If you want to raise venture capital, the first thing you must do is see your startup through the eyes of potential investors. Here are five tips that will help you connect with those investors:
1.
Identify the right
audience because each investor has different likes and dislikes. You should
research potential investors before you talk with them so that your company
fits the stage -- early, middle or late -- and the industry that the investor
prefers.
2.
Get an introduction
through a trusted source. You should seek an introduction through the CEO of a
potential investor's current or former portfolio companies.
3.
Have a brief PowerPoint deck that tells a
story in non-technical terms. Your deck should address your venture's team,
market opportunity, need for the product and its value to the customer, its position relative to the competition, how much capital you'll need
to build the company, and a financial plan.
4.
Be intellectually
honest rather than answer every question. You should quickly admit you don't
know rather than try to bluff.
5.
Adapt to feedback. You should listen to
feedback, absorb its intent and revise your pitch accordingly.
In order for this flurry of activity to
have meaning, you will have to answer two fundamental questions the right way:
Are you a great startup CEO?
VCs spend time with a few dozen entrepreneurs who display the right characteristics. If you are energetic, inspirational, smart, hardworking, honest and magnetic, meaning people want to help you, then you have some of the right characteristics.
But you also need to be tireless in
pursuit of market share. Great startup CEOs are driven, relentless, have a
vision and want to disrupt a market.Are you a great startup CEO?
VCs spend time with a few dozen entrepreneurs who display the right characteristics. If you are energetic, inspirational, smart, hardworking, honest and magnetic, meaning people want to help you, then you have some of the right characteristics.
Before you ask them to write you a check, spend enough time with potential investors to show them -- based on your experiences in college, sports or family life -- that you have all these traits.
How do you plan to disrupt a big market?
If you can prove to an investor that you are a great CEO, you're about half way there. Your next challenge is to make the case that you can build a startup that will get big fast so they can generate a return on their investment.
If you can prove to an investor that you are a great CEO, you're about half way there. Your next challenge is to make the case that you can build a startup that will get big fast so they can generate a return on their investment.
To do that, you will need to convince a VC
that your venture targets a strong market with a valuable product. It follows
logically, that a combination of these two factors could mean your product will
gain share rapidly in a fast-growing market -- and that would give the VC a
return on investment.
What is a strong market? It is big and
growing fast or ready for a new product that will generate a rapid spike in
demand. Doing that means finding customers that have a history of adopting new
technologies quickly who your startup can reach without spending too much
money.
...a
valuable product is based on unique insight, difficult for competitors to
replicate, maintains intellectual property rights and delivers clear value to
the customer.
To assess whether your venture has what it
takes, ask yourself whether you have a vision for how your startup's market
will evolve. If you can convince the investor that the answer to both questions
is yes, they will be eager to invest.
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