Investors reveal what grabs their attention--and what makes them cringe.
SOURCE: www.inc.com
Dan Doperalski, ddoperalski.com
For a certain kind of tech start-up founder, the pitch contest offers
a thrill that few other events can deliver: You have only a few
terror-filled minutes to successfully demo your product (using shaky
wi-fi, no less) in front of a firing line of judges who can—and
will—find holes in your idea big enough to drive a truck through.
I've spent the last two days camped out at this year's Launch Festival,
a tech start-up competition in San Francisco founded by entrepreneur
and investor Jason Calacanis, where more than 40 start-ups competed for
more than $1 million in prizes and seed capital.
In between the pitches, I asked investors and judges what it takes to make them sit up and pay attention.
1. The shorter your pitch, the more successful you'll be.
Calacanis claims that after five years of putting together the
start-up competition, he's learned that the more quickly founders can
articulate their business ideas, the more viable their companies usually
are. Your first sentence is critical—state what your company does as
clearly as possible. If you nail it, "I start thinking about what's
possible to do with you," says AngelPad founder Thomas Korte. "If you
don't, I stop listening because I'm trying to figure out what it is you
do."
If you're given five minutes, don't practice a five-minute pitch; aim
for just over four minutes. "If an investor is looking at you as a
manager of an idea, they watch how you behave and how you manage time,"
says IdeaLab founder Bill Gross, a Silicon Valley tech veteran who
picked up a lifetime achievement award at Launch. "Your demo is an
indicator of how you'll manage everything else."
2. Identify the problem you're solving.
And don't stop there: How do you know it's a problem? And is it a big
enough problem to support your solution as a business? These are all
questions you need to answer. Here's where Space Monkey,
voted best overall start-up at Launch, made the most compelling pitch.
The company framed itself as a cloud storage provider that's cheaper and
more secure than everything else on the market. The details of the
technology behind it were complex, but the judges immediately understood
the value proposition.
3. Pay attention to voice.
This one is a deal breaker at a tech conference: Don't be the one
with the slick salesman voice. Oversell your nascent product and you
lose credibility real fast. "Be real, be conversational," says Dave
McClure, founder of the tech accelerator 500startups.
4. Never, ever use a video to give your pitch.
Start-up competitions are about giving live demos and speaking
directly to the judges and the audience, says TechStars founder (and Inc. columnist)
David Cohen. The fastest way to turn the judges against you? Skip the
tough step of personally pitching your company and rely on a canned
video instead. One poor soul learned this the hard way at Launch and
took heat from the judges for it.
5. Explain why the heck people should trust you.
This one seems basic but it tripped up a number of start-ups at
Launch. Often the entrepreneurs waited until they were grilled by the
judges to mention that, oh by the way, their team includes an ex-Google
engineer who really knows location-based technology or a former Merrill
Lynch finance guy who's the perfect person to launch a beneficiary
planning app.
"It's important to show that you have experience in your domain to
build audience confidence," says Ryan Swagar, managing partner of
venture51, a seed-stage venture firm that sponsored Launch. "Craft short
bios that demonstrate to the audience why you and your team are tailor
made for the job."
6. Pitch to the decision makers.
Customers want to know why they should use your product or service.
Investors want to know how they will make a return. Who's picking the
winning start-up: an audience of potential customers, investors, or
both? "A number of companies I saw at Launch focused on the product but
not about plans to scale," Gross says. The panel of investor judges were
quick to nail anyone who didn't articulate some kind of growth
strategy.
SOURCE: www.inc.com
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