Pitching a VC -- The Basics Revisited

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When I first started writing VentureBlog, I used to talk a lot about entrepreneurship. At the time, not a lot had been written about pitching VCs or the Venture Capital process, so there was lots of virgin territory. Since that time, dozens of VCs have started blogging and much has been said about what it takes to get a VC down the isle. Bits and pieces here and there -- a good Google archeologist can pull it all together. But having spent the week pontificating about PowerPoint and the likes, I've decided to take one more swing through the basics of pitching a VC.

As I thought about the process of pitching a business, it struck me that no matter what the stage, the information was essentially the same. A good elevator pitch contains the same content as a good executive summary contains the same content as a good PowerPoint contains the same content as a good business plan. The distinction among these business descriptions is not the substance, it is the degree to which the essential elements are fleshed out. Each document contains slightly more detail than the preceding.

Elevator Pitch --> Executive Summary --> PowerPoint --> Business Plan

This makes good intuitive sense. There is no reason that the things that are most compelling about your business would change based upon the nature of the business description. Nor would an investor be interested in different things by virtue of the form that description takes.

What, then, are the essential elements that make up a good PowerPoint, a persuasive elevator pitch, a compelling executive summary? I have no doubt that VCs will differ somewhat on the precise list, as well as the order and the emphasis. But at its core, I believe that a successful business description should include the following elements:

1. Introduction
2. Team
3. Product
4. Market
5. Business Model
6. Competition
7. Financials
8. Conclusion

If you are pitching a VC, start with these 8 slides. If you are writing an executive summary, start with these 8 headings.

Obviously some businesses will require additional information that is outside the scope of these basics. I am not suggesting for a second that you should always pigeonhole your business into these categories alone. But they are a great starting point from which to build a persuasive description of your business.

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2 Comments

From the list, I see you value the team more than the others :-)

I guess thats true for early startups. For me doing pre-seed, the team is even more important than the idea itself.

The only thing I would add to the list is the intend use of the fund and exit strategy.

*cheers*

Jeff Gwynne Author Profile Page said:

Great boiled up list. As a former start-up founder and VP of marketing, I wrote investor pitches and business plans for several series of financing and an S-1. While the team might be extremely important in a Series A and the financials extremely important in an S-1, what is key in all stages is an explicit statement of the problem and solution. If you don't have this as an opening gambit that grabs the audience, you'll have a tough time getting to the rest of it.

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This page contains a single entry by David Hornik published on January 21, 2008 10:43 AM.

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