Making a pitch for investment is one of the most important steps that many new business owners can make. It can also be one of the most intimidating. First impressions matter with investors, so the pressure is on to make your pitch to them a winner.
For many years the rule of thumb was to limit your initial pitch to investors to no more than ten slides in your PowerPoint deck.
But now there is a push to get entrepreneurs to consolidate their pitches even more. The latest recommendation for pitches to initial investors is to limit the presentation to five slides.
“I am an advocate for communication in a clear, crisp way,” explains Mark Montgomery, founder of the Nashville consulting firm FLO Thinkery. “Great ideas at the core should be simple. If you require pages and pages to explain the concept, then perhaps the concept is not fully baked.”
Here is what I would recommend you put on five slides for an initial pitch to potential investors.
Slide One — Who are you? When it comes down to it, investments are primarily made in people, not in business plans, concepts, or ideas. The best idea in the world has no value to an investor if they don’t think the entrepreneur can successfully implement it.
Slide Two — What is your concept? What problem does it solve or need does it take care of for your target customers? This slide conveys your target market and the value proposition you offer them.
Slide Three — What is your “proof of concept”? The more real and tangible this evidence is, the better. Conduct market experiments and, if appropriate, develop prototypes that you can test on real customers. A great way to get real data from customers is to give the first versions away for free. The information you get from these first customers will be worth much more that what they might pay for the product. And, you will have real live customers to talk about with investors.
Slide Four — What is the growth potential for this business? Tell them what the business can become and what you will need to reach that potential. Investors want to see growth – significant growth. They want to opportunity to make their investment back several times over, which means you need to show how the business can grow into new markets or expand into new products.
Slide Five — What is the exit plan? Investors want a path to get a return on their investment. Demonstrate that there will be someone willing to buy the business to get them that return. Find examples from your industry of other startups that have sold to larger companies as evidence.
Your presentation during these five slides should be genuine and passionate. Show them you are committed, knowledgeable, and prepared.
If you can keep your initial pitch clear and concise, you have a much better chance of moving into more serious discussions with investors.
All it Takes is Five Slides http://t.co/dk7pAszg
How to develop a five slide pitch for investors. http://t.co/U4WklLVj
All it Takes is Five Slides http://t.co/UVfZ64Bm #entrepreneurship
“All it Takes is Five Slides” – How to develop a highly effective investor pitch. http://t.co/ZHf7IdPw
Good guide, no doubt about it! Its all in the slides, so one must carefully consider what to include in them.
Clear, crisp communication all the way! via @cornwallJ – All it Takes is Five Slides http://t.co/bnwvCSQV #pitch #investment
How to develop a 5-slide pitch for investors – http://t.co/y4seLSuP
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