NIC Islamabad is hosting a Pitch Mastery session on July 7, 2026, from 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM, as part of the Founder Institute Cohort 5 programme, bringing together three experienced mentors to guide founders through the process of crafting and delivering compelling startup narratives that resonate with investors, customers, partners, and other key stakeholders. The session is guided by Charlotte Christensen, Advisor at MON5, Shahla Qayyum, Founder and Principal Consultant at SQ Education Consultancies, and Kamran Taufiq Khan, Program Manager at NIC Islamabad, whose combined expertise spans investment advisory, education and communication, and startup programme management.
The ability to pitch a startup effectively is one of the most consequential skills a founder can develop, and one of the most consistently underestimated in terms of the deliberate practice and structured learning it requires to do well. Many founders approach pitching as a presentation exercise, focusing on slides, timing, and delivery mechanics, without recognising that the deeper challenge is a narrative one. A pitch that works is not primarily a performance but a story, one that articulates a bold vision, defines the problem being solved with enough specificity to make the opportunity feel real and urgent, explains why this team is uniquely positioned to address it, and communicates all of that in a way that moves the listener from curiosity to conviction. The Pitch Mastery session is structured around developing exactly that narrative capability rather than the surface-level presentation skills that most pitch training addresses.
Charlotte Christensen’s advisory background brings an investor-facing perspective to the session, giving founders direct insight into what experienced advisors and investors are listening for when a founder pitches, what signals create confidence and what signals create doubt, and how the structure and content of a pitch either opens or closes the door to the conversations that matter. Shahla Qayyum’s expertise in education and consultancy adds a communication and clarity dimension that addresses how founders express complex ideas accessibly and memorably to audiences who may not share their technical or domain knowledge. Kamran Taufiq Khan’s operational familiarity with NIC Islamabad’s founder community grounds the mentorship in the specific context and stage of the Cohort 5 participants, ensuring that the guidance connects directly to where these founders are in their development rather than addressing a generic founder archetype.
The three-hour format of the session gives founders sufficient time to move through the full arc of pitch development, from articulating their vision and defining the problem they are solving through structuring an impactful narrative and practising its delivery with feedback from mentors who can identify and address the specific gaps in each founder’s approach. Founder Institute Cohort 5 at NIC Islamabad, supported by Ignite and the Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunication alongside partners including Hashoo Group, Fauji Foundation, Telenor, Founder Institute, Cybervision International, and CM, continues to build a programme that equips its founders with the full range of capabilities that taking a startup from idea to investable venture requires, with Pitch Mastery addressing the communication dimension that ultimately determines whether everything else a founder has built gets the hearing it deserves.
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