy, or high-pressure alignment meetings.

What your review helps you prepare for

The output is meant to help you understand what you are saying, why you are saying it, and what you will need to defend when challenged.

Narrative flow See where the story moves with confidence and where it starts to lose coherence.
Unsupported claims Find weak claims, thin evidence, unclear logic, and slides that invite hard questions.
Safer transitions Understand how to move from one point to the next without sounding scattered or fragile.

Before the meeting, know where the deck breaks.

Do not walk into the room hoping the logic will hold. Stress-test the story first.

Run deck stress test