Entrepreneurs need to be ready to pitch any time, anywhere.
Jake Jorgovan, an alumnus from Belmont’s Entrepreneurship program, is always ready to give his pitch.
“At the most random situations, I will find myself giving a pitch,” says Jorgovan. “Out at drinks with friends, or just out socializing and suddenly I run into someone who is a contact directly in the space that I am working in. It can catch you off guard sometimes, but you should have your elevator pitch prepared and not be afraid to deliver it anytime of day.”
Jorgovan has become an expert at pitching through a lot of practice. While in school at Belmont, he participated in every business plan pitch competition he could. He had lots of success, winning Belmont’s campus business plan competition and the business plan event at Collegiate DECA during his college years. He also was honored as the recipient of the 2011 Nashville Youth Entrepreneur of the Year Award and the third place winner of the 2011 Global Student Entrepreneur Award.
Jorgovan is now working on his second venture since graduating from our program. He is currently founder and CEO of Virtual Physical Therapy.
Here are the five tips Jorgovan offers to young Belmont entrepreneurs who, as an alumnus, he advises and mentors:
1. Present a clear case of the problem and the solution. This is the most important part of the pitch. If the audience does not believe there is a problem, or fails to understand your solution, then nothing else you present beyond that will matter.
2. Present with passion. Don’t just run through the entire pitch in a monotone voice with no excitement. If do not sound excited about your venture, your audience won’t be excited about it either.
3. Work on your delivery. Learn how to use your voice to help emphasize key points. Slow down and emphasize your most important points so the audience knows that is what is important. Make it seem as if you are talking to each person in the room by using eye contact.
4. Know the audience. Each pitch should be tailored to whom you are presenting to. If it is a business plan competition, tailor your pitch specifically to the judging criteria. If it is an investor pitch, talk about the issues important to investors and be clear about the return they might gain from investing in your business. If it is a sales pitch, tailor it to the value proposition you offer to the customer. “There is no one size fits all pitch presentation,” says Jorgovan.
5. Practice, Practice, Practice. The more times you can run through your pitch, the more effective you become. “Try it in front of your mom, dad, sister, neighbor, dog, or whoever will give you the time of day,” recommends Jorgovan.
You never know when you might run across a potential investor or customer. So you always need to be prepared to give a clear and concise pitch of your business.
As I tell my students, “Life’s a pitch. Be ready!”
Great tips on presentations. Clarity is very important when pitching to a crowd because they need to have a good understanding of what’s at stake.
Very good tips. It’s true, you can find yourself pitching almost anywhere these days — not just in a board room. Thanks for sharing!
-Gasper
Great post! I am a current Belmont undergrad student from Colombia. I am currently starting a venture at home and I have found that you do have to be prepared to pitch to anyone at any time because you will never know what can happen after it. If people believe in the cause you are pursuing, they feel the passion you have for what you are doing, and connect with your words, there is a big chance that something good can happen. Be ready, you will never know who is listening. And don´t forget, you can not transmit what you don´t feel. Thank you Dr. Conrwall for sharing.
This brings me back to similar lessons we learned in speech class! One of our assignments last semester was to work on our elevator pitches to future employers. We learned these tips and practiced applying them in the form of a pitch to the class about where we want to be in 10 years, career wise. Expect the unexpected and always be ready for an opportunity to present itself! Great tips to help prepare others!
Great article!
I’m currently a Business major at Southeastern University. This article stood out because I definitely can start implementing these five tips/tricks from Jake Jorgovan. Tip number three and five are ones that I can improve and work on when pitching an idea, project, assignment, etc. For point number three, sometimes I get lost in my words that eye contact is the last thing on my mind. Which I understand can make the audience feel like I’m having a conversation with the walls in the room instead of them. Lastly, point number five is one that I’m currently working on and that’s just giving myself enough time to practice and rehearse in front of people as well as the mirror!
I love the idea that you must “be ready” to pitch at all times. When you are an entrepreneur, you never when you may come across the person who could change your life completely. Part of being successful is being at the right place at the right time, and being prepared to take advantage of your opportunity when your number is called.
Jake’s business sounds like such a cool concept! He brings up good tips about preparing to give your pitch at any moment. Often times conversations about the business you’re working on come up at unexpected times. While it feels unnatural to practice presentation skills while having dinner with friends, there is a lot we can take from what we’ve been taught about presenting such as expressing passion in our voice.
Dr.Cornwall, I really appreciate all the great advice and tips you give us on a daily basis especially in this article. Present, present clearly with your passion in front of it is such an awesome thing to work on for the future. One thing I can relate to is you have to know you audience speak to them and with them on the topics they want to know. more about, feed off their engagement.
Thank you for this insightful article! As a student entrepreneur myself, I completely agree with your point about the importance of being ready to pitch at all times. I had many opportunities to pitch my small business in unexpected situations, and being prepared has made a huge difference in my success.