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About pitching (or the complete Seedcamp feedback)

by Rodolphe, on March 24th, 2009
3 Comments

I think it is time to write our feedback on the Seedcamp day. Seedcamp was a really unique event as it provided us the opportunity to meet more than 50 experts in our field (entrepreneurs, VCs, angels, consultants…) and to be challenged on our vision. We have had dozens of insightful and relevant feedback on our product, our business model, our strategy… but I think that the best practice we experienced there was the “art of pitching”.

The coffee pitch

The day started at 9:00 am at the Microsoft Technology Center. We were welcomed by a small breakfast and got the “team” flag stuck on our chest. Tagged like that, we had no other solution than to experiment our coffee pitch.

The goal of this one is to awake your future audience (coffee is there to help you !) to get its attention during the coming elevator pitch. It is also the occasion to practice and correct your first mistakes (hoping that your target won’t pay to much attention to it due to the early hour).

The elevator pitch

On the stage, you have 5 minutes (and no extra sec) and you want that these 60-70 people to remember you during the whole day (and even longer!), and get a good opinion of you and of what you do. The challenge is even harder when they already heard about 18 other start-ups and had no break for almost two hours. You should definitely practice a lot for this one.

The lunch pitch

Now, if you got it right, people remember who you are and what you do. They have in head the single message you wanted to pass them (that you and your startup rock) during the elevator pitch, and they come to you to get deeper information. The lunch pitch is a difficult one: you have to keep talking and pitch your interlocutors, while trying to grab food everywhere to refill your batteries. If you fail eating at this time, you won’t make it until the end of the day… but it is the opportunity to have a privileged contact with the people that felt the most interested in your project.

The mentoring pitch

During the rest of the day, we had four mentoring sessions with a panel of 5-10 advisors. 40 minutes shared between two teams to pitch and ask for advice. You better get prepared also for this one, knowing who are the people you are talking to. The difficult but most interesting part comes from the questions. You have to be prepared to answer to specific questions on your business, and believe me: these people are smart and quickly point out the strength/weakness of your project. You better perfectly know these points to get as much as you can of these short discussions.

The restroom pitch

Time to fresh up… But it is likely that the very famous guy you unsuccessfully tried to talk to during the whole day is the one washing his hands next to you. You can not miss this opportunity… pitch him!

The wrap up pitch

The day is almost over, it is 9pm and your throat feels like dry paper, having pitched the whole day. You feel exhausted, and these cups of champagne seem to be the definitive answer to your throat issues. You think you have succeeded, as you have been among the five winners. But it is not over yet. The wrap up pitch is the opportunity to gather the feedbacks of your day pitches. It is also the moment when you can engage in more passionate discussions, being more relaxed and show that you might also be a pleasant and sympathetic person.

The night pitch

This one was between me and powerpoint preparing the tomorrow 8am investor committee pitch.

The investors pitch

The day after, we were asked to pitch in front of the Seedcamp Investment Committee. OK, it seems that they liked our service and the team, but the question here is “should we put money in this project?”. Of course they want to go deeper in your product, understand the problem you are trying to solve and the solution you propose, understand where you are in your development road map and what and when do you expect to launch. But they are also very interested on the value that their investment would procure: what are your expenses, your funding history, and how much do you need their money. You get here into much further details than you got before, and have to be pretty convincing as you will be highly challenged.

The Techcrunch pitch

We were then invited to pitch during the Techcrunch talk held in La Cantine during the afternoon. It was almost the same format as the elevator pitch. However we only had 3 minutes to present Wozaik. This is a “media” kind of pitch; the goal is to convince potential users. They must feel that you are building the killer app and must be eager to test your product. I think the success of this kind of pitch should be an exploding beta invite queuing list.

So how to pitch?

Even if we had extensive two days practice pitching, I am still a young beginner pitcher (and I must confess that most of the time Vincent was pitching ;-) ). However, in a discussion with Laurent Chiozzotto, we agreed that a good early stage pitch should answer the 5 following questions in that order:

  • What problem do you solve?
  • Who will use your service ?
  • How do you solve the problem? (your product/service)
  • Why are you doing this?
  • And finally, who are you?

We are definitely going to follow this advice to prepare Mini-Seedcamp Berlin pitches!

Tags: News, pitch, seedcamp, start-up

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3 Responses to “About pitching (or the complete Seedcamp feedback)”

  1. Fabien Says:
    March 26th, 2009 at 8:21 pm

    It’s not an great question, I think, but why the “who are you” part is to the end ?

    If you begin your pitch with a (little) part about you, you can continue to the next part “naturally” (What problem we want to solve).

    And what do you think about the G. Kawasaki technics about pitch ?

    Best regards,
    Fabien.

  2. fromy Says:
    March 27th, 2009 at 2:03 pm

    Wow, thanks for all this helpfull information. How did you and the other teams present their concept?

    Did they use powerpoint/keynote? Because if there is in some cases 5 minutes or in some others less or more. It will be not easy to prepare upfornt the right presentation.

    Or do they do it without a beamer etc.?

  3. Rodolphe Says:
    March 27th, 2009 at 9:04 pm

    @Fabien: Personnaly I prefer exciting my interlocutor’s curiosity starting with the problem (like asking him a question that point exactly on the issue…). G. Kawasaki advices are excellent of course. His 10/20/30 powerpoint rule is the ennemy of boredom! By the way I think that it is tough to fit his “10 points that interest VCs” in a 5 min presentation. These points can be discussed later during the discussion.

    @fromy: We all had a presentation ready. Some made a real demo. For our part we prefered a video demo (you never now if the internet connection will work, and in 5 min you hav no time to fix any issue…). I personnaly find it easier to use the visual presentation to hammer your pitch message to the audience bing very simple (1 sentence/slide or 1 visual/slide). However other teams managed to show more detailed presentation that worked very well! Good luck if you are applying!

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