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Resources : Perfecting Your
Pitch
This is one of the best guides
to perfecting your investor pitch courtesy of Garage Technology Ventures.
The purpose of your pitch
is to sell, not to teach. Your job is to excite, not to educate. Pitching
is about understanding what your customer (the investor) is most interested
in, and developing a dialog that enables you to connect with the head,
the heart, and the gut of the investor.
Tell a good story
Most of the articles on pitching
are generally right about the topics, even if they miss the nuance (sell,
dont explain). But don't take any template as graven in stone.
Your story may require a moderate or even a dramatic variation on the
list of slides below. You may need to explain the solution before you
can explain the market; or if you are in a crowded space you may need
to explain why you are different than everyone else early on in the
conversation; or you may want to drop some very impressive brand-name
customers before you explain your product or your market. The one thing
you may not do is expand the number of slides to 20 (or 30 or 50)! Other
than that, let the specifics of your situation dictate the flow of your
slides.
Nevertheless, it is useful
to have a guide. With the caveats above in mind, here is a basic outline
for your pitch:
Cover Slide: Company name,
location, tagline, presenter's name and title.
If there are multiple team
members participating in the pitch, put names on the next slide instead.
Key objective: Everyone in the room should know the basic idea and value
proposition of the company, including the target market, before the
next slide is shown. All the words should not be on this slide, but
with one or two sentences orally, reinforcing and extending the tagline,
everyone should have a foundation for what is to come. Cardinal sin:
Launching into your presentation with an investor at the table thinking,
I wonder what these guys do?
Intro Slide: Team.
The three or four key players
in the company. For some reason, everyone puts the team slide at the
end, but investors almost always want to know this at the beginning,
and it is just common courtesy to make sure everyone is introduced.
But make this short, crisp and relevant. This is not the time to share
everyone's life story, or detail the resumes of all six members
of the advisory board. Focus on a significant, relevant accomplishment
for each person that identifies that person as a winner. In 10 to 15
seconds, you should be able to say three or four sentences about your
CTO that says everything the investors want to know about him or her
at that moment. Key objective: Investors should be confident that there
is a good credible core group of talent that believe in the company
and can execute the next set of milestones. One of those milestones
may be filling out the team, and so it is important to convey that the
initial team knows how to attract great talent, as well as having great
domain skills. If there is a gap in the team, address it explicitly,
before investors have to ask about it.
Slide 1: Company Overview.
The best way to give an overview
of your company is to state concisely your core value proposition: What
unique benefit will you provide to what set of customers to address
what particular need? Then you can add three or four additional dot
points to clarify your target markets, your unique technology/solution,
and your status (launch date, current customers, revenue rate, pipeline,
funding needed). Key objective: Flesh out the foundation you established
at the beginning. At this point, no one should have any question about
what it is that your company does, or plans to do. The only questions
that should remain are the details of how you are going to do it. Another
key objective you should have achieved by this point in your presentation
is to make sure that if there are some compelling brand names associated
with your company (customers, partners, investors, advisors), your audience
knows about them. Feel free to drop names early and often;starting
with your first email introduction to the investor. Brand name relationships
build your credibility, but do not overstate them if they are tenuous.
Slide 2: Problem/Opportunity.
You need to make it clear
that there is a big, important problem (current or emerging) that you
are going to solve, or opportunity you are going to exploit, and that
you understand the market dynamics surrounding the opportunitywhy
does this situation exist and persist, and why is it only now that it
can be addressed? Show that you really understand the very particular
market segment you are targeting, and frame your market analysis according
to the specific problem and solution you are laying out. In some cases,
however, the problem you are attacking is so obvious and clear that
you can drop this slide altogether. You do not have to tell investors
that there are a lot of cell phones out there, or that teenagers like
to socialize. Save yourself, and the investors, the pain of restating
the obvious.
Slide 2.1: Problem/Opportunity
Size.
Even if your market opportunity
is not obvious, in most cases you can assert the size of your opportunity
on slide 2. But sometimes you may need a dedicated slide to clarify
the factors that define the size and scope of the opportunity, particularly
if you are going after multiple market segments. Or there may be a unique
emerging trend that requires explanation. Do not use this slide to quote
the Gartner Group or Frost & Sullivan; show that you really understand
where your prospective customers are from the ground up.
Slide 3: Solution.
What specifically are you
offering to whom? Software, hardware, services, a combination? Use common
terms to state concretely what you have, or what you do, that solves
the problem you've identified. Avoid acronyms and don't try
to use these precious few words to create and trademark a bunch of terms
that won't mean anything to most people, and don't use this
as an opportunity to showcase your insider status and facility with
the idiomatic lingo of the industry. If you can demonstrate your solution
(briefly) in a meeting, this is the place to do it.
Slide 3.1: Delivering the
Solution.
You might need an extra slide
to show how your solution fits in the value chain or ecosystem of your
target market. Do you complement commonly used technologies, or do you
displace them? Do you change the way certain business processes get
executed, or do you just do them the same way, but faster, better and
cheaper? Do you disrupt the current value chain, or do you fit into
established channels? Who exactly is the buyer, and is that person different
than the user?
Slide 4: Benefits/Value.
State clearly and quantify
to the extent possible the three or four key benefits you provide, and
who specifically realizes these benefits. Do some constituents benefit
more than others, or earlier than others? These dynamics should inform
your go-to-market strategy, and your product/service roadmap, which
you will discuss later.
Slide 5: Secret Sauce/Intellectual
Property.
Depending on your solution,
you might need a separate slide to convince investors that no one else
can easily duplicate or surpass your solution (assuming thats
actually true). If you are in a business sector in which intellectual
property is important, this is where you drill down into your secret
sauce. This is usually some combination of proprietary technology, unique
team domain expertise, and unique partnership. Boil this down to simple
elements and terms, devoid of jargon. Do not walk the audience through
a detailed tour of your product architecture. Instead, highlight the
elements of your technology that give you unique potential for leverage
and scale as you grow. If you do slides 4 and 5 well, it will be easy
to make the case for your
Slide 6: Competitive Advantage.
You may be good, but are
you really better than everyone else? Most entrepreneurs misunderstand
the objective of this slide, which is not to enumerate all the deficiencies
of the competition (as much fun as that may be). Just because you have
really cool technology does not mean you will win. You need to convince
the investor that lots of folks will buy your product or service, even
though they have several alternatives. And dont forget that the
toughest competitor is often the status quomost prospective customers
can muddle on without buying your solution or your competitors
solution. The best way to convince an investor that you really do have
a better mousetrap is to have referenceable customers or prospects articulate
in their own words why they bought or will buy your offering over the
alternatives. Use this slide to summarize the three or four key reasons
why customers prefer your solution to other solutions. Many entrepreneurs
have been coached to use a four-square matrix that shows that they are
in the upper right-hand quadrant, but this has become a joke in the
venture community. Check-boxes are better, if they are not abused. Make
sure your check-box criteria reflect the markets requirements,
not just your product's features.
Slide 6.1: Competitive Advantage
Matrix.
Depending on how important
the analysis of competitive players is in your market segment, you may
need a detailed list of competitors by category with their strengths
and weaknesses in comparison with your company. Preferably, you develop
this as a 'pocket slide' to be used for Q&A, if necessary. Whether
or not you present this slide, it is important that you do your homework
on the competition, and that you don't misrepresent their strengths
or their weaknesses.
Slide 7: Go to Market Strategy.
The single most compelling
slide in any pitch is a pipeline of customers and strategic partners
that have already expressed some interest in your solution;if they
haven't already joined your beta program. Too often this slide
is, instead, a bland laundry list of standard sales and marketing tactics.
You should focus on articulating the non-obvious, potentially disruptive
elements of your strategy. Even better, frame your comments in terms
of the critical hurdles you need to get over, and how you are going
to jump them. If you don't have a pipeline, and there is nothing
unique or innovative about your strategy, then drop this slide and make
the elements of your sales model clear in the discussion of your business
model (next slide).
Slide 8: Business Model.
How do you make money? Usually
by selling something for a certain price to certain customers. But there
are lots of variations on the standard theme. Explain your pricing,
your costs, and why you are going to be especially profitable. Make
sure you understand the key assumptions underlying your planned success
and be prepared to defend them. What if you can't sustain the price?
What if it takes twice as long to make each sale? What if your costs
don't decline over time? Many investors will want to test the depth
of your understanding of your business model. Be ready to articulate
the sensitivity of your business to variations in your assumptions.
Slide 9: Financial Projections.
The two previous slides above
should come together neatly in your five-year financial projections.
You should show the two or three key metrics that drive revenues, expenses
and growth (such as customers, unit sales, new products, expansion sales,
new markets), as well as the revenue, expense, profit, cash balance,
and headcount lines. The most important thing to convey on this slide
is that you really understand the economics and evolution of a growing,
dynamic company, and that your vision is grounded in an understanding
of practical reality. Your financials should tell your story in numbers
as clearly as you are telling your story in words. Investors are not
focused on the precision of your numbers; they're focused on the
coherence and integrity of your thought process.
Slide 10: Financing Requirements/Milestones.
It should be clear from your
financials what your capital requirements will be. On this slide you
should outline how you plan to take in funding;how big each round
will be, and the timing of each;and map the funding against your
key near-term and medium-term milestones. You should also include your
key achievements to date. These milestones should tie to the key metrics
in your financial projections, and they should provide a clear, crisp
picture of your product introduction and market expansion roadmap. In
essence, this is your operating plan for the funds you are raising.
Do not spend time presenting a use of funds table. Investors
want to see measures of accomplishment, not measures of activity. And
they want to know that you are asking for the right amount of money
to get the company to a meaningful milestone.
Summary Slide.
This slide is almost always
wasted. Most entrepreneurs just put up three or four dot points about
how wonderful their investment opportunity is. Generally the words are
the same words that investors hear from scores of other entrepreneurs,
such as, We have a huge opportunity, and we will be the winners!
Your key objective on this slide is to solidify the core value proposition
of your company in words that are memorable and unique to your company.
If the venture investor in the room has to give a short description
of your company to his partners, these are the words you want used.
This is a good place to reinforce your tagline, or mantrathe short
phrase that captures the essence of your message to investors. The best
solution to creating your summary slide is to imagine that this is the
only slide you will ever be able to present. If you had to do your whole
pitch in one slide (with 30 point font), this is that slide.
So here we have a good general
outline for pitching your company. But remember, its about selling
your investment proposition, not about covering points. Dont get
fixated on using this or any other template. You should know the issues
about your company that investors are most concerned about. Those are
the issues you need to concentrate on. Make sure you address all the predictable
burning questions as early as you can in your presentation,
even if it means violating the sequence above.
Tips on effective pitching
How do you turn a pitch from
a monolog to a sale? Make sure every point you make connects with your
audience. Keep your text very, very short. Really. Please. Use charts
and pictures if you can. And engage your prospect. Ask questions. Do
you think this market opportunity is interesting? Have you
seen anyone else addressing this problem? Do you think CIOs
would be interested in a solution like this? You may get some tough
responses, but you will know a lot more about what is going on in the
investors mind, and you will be engaging them in your storyinstead
of letting them play with their Blackberries under the table.
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Make sure that everyone
in the room is introduced. Rarely do entrepreneurs ask the investors
in the room to introduce themselves. While it is appropriate to be
familiar with each investors bio (assuming it is on the web),
its fair to ask something like, What investments have
you been looking at recently? And if there are some other faces
in the room, you should absolutely have them introduce themselves
and provide a little background.
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Dont use a feel-good,
visionary Mission Statement on your overview slide. Mission
statements have also become a joke in the venture industry. Its
like saying, Our projections are conservative. Focus on
making sure your statement of your companys value proposition
is crisp, clear, and unique.
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Prepare good use cases.
Sometimes, no matter how simple and clear the description of a product,
what the investor really needs is a concrete example of how people
will actually use it. In some cases there will be multiple different
use cases. You may need to explain these to get your point across.
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Drop names, early and often.
If you really have some brand names involved in your company
as customers, as partners, as members of the team dont
keep them a secret for the first nine slides; make sure the investor
knows about them early in the presentation. But be prepared for the
investor to contact every single name you drop whether its
a person or a company. If you are going to drop names, they had better
be real.
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Make sure you can tell
the entire story in 10 to 15 minutes. Even if you have time, your
total presentation should be no longer than 20 minutes. You want to
have time to engage the investors and discuss their questions or concerns.
If you think you have additional critical points that have to be made,
prepare pocket slides that you can put up if the topic
arises.
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Average entrepreneur pitch:
38 slides. Average VC attention span/cranial capacity: 10 slides.
Do the math.
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Learn how to control the
flow of the meeting, without seeming inflexible or anxious. Watch
and listen. Body language and questions will tell you if you are okay
deferring a point or if you need to address it immediately. If you
let your audience take over the flow, you will probably wind up creating
a confusing, incomplete impression of your company. But if you dont
address the burning questions early and effectively, the
investors wont hear anything else you say.
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Dont lie. You would
think this goes without saying, but in their enthusiasm for their
creations, entrepreneurs tend to slip across the line all too often.
Please do not interpret our exhortation to sell as an
endorsement of hype, exaggeration, misrepresentation, spin, or lying.
The best salespeople are credible and trustworthy. It is more important
that investors trust you than that they understand every nuance of
your business.
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Pitching investors is different
than pitching customers. If you have a sales presentation for customers,
do not think you can simply modify it slightly for pitching to VCs.
Start from scratch, keeping in mind with every slide that an investor
has a very different perspective than a customer.
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You dont have to
be conservative, but you do have to be realistic. Almost
every entrepreneur fails to be realistic about how long things take
in the real world (vs. the spreadsheet world). Whether its the
time to complete product development, or the time to close the next
ten sales, entrepreneurs are pathologically optimistic. As with your
financials, find examples of comparable challenges addressed by other
companies, and use that data in your model.
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Never ever put so much
text on a page that the investor has to read it. Everything should
be short, content-rich bullets in a font large enough to read without
squinting. The words are simply reinforcement of the points you are
making orally. Pictures, graphs, and charts should be uncluttered
and make clear, compelling points. If they have to be deconstructed
and explained piece by piece, you will lose focus and momentum.
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And never use your presentation
stack as a standalone document. It is perfectly okay if it is not
readable when you are not around. Thats the job of your executive
summary or your business plan.
A good pitch is very rare.
It is so hard executing on everything else that has to be done to build
a successful company, pitching often suffers. But the ability to pitch
is a key indicator for investorsif the entrepreneur doesnt
know how to sell, how can he or she build a great company?
Good luck!
Further information and
excellent resources available from Garage Technology Ventures at www.garage.com.
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