Pitch advice from seasoned funder

I was fortunate enough to be in an Intuit group pitching to multiple investors recently. Bing Gordon was there and gave feedback afterwards. It was so valuable that I just had to share it. 
He said the best entrepreneurs build small and great…one feature at a time. They use existing assets, existing brand, and existing data. This is a hit business and you need to present like a movie pitch. Your presentation is a movie poster with a clear picture of the customer enjoying value. This pitch needs to have very few slides:
  • Distinct strategies 
  • Starting assets 
  • Numbers
Only 3-5 bullets, one sentence per bullet and know your slides at all times. You have to know it inside and out…you can work the story without slides and pictures. 

Please use Waze!

I just used Waze for the first time. It had been installed for a week or so. A friend said please use it because it’s better for me if you use it. There was  a 101 south drive ahead of me, so I opened it.

I could see the following:

  • other waze users driving around
  • where traffic was backed up
  • where accidents or other issues were
  • where police were

Then I used the routing and got the following:

  • arrival estimate that was very close
  • distance
  • issues all along the route (it was 101 in the morning)

distance
Here’s a quick view on the right of what I saw in the app. Another thing that was interesting was when I was talking to my dad (with earpiece and hands-free) and the Waze voice came on and alerted me that there was an accident ahead. Sure enough, the traffic started to slow.

Overall, this app gave me visibility of a previous unknown and helped me understand when I would really get in to work. I’m interested to try the routing more. I would recommend that others use it as it will be on when I drive for sure. It is highly performant…much better than google maps with traffic overlays. It’s huge leaps above that!

Chase…increase your mobile check deposit limit!

What an awesome feature Chase Bank has. Take a picture of a check to deposit it. I love the idea. When I ask customers if going to the bank is a problem, they say, “No. I do it all the time. It’s not a problem.” Then, when I ask them about Chase mobile check deposit and they have it, they say, “I love it. I don’t have to go to the bank anymore!”

I love the idea so much, I created an account there for my rental properties. Some of the management companies send checks to me instead of doing direct deposit. So for me, this is an attractive feature. However, when I tried to deposit my rent checks I found some major buzz-kill. There is a 2k check limit! If you have a rent check for 2100.00 (pretty common for rents in major cities), it won’t work! Ugh. On top of that, there is a 5k a month limit. I understand that the feature is new and risk management is necessary, but that is the whole reason I even considered Chase. I feel like I’ve been dry-tested.

Now, I should have read up on the feature and looked at the ins-and-outs of it and then decided before I started switching banks. I’m responsible for that. However, Chase has irked me when they were trying acquire me. I know there are others who have run into this limit and become irritated. I have talked with small business owners who have called out this limit specifically. Also, if you can afford an iPhone and run a small business, you are likely getting checks over 2k every now and again. Chase, you are likely enticing and irritating 27 million people with this limit. Your risk management for this feature is out of line for the segment of customers it attracts. CHANGE IT!

Steve Blank at the Alchemist Series

I just sat in the front row of an intimate Steve Blank talk. It was great! I got to be in the “hot seat” on the stage where I put my venture out in front of the audience and took questions. Then, Steve Blank came up and did a great presentation on the Startup Owner’s Manual and answered all kinds of great questions we had for him.

Here are my notes (I banged some out on twitter during the session).

Business plans were the old way. When they didn’t work, you fired the VP of Sales. Then you hired another VP of Sales. If it still didn’t work, then you fired the VP of Marketing. If the business was still failing, then you replaced the CEO. Now, you replace the business model first. Pretty cool. He hammered the waterfall product development model: Waterfall has 2 specific errors… it assumes I know the customer problem and I know the features.  Most startups fail from a lack of customers and not product development.

He talked of the big difference between startups and companies. A startup wants to become a company. The definition of a startup is a temporary organization designed to search for a repeatable and scalable business model. That whole startup mode is the “search” for a model. Then, after the model is found, the company exists and is now in “execution”. Then, marketing and sales and development can execute. Executing before the search is complete leads to disaster.  Search! Don’t sell. Don’t code. Get out of the building and question your customers.

He talked of the Lean Canvas and Customer Development. The lean canvas is filled with hypotheses or “f-ing guesses”. The word hypotheses is used because people in school are paying big bucks for tuition, but they are really “f-ing guesses”. I love that.  Customer Development turns the “f-ing guesses” on the canvas into facts.

Startups go from failure to failure. The initial idea is almost always wrong. This is really hard for smart people. How quickly can you learn what is wrong is the key. You can’t get it all right on day 1. If you think that’s true, the odds are you are hallucinating. It’s about how quickly are you learning that you are wrong.
When asked about protecting ideas in the early stage, Steve said if you are doing a web startup…it’s an eng problem. Your idea is not a company. You need rapid customer feedback. You need to talk to customers about their problems and really nail that. Then, you need to see what solutions will work for those problems. Don’t sit in some room and fret over someone taking your idea. Get out and talk to customers. However, if it’s BIO tech, get a patent immediately. Don’t mess around with billion dollar biotech ideas.
We talked about smaller niche markets vs. bigger mass markets. He stated the Business Model Canvas doesn’t show the biz oppty. He said it’s really the difference between doing a small business and a big startup that VC’s want to invest in. If you have a 5m a year business, then it is a small business (which is fine if you want that). If you don’t know the biz model of Angels and VC’s, you will be frustrated. If your biz isn’t large enough, you aren’t getting VC money.   
When asked about straddling markets and deciding which to invest in, he said if you are GM with a lot of resources then you can straddle. But as a startup, you need to really know your market.  You need to understand your market to know when and where to put all your chips in. That’s a startup.  When you push a chip in at a time, you are a small business.  

Great list of startup tools

  • Developers use awe.sm to make meaning out of social sharing behavior.
  • Helps you set up a social launching soon page in minutes.
  • Measure engagement and impact in customer experience
  • Let’s people build, publish and test landing pages without IT or software
  • Live chat helps you to sell better and help your customer 
  • Provides fast, affordable feedback on your website and mobile apps within an hour
  • Interact with customers and build relationships
AskYourTargetMarket https://aytm.com/
  • Enables you to perofrm your own online market research
  • Feature-rich URL shortener tracks location and source
  • Help for designing apps by sketching out their ideas
  • Provide user interaface design temaplates that enable you to prototype and test your app ideas usig keynote, ppt, or open office.
Google Adwords, Bing Ads, Facebook Ads
  • Run ads to landing pages…test which ads work best