Harvard Innovation Lab Workshop on developing the Perfect Pitch, by Michael Skok.
Michael is an entrepreneur turned venture capitalist, who has seen both sides of this. He spent 21 years as a CEO, building companies and raising over 100 million to build a number of software businesses. And then has spent the last decade as a VC seeing thousands of pitches from entrepreneurs raising money, and invested in companies that have generated over a billion dollars in value.
So with that in mind, the idea here is to give you an insider's checklist for your own pitch,
Getting behind the Perfect Pitch - Harvard Innovation Lab Workshop
1. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
START UP
SECRETS
An insider’s guide to unfair competitive advantage
Getting behind the Perfect Pitch
MICHAEL J SKOK
North Bridge Venture Partners
twitter: @mjskok mjskok.com
2. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 2
My Agenda (for this workshop)
• Checklist for a pitch
• Selective drill down
• Get behind the pitch
• Q&A
• NOT how to give your pitch
• … a story
3. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
4. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 4
Your Agenda
• What are you going to cover ?
– Example:
• Team
• Business Overview
• Market Opportunity
• Value Proposition
• Go To Market plan
• Business Model
• Financials
6. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 6
Team
• Founders
• Management
• Board
• Advisors
7. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 7
Team - Founders
– What led you to this opportunity?
– What was your specific insight?
– How are you uniquely advantaged to build this
business?
– Relevant life experiences ?
– Domain expertise gained?
– Teaming
– How do you know each other?
– Results of having worked together?
– TBH: Who else is needed on the team?
8. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 8
Team - Management
• Management
– Previous companies, positions
• Achievements
– $ of value built
– $$ Exits
9. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 9
Note
For a more complete discussion of this section, see the
presentation at www.mjskok.com on “Company
Formation ”
http://mjskok.com/resource/company-formation
11. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 11
Business overview
“We do xx for yy by uniquely zz”
Keep it short and sweet for context and orientation only
Get the audience wanting more
(this should be consistent with your value proposition and
positioning)
12. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
Problem?
13. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 13
Problem statement
What problem are you solving?
(uniquely well, for who?)
14. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
Market opportunity
15. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 15
Market opportunity
• Business Pain
• Technology Need
Urgency: Why NOW ?
16. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
Value Proposition
17. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 17
Value proposition / solution
• How you address the pain / need?
• Your Product / Service…
– What’s unique & defensible about it?
– Why is it a breakthrough?
– How is it compelling?
18. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
After Before
19. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 19
Value Proposition
Before After
Vitamin vs. Penicillin
Acute Pain Absolute Joy
20. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 20
“Gain/Pain ratio”
The gain delivered to the customer
vs.
The pain and cost for the customer to adopt
Gain Pain
21. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 21
“Gain/Pain ratio”
> 10 to overcome
Inertia,
RISK
Pain
Inertia,
RISK
Gain
>10
22. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 22
Note
For a more complete discussion see the presentation
on
“Building a Compelling Value Proposition” on
www.mjskok.com
Or read this article on VentureBeat
23. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 23
Examples, case studies
• PROOF of what you do uniquely well
• Articulate from customer viewpoint
– Tangible benefits
• Easily measured ROI?
• Short Payback period?
• Articulate from your viewpoint
– How repeatable, scalable it is
(leads up to how you will make money from it later)
24. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 24
Vision & Mission
• How the market will evolve?
• How will you will lead it?
• What is your mission?
25. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
If you’re not early with a vision, you’re probably too late
26. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 26
Where does it all fit?
Building an enduring company:
Vision
(Market)
Execution
(GOSPA)
People
Team
Value
Proposition
Startup Enduring
Cultural Consistency
Roadmap Compan
y
27. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
What is the roadmap to achieving your mission?
• Market evolution & drivers
• Key milestones to address the evolution
28. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
Market Sizing
29. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
Top Down
30. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
Bottom Up
31. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 31
Market sizing
• Total available market – top down
– Quote sources like IDC, Gartner, Forrester
• Addressable market – bottom up
– Clarify basis
• Growth
– Drivers
32. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
Competition
33. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 33
Competition
• Unique differentiation
– Not just technology
• Barriers to entry
– Rewind, repeat: not necessarily just technology!
• What is impenetrable, sustainable?
– IP, patents, network, data etc
34. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 34
Positioning 2x2
Whatever sets you up… for a unique white space
High
{whitespace} Define real
BARRIERS
a To entry into each
c segment
The choice of
axes is
critical
b Bubble
sizing for
relative size
d of
competitors
Low
Low High
35. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
Go to Market
36. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 36
Go To Market
example highlights:
• Marketing Plan
– Segmentation, targeting, personification
– Marketing & Sales cycle
– Inbound / Outbound
• Sales Plan
– Inside / outside pre-sales and sales
– Direct / indirect channels & distribution
– Services and or product
… in sync with business model
37. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 37
Go To Market
Marketing Plan
Awareness
Interest
Understanding
Engagement
Trial
Purchase
Sales Plan
38. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 38
Note!
• For a more complete discussion of this area – see
the presentation at www.mjskok.com on “Going To
Market”
http://www.mjskok.com/resource/startup-secrets-going-
market
Michael Skok
39. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 39
Business Model:
How do you make money?
What is your model for
• Creating
• Delivering
• Harnessing
VALUE?
40. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 40
Business Model:
Examples:
41. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
Your Revenue streams…
• How do they align with customer’s interests?
• Do they encourage partners?
42. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 42
Note:
For a more complete discussion of this area see the
presentation at www.mjskok.com on “ Game Changing
Business Models”
http://www.mjskok.com/resource/startup-secrets-game-
changing-business-models
43. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
Numbers
44. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
Assumptions, Milestones &
Metrics are more important
than the spreadsheet!
E.G.
• Key hires
• Product beta, ship
• First customers
• Channel partners
• Etc…
45. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 45
Show me the money!
46. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 46
Financials
• P&L, Cash Flow
– One year by quarter minimum
– Plus annual up to 5 years thereafter, highlighting
– Cash flow positive
– Breakeven
• Minimum suggested information / detail as needed for the above
– Headcount
– Bookings
– Revenue
• May need to break out things like Services depending on your business
– Gross Margin
– Expenses
• Major categories like R&D, Sales, Marketing, G&A shown as needed
– Profit/Loss
– Cash
47. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 47
Realistic optimists?
48. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
49. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
? ?!
50. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 50
Cash raise
• Use of proceeds falls out of Financials
• Typically 18 months of runway
• Highlight key milestones that would set up for next
round
51. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
52. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 52
Summary
• Why this is a great investment ?
• Why do you have unfair competitive advantage?
Recap on what you said you’d cover in your agenda, making it
obvious why this is a great investment and why your are
advantaged to succeed…
At North Bridge we look to invest in uniquely qualified teams going
after large new markets by solving significantly painful problems
with disruptive and defensible new ways to build and deliver value.
IE “Game-Changers”
53. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 53
Backup slides
• As needed for the type of presentation you’re doing,
or leave behinds you feel will enable the right
assessment of your business
A typical mistake of entrepreneurs is to cram too much into one
presentation. Decide what your call to action is. If it is to gain some
follow on commitment to dig in on your opportunity for example,
then leave out the material that will come in that follow on meeting.
Only present what you need to drive action, and no more. If
anything leave your audience wanting more.
54. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
55. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 55
Cap Table (as appropriate)
• Major elements, summarizing:
– Existing investors %
– Founders %
– Existing team %
– Remaining option pool %
56. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
57. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 57
Exit potential (only if appropriate)
• Independent beyond IPO is the ideal
• Potential acquirers
– Their motivations
• Recent transactions in the space
– $ paid and valuations basis
• Comparable valuations for private / public cos
– Data for these like revenues, growth rates, market cap
58. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
59. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 59
As needed for drill down
– Examples
• Financial assumptions
• Screenshots of products
• Customer testimonials (if not already worked into the
pitch as proof points)
• Market data backup
… whatever puts you in command of your audience for
Q&A
60. Video from Great Wall
Video from the story woven
throughout this presentation can be
found by
CLICKING HERE
62. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch 62
End Note
Most of the value of this presentation is in the talk
track onwww.mjskok.com in the resource
http://mjskok.com/resource/getting-behind-
perfect-pitch
– Comments and questions are welcome on the site.
– Other notes are also available in Slideshare
63. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
Other tips and Resources
• As this pitch was NOT intended to help on HOW to
present, here are a few ideas on that…
• Presenter guidelines
– Don’t read your pitch – present it to us, authentically
• Get handouts ready in advance if you want your audience to have backup
– Make a point only once unless you specifically want to
reinforce it
– Proof is more credible than talk – wherever possible back
your points up with references to customers, or partners or
other validation
• Recommended reading
– www.slideology.com and the book by Nancy Duarte
– Presentation Zen by Garr Reynolds
64. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
Thank you…
Find Me Online
mjskok@northbridge.com
mjskok.com
@mjskok
/mjskok
linkedin.com/in/mjskok
bit.ly/mjskok-google
bit.ly/mjskok-youtube
65. Hi Harvard innovation lab : Michael J Skok : Startup Secrets : Perfect Pitch
START UP
SECRETS
An insider’s guide to unfair competitive advantage
Getting behind the Perfect Pitch
MICHAEL J SKOK
North Bridge Venture Partners
twitter: @mjskok mjskok.com
Notes de l'éditeur
So with that in mind, the idea here is to give you a simple checklist for your own pitch, And many times these days the pitch to a VC displaces the old business plan, which sadly many of us don’t get anymore, doubtless because people believe, in many case rightly, that we don’t have time to read them.Because this is often a business plan presentation, I will selectively drill down into certain areas of the business, but there isn’t time to cover all the depth behind these slides. I’ve simply picked out some of the areas that I see most lacking in the thousands of pitches I’ve witnessed first hand at North Bridge.Just note that I am continuously speaking on entrepreneurship and working on requests to cover key items in this presentation in classes, tutorials and workshops. So as I get time from my day job to post them, you will find an expanding set of materials to accompany these slides at mjskok.comBut most importantly this presentation is designed to get behind the pitch and help you understand first of all what VCs are looking for and secondly to help you check in on your own idea or venture and see if you’ve got what it takes to build a company and get it funded along the way.We’ll leave time for Q&A if questions don’t come up along the way.A couple of caveats. This is not a class on how to present. Presentation skills in of themselves are a full topic area. It’s also biased toward software ventures as that’s my operating experience and my investment focus. In fact I’m really even more focused than that these days on disruptive business models like Open Source, and then SaaS, and the Cloud Computing infrastructure that supports it and key areas within that like Mobile,Social Business and Big Data.
To entertain you along the way, as this is pretty dry subject, I will tell a story, as that is often a key element of any presentation. Usually it’s a story about you and how you came to decide to devote your working life to this new idea.In my case it is the story of a recent trip I made and you can try to guess where I was and then as you do I’ll tell you my story. It's in italics if you want to skip it during this read and just focus on the main slidesSo here is my starting point on that journey. It was a hazy morning. I really couldn’t see much except a few glimpses of the fall foliage. But I’ll tell you it wasn’t New England as you can probably tell from the terrain.
But where should you start in your Pitch? Just like I did here, give an Agenda of what you’re going to cover, mainly to set expectations. What expectations you ask? Well, given my comment earlier that presentations often replace business plans, it’s important to set out your pitch. Is it a comprehensive coverage of your business that will go into detail covering your entire business plan, or is it brief introduction to your business to encourage your audience to learn more in person? Or is it something in between like an update to your current stakeholders on progress in the business with an interim capital raise? Whatever the case, present your agenda and set your audience’s expectations clearly so you can exceed them with that Steve Job’s like zeal for “one more thing” to put your audience over the top.
I took this picture of a boy we met along the walk I was talking. I always feel the best way to experience a new place is to meet the people. I purposely took along a translator to find a way to do this, and met many interesting locals on my day out. I was particularly enchanted by the way this boy was surveying the landscape around him, framing it with his hands as if to take a photograph in his mind’s eye. It reminded me that everyone sees things from their own perspective and it’s important to try to get aligned with that perspective when reviewing people’s vision.Similarly for us as venture investors, it’s always all about people.
So first, if you haven’t already had the chance to introduce yourselves on the way into the room or in prior meetings, get the Team slide up as soon as possible. We invest in people first and foremost and we want to know who you are right up front, so we have context for where you are coming from. Founders and Management might be one and the same, but we distinguish between entrepreneurs and functional managers
What if you haven’t had experience yet? Well as we all know there are many examples of great entrepreneurs that have succeeded despite that, ranging from Gates, to Jobs to Zuckerberg. So what you can talk to in those circumstances is what has led you to this point in your life that makes you convinced you’re uniquely qualified to have this insight to invest the next several years of your life and our fund’s money into.What I’m looking for as an investor here is someone who shows focus on their subject matter and who is showing the passion and persistence to pursue the opportunity they’ve identified.In many instances there is no industry to have experience in - eg social media didn’t exist 10 years ago. Nor did mobile Apps. So no one has a decade of experience when there are new areas opening up!Also of importance to us is to understand where people have worked together before. Great teams are often formed through shared experience. So it’s great to hear if you have worked together or shared some experience that has helped you bond as a team. We recognize how important that can be in navigating the challenges ahead.Equally don’t be afraid to profess where you need help. Self awareness is a great quality and we enjoy helping to build teams and expect to help fill those gaps.
You’ll see I’ve suggested one of the important things to try to do here is state your experience and if you’re lucky enough to have had enough to have already created value and driven great outcomes, talk to those experiences.
Next we need to shed some light on what the business is that you're going to build.It should be a gradual reveal - just as here all you can see is the light and none of the viewGet your audience intrigued to learn more at each step - just as I was with the shadow being at right angles to what I would have expected from the window I could see…
This needs to be a simple statement, summarizing what you do uniquely well for whom and how. Keep it short and sweet, to provide context and orientate your audience to what is about to follow. Get your audience wanting to learn more.
Now we're at the point in the presentation where we need to get your audience excited about the market opportunity.Clearly state the business pain that you’re going to address, connect that to a technology need that can address that that pain, and explain why customers will see this as an urgent solution.Make sure your audience is in no doubt of the significance of the opportunity before you move on. Ideally they should literally be visualizing the unbearable nature of the pain. Or if they are representative of the target audience, they should confirm they are feeling the pain, as they think about what you’ve described as the unworkable current situation. Ideally you want people literally dying to hear how you address the pain and need with your value proposition, before you unveil your solution.
As I looked down the wall, I imagined the immense vision one must’ve had to have even started the wall. As I took this photo, I began thinking about how many bricks must’ve been used to build it. I subsequently learned that in fact before the use of bricks the Great Wall was mainly built from rammed earth stones and wood. It was only during the Ming Dynasty that bricks and other new materials such as bricks and tiles came to be used and helped quicken the pace of construction.
People often don’t include the 3rd point around customer urgency. You could say it’s optional, but in uncertain economic times, the default option for any customer is to do nothing. It’s incumbent on you to make sure that your solution, is considered at the top of the list of other potential projects or priorities, as many vendors will no doubt be vying for dollars from your potential customer. And remember that as a startup, you will usually be seeking funds from an existing budget, so you’re actually displacing planned spending priorities. Hence understanding customer urgency is very important.
For Great Wall of China, the value proposition was really quite simple, protect the Chinese from the northern nomadic invaders like the Mongols or risk losing their country. And as I walked along the Jinshangling section, I could not help but be struck by the domineering watchtowers, of which there were no less than 67 on this section alone.
However you describe your value proposition, ensure your audience really “gets it”, before proceeding. And be careful not to make any assumptions here, that may come out of your familiarity with the opportunity. Instead be explicit about what could simply not be done without the solution you are proposing and why that is so compelling. (One other word of caution here. Many entrepreneurs, particularly technically driven thinkers spend too long on this section of the pitch. Just present it and don't try to describe every detail of the solution, no matter how proud you are of it! Present just enough to be clear as to why it is a breakthrough. And then use outside examples as proof points. See later on for more of this. )
In this picture I capture a section of the wall where the contrast between the new bricks on the left and the old bricks on the right is clear. Your value propositionshould be equally clear.
Gain / Pain ratio?If like me you believe you can’t manage what you can’t measure, then you might find the following concept useful. It’s a ratio, designed to test the validity of value proposition and ultimately your proof points.
Simply stated the gain pain ratio measures the gain delivered to your customers versus the pain and cost for the customer to implement your solution. To have a really high impact solution your gain pain ratio should be obviously greater than 1, and in most instances for a startup to really make a breakthrough needs to be greater than 10 EG an order of magnitude improvement.
Ultimately no matter what you claim, examples and case studies that proved from your customer’s viewpoint what you can deliver, are more credible than anything else.So if you have that proof try to explain the tangible benefits the customers are enjoying from your solution.And try to explain in terms of ROI and payback period. As investors these mean more to us than random superlatives. But for you as an entrepreneur they should also help you in the pitch to your customers. To state the obvious if you can walk in with a solution that takes just a few days to show results and thereafter provides a clear ROI, it will be much more successful than an offering that takes months to implement years to show a return and is not measurable in dollars and centsFor extra credit articulate in these proof points how from your own viewpoint the solution was both easily and repeatedly sold and therefore represents a scalable business for you. This will help you lead up to your business model and how you will make money from it later in the presentation.
This should lead you up to describing your vision, for how the market will evolve and how you plan to lead it. Vision is very important to us, because you will usually be looking at markets that will emerge over many years. And because it will be important to be early into a market to lead the it, we look for entrepreneurs who have the vision to see how it will unfold into a big opportunity down the road.What are the possibilities opened up by your vision?
For the wall the real proof was the test of time. Despite Genghis Khan for example penetrating it, the concept of the wall was revived in the Ming Dynasty and reconstructions and extensions succeeded in supporting China’s defenses for hundreds of years thereafter.
Only when the sun came up could I really begin to see the extent of the wall stretching into the distance.
For me at this point in my walk the gain/painwas in the balance. I had just climbed up these steps,which the photograph barely shows the true incline of, and turned around to see that I had still a few miles to go before the agreed rendezvous with our driver.
Market sizing helps quantify the total available market for your project and is best done both top-down and bottom-up. Top-down analyses are usually available from analysts like IDC and Gartner, and while there directionally helpful, they rarely predict the true nature of the market you will specifically be addressing. That’s why bottoms up analyses are often more important. They can be as simple as defining the average deal size for your product and clarifying the target segment and size of that segment, and multiplying the two. But what we’re really looking for as VCs is people who understand their market in a very granular way, right down to the persona of the buyer, and where that is distinct, the user of the product or service.Really good analyses will therefore involve careful segmentation of the true addressable market and thoughtful descriptions of how those customers will pay for the solution over time to build up a picture of a realistic market size.
The whole point of the Great Wall was as a barrier to entryThe amusing thing to me was that looking at the terrain it was built on - that felt like enough of a barrier in itself, but clearly the Chinese didn’t feel that was enoughCheck on your own barriers. - Are they impenetrable?
This is always a fun section. Entrepreneurs often claim they have no competition because the idea is so unique. While that may indeed be true, it’s unlikely that you won’t have competition for at least the dollars that the customer has to spend on either existing approaches or alternatives.So what helps here is to describe very clearly what your unique differentiation isThen be clear what barriers there are to others following you. Technology is one obvious differentiator to bring out, but don’t forget others For example your business model, which may include your pricing advantage or your open source development capability or your ability to partner and or open up new channels. Other sustainable advantages may include the network of users you build up or the data being collected. In the end all these may be as compelling as your technology differentiation, and more important as a barrier to entry for competitors.
There may be many ways to express your unique positioning, but I’m a believer in pictures - in case you hadn’t already figured that out ;) So here’s the kind of simple picture I recommend using to clearly position yourself. The key to this particular diagram is the axes you choose. Suffice it to say you want to end up in the top right, positioned to win in a unique whitespace. Here bubble sizing is for relative size of competitors a,b,c,d.Catch me in person and I'll tell you the real key is to find a way to explain why the competitors just can't cross the barriers in this diagram to even enter the top quadrant. Then you know you're really onto a winner. - examples would be the shift from on premise to in the cloud, or scale up to scale out, or on premise to SaaS/multi tenant etc.It's a subject unto itself for a drill down, but you need to be able to get across the white space you have identified
A business model describes the rationale of how and organization creates, delivers and harness valueAgain this is potentially a whole subject unto itself, but you should at least cover the basics of how you create, deliver and harness value.For example in a software company you should cover how you develop your product, sell, install and support it, and how you package and price it, and what channels you may sell it through.
In the end we need to know as investors that you understand the methods and costs associated with building your product, selling it and supporting customers in a profitable manner.
The Great Wall is often compared to a huge dragon winding up and down in the mountains, grassland and deserts.So what was the Business model on the Great Wall?Well there were certainly plenty of vendors selling drinks and snacksSome didn’t make the products, they just distributed them, where others were clearly home made.ALL had a markup!It turns out that the wall became a basis for tradeSo to stretch the point… is the business model simply tourism, what does that bring to China in revenue, goodwill and the like and how does that compare to the costs of supporting rebuilding of the wall?
Number of people on the wall was staggering – but tailed off the further I went !
Don’t be afraid to get into the details at this point – just as I was focused on the details of colors and contrasts in photoFor your model for example it would be the details of ASSUMPTIONS and how they connectAssumptions milestones and metrics are more important than just the numbers your spreadsheet pumps out.
That of course ultimately leads to the Financial Model where the numbers should prove your business model out.Here the assumptions are as important as the model. Anyone can use a spreadsheet to make projections but if the Financials hang together with the rest of your pitch, we know you're really modeling the business with the thought it takes to build the a company and that's what we're looking for.
Financial planning is a specialist skill though, and few entrepreneurs have it. It's an example of where we can often help introduce the right resources to get your plan together.Outer years are directional only – to show how big the business can be, how the model works, how growth and profitability can be thought about
Show clarity of milestones and thinking around how to achieve what is in your controlRecognize the need for humility in regard to what you can’t control = often the market and timingIt turns out that most entrepreneurs are over optimistic – thinking along the blue lineOf course if you came in and pitched the black, boring line, you will not likely attract funding. And if that’s what you really think your business will do it may not be appropriate for VC funding anyway.Whereas most businesses take longer to take off than people think and if they are successful can exceed expectations. See the red line.In the end no one can really predict all this, but it helps if you can be a “realistic optimist” and plan somewhere in between and adjust along the way – eg the green line.
It can be a steep slope to climb, building a business…
If you look closely you can see a guy who got off the wall and decided to walk back down – that’s rarely an option for us !And we know the really successful entrepreneurs have the passion and persistence it takes to go the distance.
One of the key things we need from the Financial plan is the cash forecast to determine how much you need to raise.Here the key is to figure out what you need to get the company through some key milestones, and to a place where it makes sense to raise your next round, if necessary.And if you raise that next round you’ll want to do it at a higher valuation based on the milestones you've hit.At North Bridge we typically finance about 18 months at a time, because from experience we’ve learned that’s often a good chunk of time to allow the team to get focused on things like building and validating a product. And beyond that we all find it hard to predict too far out.
Light at the end of the tunnel = or in this case sun rising out of the clouds
Summarize with what you’ve covered in your agenda and explain why this a great investment.If you’ve done this right, as VCs we should be thinking how can we invest in this? EG…It’s such a uniquely qualified team going after such a game changing opportunity with such clarity of how to lead with a compelling value proposition. And the business model make such good sense we can’t fail to make money together!
My video from the walk along the wall.
Check in with your audience and see if they got what they needed – and thank them for their time.Then agree next steps.