Pitch Deck Diagrams

Architecture diagrams for your pitch deck.

Your pitch deck needs a technical slide. Cybewave generates clean architecture diagrams from your product description - export as PNG for your slides or share the full 11-slide presentation directly.

How to use Cybewave diagrams in your pitch deck

01

Describe your startup

Tell the AI about your product, users, and business model. The discovery interview takes about 10 minutes.

02

Get your diagrams

AI generates 4 architecture diagrams. Export the system overview as PNG for your pitch deck slide.

03

Share or embed

Add the PNG to your deck, or share the full 11-slide presentation link with investors directly.

How it works

From product description to pitch-ready diagrams in three steps.

1

Describe your product

Explain what your product does and how users interact with it. The AI identifies the key components, integrations, and data flows that make a compelling architecture slide.

2

Choose your format

Get clean architecture diagrams optimized for dark or light slides. Download as PNG for Keynote, PowerPoint, or Google Slides. Or share the interactive 11-slide presentation directly with a single link.

3

Add to your deck

Insert the architecture diagram as your 'How it works' or 'Technology' slide. The clean, professional styling matches modern pitch deck aesthetics and communicates technical depth without overwhelming non-technical audiences.

Architecture slides that work in pitch decks

What makes a technical slide effective for non-technical audiences.

The system overview slide

Show the high-level architecture: user-facing frontend, backend services, database, and key integrations. Label each component with what it does, not what technology it uses. 'Payment Processing' is clearer than 'Stripe API v3' for most investors and partners.

The data flow slide

Trace a core user journey through your system. For a marketplace: user browses → search service → product database → shopping cart → payment processor → seller notification. This shows investors how the product actually works under the hood.

The scalability slide

Show current architecture alongside the scaled version. Highlight what changes when you go from 1,000 to 100,000 users: adding caches, read replicas, CDN, load balancers. This demonstrates technical foresight without requiring a paragraph of explanation.

The integration ecosystem

Map your product in the center with arrows to all integrations: payment providers, email services, analytics, CRM, cloud infrastructure. This shows the breadth of your platform and the vendor relationships that accelerate development.

The security and compliance view

For enterprise and B2B startups, a diagram showing encryption boundaries, access control layers, and data residency is often required in the pitch. It answers the 'is your product enterprise-ready?' question visually.

The technical roadmap

Show your current architecture labeled 'Now' alongside future phases. Phase 2 adds real-time features, Phase 3 adds multi-region deployment. This gives investors confidence that you've planned beyond MVP and know what engineering investments are needed.

Why every pitch deck needs an architecture slide

The best pitch decks tell a story in three acts: what problem you solve, how your product solves it, and why your team can execute. The architecture diagram is the proof point for acts two and three. It shows HOW the product works technically and demonstrates THAT your team has the engineering depth to build it.

Without an architecture slide, your “how it works” section is a list of features. With one, it's a system. Investors, enterprise buyers, and technical partners process systems differently than feature lists — they see scalability potential, integration possibilities, and technical risk all at once.

The common objection is “our audience isn't technical.” But a well-designed architecture diagram isn't about technical details — it's about showing that the complexity behind your product is organized, intentional, and manageable. Non-technical audiences understand boxes, arrows, and labels. They understand “this part handles payments, this part handles user accounts, this part talks to the AI.” That's an architecture diagram.

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