Copyright 2005 Pacific Technology Ventures Ltd  1. What’s my “elevator pitch”? Explain who your customers are, what their problem is, how you solve it,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Attention (your target market) !. Are you (their problem) ?
Advertisements

Company Name Sample Template Presenter Name
Home of unlimited opportunity. Open House Follow-Up Myth vs. Reality.

Word List A.
DO YOU WANT TO BE AN ENTREPRENEUR?. WHAT IT TAKES Starting your own business may sound exciting, but it is not something to take on lightly. Do some soul.
Elements of a good startup pitch
How to Pitch Your Company to Investors Presented by Community Capital New York Hudson River Ventures Orange County Business Accelerator July 30, 2014.
Rules, Rights, and Responsibilities
Elements of this Presentation are Courtesy of Dr. Mohan Kellogg School of Management 1 Big Idea Competent Team Sufficient Money Good Plan RelentlessExecution.
Retailing in Today’s Market – One Person’s Lessons Barbara Darlow, CMA,CPA Business Advisor, Invest Ottawa.
How to Pitch Angel Investors By Stephen Van Beaver 01/09/14.
Chapter 13 Communicating the Opportunity. Objectives Target the business to investors. Prepare oral and visual presentation for investors. Investor evaluation.
Are always looking for money. Get over it!!!. Serial Entrepreneur Raised €20 million (over 10 years) Constant Fund Raising 400+ Investors before IPO Alltracel.
Workplace Skills Interviewing.
Lesson 18 Edification.
Aspire 3 Entrepreneurial Educational Experiences Pitch Presentation Frame and Template.
Making a Pitch Presentation. Ultimately you are always pitching to investors, customers, business partners, recruits, friends, your spouse, etc… PRACTICE.
Welcome To Mrs. Carlton's Room. Entering the Class Come in quietly. This not a social time. Get out your morning work,agenda,and homework Make sure.
This presentation is not complete, so far I have just put down thoughts, I need to organize them.
CSCD 555 Research Methods for Computer Science
Miscellaneous topics and advice Never ever ever ever ……… EVER ….. What you should never ever ever ever ever do Light bulbs, planters, tough experiemts,
Applied Software Project Management 1 Introduction Dr. Mengxia Zhu Computer Science Department Southern Illinois University Carbondale.
Overview on financing instruments: Which instruments suit which business idea? ICT 2013 Conference Matthias Frieden, Go Beyond Investing 1www.eig-project.eu.
Business 16 Stanford Department of Continuing Education Class # 5, 10/26/09 Fundraising: Strategy, Termsheets, Dilution.
Joel Adams Ken Stuart Engineering Science 466b © J. Adams & K. Stuart : Starting up a Business March 16, 2004.
Raising Money from Business Angels. 2-2 What’s an Angel? A person who provides capital from his own funds to a private business owned and operated by.
The Business Plan. Why write a business plan? Always when a new venture needs outside funding Early in the planning process when you are looking at a.
16 Step Sales Process Keep Advancing the Prospect Toward a Sale
EUREKA HTIP Investment Readiness webinar #3 « Communicating with investors (post investment)» Presented By Selma Prodanovic | Serial Entrepreneur and Investor,
How Do I Find a Job to Apply to?
Vcapital Confidential1 Startup Workshop Presentation to.
CEO Ventures Entrepreneur Resources... How Do Venture Capitalists Select Investments? Full content credits to Catharine Merigold.
The Secrets of Hiring, Managing and Retaining Star Employees Presenter: Brian Waldman, Vice President of Marketing and Strategy Merchant Warehouse.
The Funding Process From The Entrepreneur’s Perspective Dan Dykens CEO Norbury Financial Systems, LLC.
Steve Jobs' 12 Rules of Success Lessons from Steve Jobs, Founder of Apple Computers.
Why Invest In You Training? Real Improvement. THE THREE WAY CALL 1. Set schedule call either using Invest In You or conference call. 2. Let upline or.
Becoming a Professional Network Marketer Part I By Gediminas Grinevicius.
ACTIVITY! Working with the people around you, list as many of the shops at the local St Helena shopping strip as you can. You have three minutes!
16 Facts Strengthen Your Life!!!. It takes more courage to reveal insecurities than to hide them, more strength to relate to people than to dominate them,
Being Audited – Life on the Other Side of the Fence.
purposes: scientific, business, diploma
5 - 1 Screening Venture Opportunities Dragon’s Den What are the factors the Dragons are looking for? What do they bring to the table other than.
KAREN PHELPS Spontaneous Sponsoring. Your Home Presentations “A Valuable Source for Recruits”
Cornell Notes Note-taking strategy that will improve your study skills and your grades!!
APPROACH AND CONTACT (STEP 2 OF THE SYSTEM MANUAL)
Test Taking Strategies for the Math CRCT. #1: Remember what you’ve learned!  You’ve worked so hard all year!  Remember the things you’ve learned in.
MGMT 3710 Entrepreneurial Foundations Chapter 9 The Business Plan.
F317 – Venture Capital & Entrepreneurial Finance STAGED FINANCING (BOOTSTRAPPING, 3Fs, ANGELS)
The Entrepreneur’s Bootcamp Jeff Hoffman ColorJar
The Materials Entrepreneur: Raising Venture Capital 19 April 2010 Hazel Moore FirstCapital.
Strengthening Your Interpersonal Relationships. 1. Don’t criticize, condemn, or complain about people.  There’s no faster way create resentment toward.
Leadership By: Nick Meress. What is a leader? Being a leader comes from how you were born and raised. It doesn’t mean you might be the president of the.
LEADERSHIP ACADEMY 2015 “HOW TO MOTIVATE CHAPTER MEMBERS INTO LEADERSHIP ROLES”
Guess our concept... What do you think the concept of our lesson is?
1. Don’t criticize, condemn, or complain about people. There’s no faster way create resentment toward you than to criticize or complain about a person.
Bullet-Proofing Dot Com Business Plans What investors look for...
n Taking Notes and Keeping a Journal n Listening Skills n Working Together n Managing Your Time.
FIRST DAY OF CALCULUS Welcome to WWOC! WONDERFUL WORLD OF CALCULUS!
Work Arbitrage  get paid helping others find work! Zero investment Work from home Immediate start Fast and easy Zero training or investment.
© by X-Academy Network. “So when I join now, how much do I make monthly”? “So are you saying ALL I have to do is bring 3 people to continue making money”?
5 ONLINE DATING TIPS EVERY NEWBIE SHOULD KNOW. So you've finally given in to your friend's suggestion. You've created your own online dating account and.
Introduction to Entrepreneurship: It’s All About The Money, Right? By: Venture Highway.
Interviewing Well In Your Job Search Preparing For Your Job Interview
10 Greatest Startup Screwups
St Peter’s CE Primary School
Ten Reasons You Should Start Your Own Business
Presentation Training
Quarter 1.
Approach Steps #2 APPROACH A sales person should always?
Presentation transcript:

Copyright 2005 Pacific Technology Ventures Ltd  1. What’s my “elevator pitch”? Explain who your customers are, what their problem is, how you solve it, and why they’ll pay you for it in 25 seconds flat. That’s how long people will pay attention after they’ve asked “so…what do you do?” Hard questions for the first-time fundraiser Hard questions for the first-time fundraiser

Copyright 2005 Pacific Technology Ventures Ltd  2. Why do I need money, anyway? Why do you even need money? If you are genuinely planning to raise your company’s value by 25 times, why not get a job and invest your own money to do it next year? There is only one good answer to this question: your company can only reach rapid growth once it reaches a funding threshold. To qualify for investment, you must prove that this is the case. Hard questions for the first-time fundraiser Hard questions for the first-time fundraiser

Copyright 2005 Pacific Technology Ventures Ltd  3. How much do I need? Take the bare minimum projection – assuming you’ll re-use your pencils, paper, and desks like a true hardscrabble entrepreneur. Then add 20%: that’s how much you need. If your number is under $200,000, get your friends and family to invest their “love money” in you. If you’re honest with them about the risks, they will be tolerant of screw-ups and will be there to help. They will also likely trust you with control of the business. If your needs are between $200,000 and $1 million, you need an “angel” – a wealthy individual who trusts you, loves your idea, and is not obsessed about valuations, projections, and business plans. Over $1 million? In 2005, you’d better be ready to have a pretty amazing idea – hardly anyone gets this their first time around. VCs care about meticulous planning, a wealth of market evidence showing the need for your product, and will insist that you have an experienced entrepreneur aboard. They will likely take control of your business. Hard questions for the first-time fundraiser Hard questions for the first-time fundraiser

Copyright 2005 Pacific Technology Ventures Ltd  4. Would my best friend invest? Would I ask him/her to? Once you know what type of investor you need (love money, Angel, or Venture), make a list of your prospective targets. Ask everyone you know what they think (even people who can’t afford to invest). Listen for common questions and criticisms. Then ask ALL of your friends for the name of someone who might be interested – remember, they’re doing their wealthy acquaintance a favour by introducing them to the Next Big Thing on the ground floor! If people are consistently refusing to introduce you to their friends, ask why they’re uncomfortable – this is a valuable source of information. Hard questions for the first-time fundraiser Hard questions for the first-time fundraiser

Copyright 2005 Pacific Technology Ventures Ltd  5. Have I thought of everything (is my plan complete)? You cannot hit sophisticated investors until you have a business plan! Use internet resources (see for links) to work out the skeleton of the plan, and consider hiring a professional business planner to clean it up. Professionals can show you where you are putting in too much time, and where you need more detail. Note – most first-time writers make the same mistakes – don’t waste time on a plan you don’t know how to write. A half-day with a business planner will cost a few hundred dollars, and will save you weeks of work! Also don’t let a business planner try to write the entire plan – you know your business better than they do. Remember, this is about your idea, not their interpretation of it. Hard questions for the first-time fundraiser Hard questions for the first-time fundraiser

Copyright 2005 Pacific Technology Ventures Ltd  6. Can I convince a complete stranger that I can transform an industry he/she doesn’t know? Once you have your business plan, practice your pitch to friends, and consider hiring an entrepreneur coach to help you refine it. You only get one chance to make a first impression! Prepare for your calls, and try to get a 15-minute meeting with every investor. For “love money” and angel-level investing, always get a reference to someone else who might be interested. If someone says they know nobody, ask why they wouldn’t forward you. Don’t be shy – everyone knows someone, and this may get you valuable information about the credibility of your pitch. Target investors and venture capitalists with some knowledge of your target industry – they will be more likely to understand your idea, and will be better able to help you refine it as the business progresses. Hard questions for the first-time fundraiser Hard questions for the first-time fundraiser

Copyright 2005 Pacific Technology Ventures Ltd  7. What sort of term sheet can I expect? From “love money” and angels, you may get to write it yourself. Three things to remember: a) treat all the investors the same way; b) have them all sign on at the same time, if possible; and c) value the shares low enough that you are sure they will make money. If they do not, you will likely never get a second round, either from them or from anyone else. If you are going for venture capital, expect an aggressive term sheet with only a 24 hour expiry. Have your lawyer ready, and get an education in term sheets from your lawyer or one of the many books on the subject. Canadians should follow general trends in the US, but should read Canadian books on the legal ins-and-outs. For all investors, the trend in 2005 is for investment to be dribbled out over years, subject to you meeting milestones – and if you miss a milestone, you’ll get hammered! Undersell and overdeliver on this! Hard questions for the first-time fundraiser Hard questions for the first-time fundraiser