Investor Q&A scripts

📖 15 min read · 🎯 First meeting → Diligence · Updated April 2026

Investors ask the same 12 questions in 12 different framings. Prepare answers; rehearse them; deliver them with the lightness of someone who has thought hard about the problem.

The first-meeting questions

"Walk me through what you do."

The 90-second pitch. 1 line on problem · 1 line on solution · 1 line on traction · 1 line on team · 1 line on ask. Don't deliver the 10-minute deck. The investor is testing whether you can be concise.

"Why now?"

Three forces (regulatory / technological / behavioural). Avoid "post-COVID" or "with AI". Get specific: "RBI's 2024 cross-border settlement rules opened the corridor pricing window we operate in".

"Why you?"

Don't list achievements. Tell one story that makes them feel only this team could solve this. "My co-founder spent 6 years at Wise running treasury for the SEA corridor. He saw a class of orders that his system kept rejecting. That's our wedge."

"Who's your competition?"

Three competitors named, with what each does well and how you're different. Never say "we have no competition" — that means either you don't understand your market or there's no market.

"What's your moat in 3 years?"

The Thiel four: proprietary tech, network effects, scale, brand. Pick the one or two you genuinely own. If your honest answer is "speed of execution" — that's not a moat; that's a current advantage.

The diligence questions

"What does your unit economics look like?"

CAC, LTV, gross margin, payback. Numbers, not narratives. "Blended CAC ₹38K, LTV ₹4.2L, gross margin 71%, payback 9 months." If you don't have these, say so honestly and explain how you're building toward them.

"What kills you?"

Investor is testing your honesty. Three honest risks, with mitigations. "(1) Regulatory shift in cross-border settlement — mitigated by 4-corridor diversification. (2) Customer concentration — top 5 customers are 38% of revenue, target <25% by Q4. (3) FX volatility eating margin — natural hedge via stablecoin pool."

"What metric matters most to you, internally?"

Pick one. Defend it. "Net dollar retention. Without it, we can't get to a Series A; with it, we can absorb churn and grow into our market." Investors test whether you have a North Star metric or are tracking everything.

"Walk me through the financial model."

Top-down (revenue assumptions) → bottom-up (drivers) → output (cash, runway). Open the spreadsheet. Show the drivers tab. Change one driver to demonstrate how the model responds. The exercise of stress-testing your own model in front of an investor is the test.

The hard questions

"Why didn't [bigger player] do this?"

Three reasons: (1) it's not their priority — they have a 1000-customer book; (2) it requires building infrastructure they'd have to undo to do; (3) they regulated themselves out of it. Pick your true reason.

"Why are you raising at this valuation?"

Three comparables. "Comparable A raised at 10× ARR; B at 12× pipeline; C at $X seed pre-money. We're asking for 11×, which is the median." Numbers, not feelings.

"What if we said no today?"

"That's fine — happy to update you in 90 days, when [X metric] is at [Y]." Don't get desperate. Investors say no for many reasons. Treat each no as a delayed yes if you can show progress.

"Tell me about a time you got something wrong."

Real story. What you did. What you learned. What you changed. Don't say "I work too hard" — investors hate the false-modesty answer. Pick a real mistake with real lessons.

The follow-up rule. After the meeting, send a 5-line email summarising what you discussed and the 2 things you'll send next. Within 24 hours. The follow-up matters as much as the meeting — it shows whether you're a person who closes loops.

What investors are really asking

  • "Are you smart?" — "Walk me through your business."
  • "Are you honest?" — "What's hard right now?"
  • "Are you coachable?" — "What feedback have you taken from a recent investor / customer / advisor?"
  • "Will you survive?" — "How long is your runway?"
  • "Will you make me money?" — "What does this company look like in 5 years?"

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