Investment Memo Template: How PE and VC Investors Structure Them

Investment memo template for PE and VC — executive summary, thesis, financials, risks, deal terms, and how expert calls strengthen IC-ready decisions.

Published
5 July 2026
Author
Miles

An investment memo is the internal write-up that drives a firm's yes/no decision on a deal. It evaluates an investment opportunity comprehensively, connects the investment thesis to evidence, and gives investment committees the primary document they use to approve decisions.

Private equity, venture capital, growth equity, family offices, and corporate M&A teams all use memos. Formats change by business stage, but the goal stays the same: structured analysis for informed decisions, not a sales pitch.

FieldSignal supports this process with targeted expert interviews for due diligence, competitive landscape analysis, leadership assessment, and customer validation.

You'll learn:

What Is an Investment Memo?

An investment memo is a structured document that summarizes a deal, the investment rationale, key findings from the diligence process, potential returns, and a recommendation for an investment committee or partners' meeting.

Investment memos synthesize market analysis and financial projections. They contain summaries of due diligence, risks, and potential returns, and help investors make informed decisions efficiently.

They're used across:

Investment memos document due diligence for future reference, provide a time-stamped record of assumptions made when approving an investment, create a searchable archive of deal analysis, enhance accountability by documenting decisions, and help surface logical gaps in reasoning.

They aren't CIMs, pitch decks, or fundraising strategy documents. A good memo is balanced analysis, with dissenting views, risk factors, and mitigation strategies included.

Standard Investment Memo Structure (PE & VC)

Most firms use a fixed structure so partners compare potential deals across vintages. Memos typically range from 10 to 25 pages long. Concise memos are preferable and should limit to 2 to 4 pages for early screening or fast partner review.

Executive Summary & Investment Thesis

Busy partners often read this page first, then decide whether the rest deserves time.

Include:

Write the investment thesis in 3 to 5 bullets:

A strong investment thesis connects company strengths to market opportunities. See our investment thesis guide for the deeper framework.

Company, Market, and Competitive Landscape

Open with facts. Don't start with adjectives.

Show:

AreaWhat to show
MarketTAM, SAM, SOM, CAGR, source date
BuyersPersonas, budgets, switching triggers
CompetitorsDirect, indirect, incumbent, new entrant
DifferentiationPricing, product depth, customer experience
Expert inputWin/loss reasons, churn causes, switching behavior

FieldSignal can source former executives, buyers, churned customers, suppliers, and channel partners to test whether the market story matches buyer reality.

Product, Business Model, and Traction

Describe what the customer does with the product. State which workflow it replaces and why customers pay.

Include:

Good signals include rising retention, short payback, customer pull, and expansion revenue. Weak signals include flat cohorts, high churn, unclear buyer urgency, and product roadmap dependence.

For VC memos, product roadmap clarity matters. Venture capitalists want to know which 2026 to 2027 releases can change growth potential or unit economics.

Financial Analysis & Unit Economics

This is where private equity and growth equity teams spend the most time. VC uses lighter modeling, especially when a company has limited operating history.

Include:

Justify valuation with projections derived from comparable analysis. Show entry valuation, exit multiple, IRR, MOIC, and base/upside/downside cases.

Using data-driven storytelling is essential. Visuals like charts and graphs enhance the digestibility of memos.

Common return targets in PE and growth equity often center on 20-25% IRR and 2.5x-3.0x MOIC, though actual fund outcomes vary by vintage, sector, and exit market. Don't assume multiple expansion. Over-optimistic projections can mislead investors.

Management Team, Governance, and References

The management team section should prove execution capacity, not list biographies.

FieldWhat to include
NameCEO, CFO, CTO, CRO, COO
RoleCurrent responsibility
BackgroundPrior companies, exits, P&L size
StrengthsHiring, sales, product, operations
ConcernsGaps, references, key-person risk

Look for a proven track record since 2010 — scaling from Series A to IPO, managing a large P&L, or operating through a downturn. Existing investors and board members also matter if they improve follow-on capital access or governance quality.

Summarize reference checks. Include expert views on leadership style, domain knowledge, hiring ability, and operating discipline. FieldSignal supports leadership assessment through vetted former employee and customer interviews.

Risk Factors, Mitigation, and Bear Case

Strong memos in 2024 to 2026 treat risk factors as central content.

Risk typeExampleMitigation
MarketAdoption slows after 2025Validate buyer urgency through calls
CompetitiveNew entrant cuts priceTest win/loss data
ProductRoadmap slipsTie funding to milestones
ExecutionSales hiring misses planReview hiring funnel
FinancialMargin erosionStress test CAC and pricing
RegulatoryRule change affects demandInterview compliance experts
Key-personCEO dependencyAssess bench strength

Insufficient risk analysis often leads to poor investment decisions. Failing to provide balanced analysis is a frequent error.

Write a bear case as a real scenario: growth slows, pricing compresses, churn rises, and the exit multiple falls. Include probability, impact, and mitigation. The memo should demonstrate deep due diligence and preparedness for follow-up questions.

Deal Terms, Structure, and Exit Paths

How Investment Memos Differ Across Fund Types

Fund typeMost space goes toLess space goes to
Early-stage venture capitalTeam, market size, product visionDetailed financial analysis
Growth equityRevenue quality, retention, path to profitPure vision
Buyout PECash flow, debt capacity, downside protectionEarly product theory
Corporate developmentStrategic fit, integration costs, operating impactIRR and MOIC alone

Seed rounds may use fewer than 10 pages. Large buyouts can exceed 30 pages with appendices. VC firms underwrite uncertainty differently than buyout investors.

Practical Template (Section-by-Section)

Using Expert Networks to Strengthen Your Memo

Expert interviews test the claims that desk research can't prove. They validate or challenge assumptions about market size, pricing power, management quality, customer pain, and competitive position.

FieldSignal uses pay-per-use pricing, no annual retainer, no minimum commitment, and pass-through call costs with no markup on expert honoraria. That contrasts with opaque, retainer-heavy models often associated with GLG, AlphaSights, Third Bridge, Guidepoint, Tegus, AlphaSense, Capvision, ProSapient, Coleman Research, Atheneum, Mosaic Research Management, and Inex One.

Use experts in:

Example scenarios:

See our pre-investment research workflow for the upstream view.

Workflow: From Diligence Notes to Finished Memo

  1. Capture initial call notes, including claims, metrics, and unanswered questions
  2. Run desk research on market, company, competitors, and valuation comps
  3. Schedule expert and customer calls through FieldSignal for diligence
  4. Build the financial model with historicals, projections, unit economics, and sensitivities
  5. Draft the investment thesis and assumption log
  6. Write the first memo draft with charts, tables, and short commentary
  7. Collect partner feedback and note dissent
  8. Finalize the IC-ready memo and presentation

Keep an assumption log during the due diligence process. Convert it into risks, bear case items, and follow-up questions.

Recommendation Page, IC Discussion, and Post-Mortems

The final page should be direct. Don't bury the answer.

Include:

Firms often revisit memos 2 to 5 years later to review winners and losses. The memo becomes evidence of what investors believed, what risks they accepted, and how well the firm made investment decisions.

Start Structuring Better Investment Memos

A disciplined investment memo improves decision making because it forces the team to connect facts, assumptions, risks, and returns.

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