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Pitch Deck
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Financial Projections
Business Model Overview
Vesta operates a three-sided marketplace connecting consumer home-buyers,
real estate agencies, and banks across Italian metropolitan areas. The platform creates value by
connecting demand (consumers searching for properties) with supply (agency listings and bank
mortgage products), earning revenue from all three sides of the marketplace.
Consumers (B2C, freemium) access a free tier that includes property search,
market analytics, and neighborhood insights. Upgrading to a paid subscription
at €9.99/month unlocks direct agency contact, the ability to submit mortgage
requests, saved searches, property alerts, and detailed reports. Paid consumers are the demand
engine of the marketplace: each generates Listing Requests (LRs) that are
matched to agency properties, and Mortgage Requests (MRs) that are packaged
for bank partners.
Real estate agencies (B2B) subscribe to tiered annual plans based on agency size:
Small (1–5 agents, €2,500/yr), Medium (5–15 agents,
€5,000/yr), and Large (15–30 agents, €8,500/yr). Each tier includes a
monthly Active Listing (AL) capacity — the number of property listings the agency
can maintain on the platform (100, 200, or 300 per month respectively). In return, agencies receive
Verified Buyer Introductions (VBIs): pre-qualified, identity-verified leads matched to
their listed properties. VBIs are included in the subscription at no additional per-lead charge.
Banks (B2B) follow a two-phase pricing model. From launch, banks pay a flat
€100 per QMF (Qualified Mortgage File) for every decision-ready borrower + property
package delivered — PRE (Property Risk Evaluation) is bundled into the QMF price. At ~10% conversion,
this implies ~€1,000 effective cost per funded mortgage, well below the Italian market rate of
€1,400–2,800. Starting in Year 3, tiered annual subscriptions activate —
Regional (€12,000/yr), National (€32,000/yr), and
Group (€60,000/yr) — for portfolio intelligence, compliance tooling, and
standalone PRE data platform access.
The demand flow connecting these segments is sequential: consumer Listing Requests (LRs)
are quality-filtered and delivered to agencies as Verified Buyer Intros (VBIs). A fraction of those
engaged buyers then request mortgage pre-qualification (MR), which is packaged into Qualified Mortgage
Files (QMFs) and sent to multiple partner banks. The chain is
LR → VBI → MR → QMF. This creates a virtuous cycle — more consumers
attract more agencies (via VBI volume), which attracts more banks (via QMF volume), which in turn
improves the consumer experience.
Annual P&L / EBITDA
Revenue, Costs & EBITDA
Revenue
Total Costs
EBITDA
Annual P&L Summary
Cash Flow & Investment Scenarios
Valuation Projections
Based on a Pre-Seed round raising
€2M, three valuation scenarios are shown.
Conservative: €6M post-money (33% dilution).
Target: €10M post-money (20% dilution).
Optimistic: €14M post-money (14% dilution).
Forward valuations are projected by applying revenue multiples from
European proptech and B2B marketplace comparables. Each scenario pairs
its round valuation with corresponding multiples that step down over
time as the revenue base grows and growth rates normalise.
Projected Valuation Range
Valuation Projections by Year
Revenue Summary
Revenue is split across the three customer segments. In the early years, consumer subscriptions
dominate as the user base grows rapidly. Over time, agency revenue catches up as more
agencies subscribe and the Active Listing marketplace matures. Bank revenue
grows steadily, driven by per-QMF transaction fees from launch and annual subscriptions from Year 3.
Revenue by Segment
Consumer
Agency
Bank
Revenue by City
Annual Revenue by Segment
Annual Revenue by City
Note: Agency and bank revenue is directly city-attributable. Consumer subscription
revenue originates from a national funnel and is allocated to cities proportional to each city's
share of Listing Requests (LRs), reflecting where consumer demand is effectively directed.
Consumer Acquisition & Revenue
Consumer acquisition follows a national funnel. From a Total Addressable Market (TAM)
of ~7 million active property seekers in Italy, a fraction becomes aware of Vesta
(rate q), a subset signs up for free (rate x), and a further subset
converts to paid (rate y). These funnel parameters evolve over time as
the brand matures and the product improves — for example, the awareness rate q grows from
7% in Year 1 to 17% by Year 4 as organic reach and word-of-mouth take effect.
Paid subscribers experience a monthly churn rate of 3% (~30% annualized), consistent
with a utility subscription used during an active property search — users churn once they complete
a transaction or pause their search. Each paid user generates an average of 1.5 Listing Requests
per month. LRs are distributed to cities proportional to agency supply, where they flow through
the demand chain: LR → VBI → MR → QMF. 25% of VBIs (verified buyer intros)
lead to a Mortgage Request.
Reading the funnel chart: TAM (7M) is the total annual addressable market.
Attention is the cumulative number of people who became aware of Vesta during the year (annual flow).
Free and Paid are year-end account stocks (cumulative active accounts, net of churn).
All three decrease at each stage: TAM > Attention > Free > Paid.
Consumer Funnel Stages
Attention
Free
Paid
Consumer Funnel (Annual)
Agency Acquisition & Revenue
Agency acquisition is city-based. Each metropolitan area has its own pool of
agencies (TAM), and Vesta acquires them through a local funnel: awareness (via BD outreach and referrals),
trial signup, and paid conversion. Agencies subscribe to one of three tiers based on their size,
each with a corresponding Active Listing capacity and annual subscription fee.
Vesta launches city-by-city across six Italian metropolitan areas, starting with
Torino as the proof-of-concept market, followed by Milano,
Roma, Firenze, Venezia, and
Bologna. Earlier cities benefit from more intensive field support;
later cities benefit from established case studies and a matured product.
Agency Revenue by City
Annual Agency Revenue by City
Per-City Breakdown
Bank Acquisition & Revenue
Bank acquisition follows a city-based adoption model with longer procurement cycles
than agencies. Banks go through a 6-month legal and compliance review before signing, after which
adoption rates gradually increase. Once integrated via API, banks are highly sticky (very low churn).
The demand pipeline flows from consumer activity to bank revenue:
Listing Requests (LRs) are filtered into Verified Buyer Intros (VBIs) for agencies, and a fraction
of engaged buyers then request mortgage pre-qualification (MR). MRs are packaged into Qualified
Mortgage Files (QMFs) and sent to multiple partner banks. Because each consumer typically selects
~2.5 banks to compare offers, and 45% of submissions pass the qualification gate,
the QMF count slightly exceeds the MR count (~1.13× multiplier). Each QMF generates a
transaction fee. Bank subscriptions activate from Year 3, adding
recurring revenue on top of per-QMF fees.
Bank Revenue by Type
Bank Revenue by City
Annual Bank Revenue Breakdown
QMF Demand Flow by City
Bank Subscriptions by City
Cost Structure
Team costs (salaries + employment costs) are the largest component
in the early years as the founding team builds out engineering, sales, and support functions.
As the platform scales, platform infrastructure costs grow with user volume
(variable compute, storage, and API costs per session) while operating expenses
(R&D licenses, marketing, software/hardware) remain relatively contained.
Cost Breakdown
Team
Operating
Platform
Annual Cost Breakdown
Team Costs by Department
Vesta operates as a flat, product-led startup with no C-suite layer below CEO/CTO.
The org is structured around four functional areas:
Platform Engineering (backend, frontend, data, DevOps),
Product & Design (product direction, UX/UI),
Business Development & Sales (city-level agency/bank acquisition),
and Customer Success (onboarding, support).
Marketing is led by a hands-on Head of Growth, and
Leadership covers CEO, CTO, and Head of Operations.
The team grows from ~12 at end of Year 1 to ~35 at steady state (Year 4–5).
Team Costs by Department
Annual Team Costs by Department
Role-Level Breakdown & Hiring Timeline
Hiring Timeline
Team Costs by Role (Annual)
Operating Costs by Category
Operating expenses cover non-headcount costs required to run the business.
R&D includes research tools, prototyping, and data licenses.
Marketing covers digital campaigns, content, and events for user acquisition.
Admin aggregates legal, travel, back-office, and office costs.
Software/Hardware covers development tools, SaaS subscriptions, and equipment.
Misc captures incidentals. Operating costs grow modestly with scale,
remaining a small fraction of total spend relative to team costs.
Operating Costs by Category
Annual Operating Costs by Category
Team
Leadership bios and advisors — coming soon