VICTORIA GEDDES, Executive Director.
In a market defined by rapid information flow, algorithmic research, and heightened scrutiny of strategic credibility, companies need more than periodic reporting to win trust. That’s why Investor Days remain a valuable engagement tool for listed companies.
A successful Investor Day is about helping investors understand how the business works, where it is heading, and why it is positioned to outperform, rather than impressive venues or extensive slide decks. The best events leave attendees with clarity and a deeper appreciation of the leadership team behind the strategy.
Importantly these are not events at which new market sensitive information is released. It is vital that any new forecasts, guidance, change in strategy or management is addressed separately through an ASX Release prior to the Investor Day to avoid the risk of selective disclosure.
Why Host an Investor Day?
An Investor Day delivers the greatest value when a company has genuinely meaningful information to share. It can clarify a shift in strategic direction, illuminate the drivers of long‑term growth, or give investors access to decision‑makers who don’t typically feature at results.
Done well, it can also address misconceptions, reinforce the investment thesis, and expand investor understanding of how the company competes and executes. The key is ensuring the agenda provides new insights — something investors frequently say they value.
Planning an Investor Day That Works
Hybrid delivery has become standard, enabling companies to reach a broader audience and giving investors the flexibility they increasingly expect. This shift has also raised the bar for clarity, reliability, and design. To guide planning, consider whether the event will:
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- introduce or unpack a major strategic initiative
- highlight the depth of your management team
- explain parts of the business model that are not well understood
Timing and Format
Schedule Investor Days outside results season and AGM cycles. Mid‑week events generally attract the strongest turnout. A half‑day format is long enough to provide substance without overwhelming the audience.
If showcasing operational capability is important, incorporate a site visit and ensure virtual participants receive equivalent value through high‑quality video or guided walkthroughs.
Location and Experience
Whether the event is held at headquarters, a major facility, or a CBD venue, the priority is a seamless experience. Investors care far more about:
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- strong audiovisual quality
- simple registration
- dependable hybrid access
- availability of replay content
Preparing Speakers
A successful Investor Day should demonstrate the depth and cohesion of the leadership team. Speakers should be aligned on the key messages and aware of current investor perceptions. Full rehearsals, including Q&A preparation, help ensure the narrative is smooth and consistent. Leaders with less experience with investor audiences often benefit from coaching to help refine delivery and simplify complex information.
A briefing on disclosure expectations is critical, as is a technical run‑through to test microphones, slide transitions and webcast functionality. The goal is confident, authentic communication that reinforces trust without relying on scripted formality.
What Investors Actually Want to Hear
Investors look to the Investor Day to understand everything behind and beyond the numbers. They want a clear strategic narrative that reveals the ambition of the company, the markets it serves, the capabilities that set it apart, and how capital is allocated to support long‑term value creation. They also want operational depth and insights into execution engines such as technology, supply chain, culture, productivity programs and innovation pipelines.
Crucially, they expect transparent context. This includes the forces shaping customer behaviour, pricing, competition, cost pressures, broader industry trends and strategies to navigate uncertainty.
Investors also look closely at what underpins sustainable competitive advantage, including:
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- data and digital capability
- ESG integration
- innovation and IP
- talent, leadership depth and succession
- operating leverage and scale
Growth drivers and milestones also matter, but only if they feel realistic and grounded.
High‑Impact Presentations
A strong Investor Day pack offers clarity and structure that make it useful even without commentary. It typically covers strategy, business model, divisional insights, competitive context, operational capabilities, innovation programs, ESG performance, capital allocation priorities and risk management.
Consistency across presenters is essential, with each section reinforcing the overarching strategic themes. Slide design should be clean, brand‑aligned and easy to follow, with messaging that supports rather than duplicates the speaker narrative. Presentations should be lodged with ASX prior to commencement of the Investor Day
Tone Matters
Investors value candour more than polish. They want balanced, evidence‑based insight, not promotional spin. Avoid jargon-heavy explanations or overly optimistic narratives that lack grounding.
The strongest presenters:
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- acknowledge challenges openly
- share practical examples
- articulate clear takeaways
- respond to questions with maturity and transparency
They also avoid commenting on share price or valuation and do not introduce unrelated corporate news flow that can distract from the purpose of the day.
On-the-Day Essentials
Smooth execution reinforces confidence in the company’s professionalism. Providing materials in advance, ensuring reliable hybrid functionality, and enabling interactive Q&A are all critical. Make sure:
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- the event starts and finishes on time
- Wi‑Fi is easy to access
- sessions include appropriate breaks
- a high‑quality recording is made available afterward
Branded gifts can be a nice touch, but investors consistently say that what matters most is the usefulness of the content.
Conclusion: Make It Count
A well‑designed Investor Day leaves investors with a stronger understanding of the business and greater confidence in the organisation’s future.
FIRST Advisers’ suite of IR services, backed by senior IR practitioners with decades of experience, is perfectly positioned to help deliver a well thought out, transparent and informative Investor Day. Our integrated service offering includes investor perception studies to identify where there are gaps in investor understanding; presentation design and performance coaching to ensure effective communication and drafting of content and Q&As to effectively promote a Company’s investment case.