Women Pitching: Finesse to Success
Female founder companies raised only 2.2% of VC funding in
2017: Source Fortune.com and Pitch Book.
These numbers suck.
We all want to see more strong female founders gaining
investment.
Unfortunately, the stats don’t support this.
A founder should be judged on their merits.
The question was posed to me by a female founder; “should
female founders pitch differently to men?”.
Following a presentation, I gave during female entrepreneur
week (and because the stats don’t lie) I decided to go a little deeper on the
topic.
I wrote this article for the women who have said to me, ‘we
just want honest feedback’, ‘I get a lot of time wasters’, ‘the investors
changed the deal on me at the last minute and I don’t know what’s right’. There
are too many bad experiences to list. Oh, and my favourite (that I can mention)
is ‘when do you plan on becoming pregnant because, with women entrepreneurs,
you never know how much time you’ve got’ lol, shock horror, the leading cause
of female founders’ failures. The topic has been a taboo for too long. I want
to make a few things clear:
My goal is to get people talking to help founders and
investors.
This is not a definitive ‘how to’ anything. Just some
observations coming from a place where I hope I can encourage good female
founders not to give up because they’re having trouble raising.
You could be a female founder who says, ‘I’m an exception to
that rule’ and to you I say, ‘go you.’ I would love to hear your experience or
some feedback on the blog.
You might be an investor feeling some remorse or even saying
that’s not your experience of female founders which you have invested in. Or
you could be a female executive who has experienced the same sort of feelings
in a corporate environment and wish to be better prepared. I’m writing this
blog for every female founder I haven’t met.
Of course, this is no panacea for female founders. It could
respectfully be a potential way to re-evaluate your approach if it is not going
well.
TLDR: No secret, it’s not how well you pitch, but how well
you shape a business that counts. Your go-to-market strategy, selling skills,
branding, positioning, product development and managing the business
fundamentals are of course far more important. These skills and your progress
in these disciplines will determine (mostly) how well you are likely to
perform. Did I mention resources and almighty cash? Again, the truth is that
pitching is so much easier if you can finesse a few things before you pitch.
Understanding the problem is the first step. I’ve sat
through so many pitch sessions with men and women (and just women) both in the
audience and as a judge in pitching competitions. I’ve distilled some lessons
from the thousands of pitches I’ve seen which are clear…at least to me. However,
I would love to hear your thoughts on the list, other problems, and your hacks
to pitching and business shaping.
So here it is, awareness leads to enlightenment and for
those few who are prepared to change…success can be yours.
The problem, women are awesome, but…and this list is just
based on the last 5 meetings I have had with female founders:
They don’t want to be ‘that girl’ (you fill in the rest).
Hate pretending to be something they are not. This grinds
them and is not natural.
Being the smartest in the room didn’t go so well for them at
school.
They apologize for perceived shortcomings rather than
allowing their actual strengths to pervade during a pitch.
Of course, there are countless exceptions. Born superstars I
have seen raise money in seemingly easy fashion. However, for everyone else,
the above ‘rules’ are meant to be broken in my world.
Is there really any difference between how women should
pitch?
Some of the best founders I have worked with are as good,
and often much better at pitching to investors than their male contemporaries.
There are definitely some common strategies that can be codified. I have
watched this so many times so, I am putting it out there, girls and guys should
pitch (slightly) differently.
Like it or not, we have all sorts of preconceived notions
when we listen to anyone pitch. Things that go through people’s minds are
(regardless of gender) either:
I like this person, they are a winner
They are a ditherer and can’t sell to save themselves or
Same idea, no idea (‘I will just check my Facebook’) game
over …
And so many more impressions. It is not uncommon that
investors tend to label people early on in the pitch and then use the remainder
of the pitch to justify their first impressions.
Female
Pitch Routine
Why not consider this, if you haven’t closed your round yet?
You might be quietly spoken, but you have poise
You demand attention by articulately nailing the essence of
the problem.
You slow down, for maximum lean-in effect, reveal your
solution.
You add, with enthusiasm and some humour ‘I will tell you
about my traction in a second’ but first you explain why you will nail this.
You share a few diamonds on the rationale for the market,
why the timing is ideal, that you are already working for free and a short but
important list of things done so far.
You briefly touch on the magical amount of traction …a list
of 5 points up on a screen for 3 seconds only and then it’s gone!
Some killer numbers, (high level only) explained with the
assurance of a seasoned CEO. Explain how the numbers will scale, what the
economics are for delivering the top line and a precise dollar amount required
to become to a company that will have the following characteristics at Series
A.
Flicking to the final screen. Your logo. Pause. ‘I’m looking
for investors who want to work with an A grade team if they have experience in
sector ‘x’’.
Come up with an expression. A mantra just before you go up
to the front of the room to pitch, this will get you into the zone.
Practice lots, not the words, but the mindset.
Break down and dilute your lack of confidence by looking at
what you have achieved.
Of course, a lot of the above makes sense regardless of
gender. But some subtle nuances may help your style.
Extra subtle points I would add:
Remember, you are not reading the evening news. It’s not
about being perfect/professional. Your passion and enthusiasm are infectious.
Its ok to show, once, a little chink of vulnerability for
effect
You must build inner excitement, slowly. Perhaps when you
hit your numbers slides with a cheeky grin say, ‘I’ve been trying to find what
I’ve missed, but here are the numbers!’.
Let the investor chase and qualify themselves stepping up to
verify they have experience and track record. It invites them (feels good too)
and allows them as people to feel relevant by adding value.
Practice your narrative. Get feedback and reshape.
Develop an ‘economy of words’ approach in the Q & A part
of your presentation. For that matter probably, this applies across the board.
Answering the question succinctly is gold.
For further context (and impact) during the course of the
presentation if you can convey that you:
Focus on the big picture, but you have already got the
basics right.
Think big but can back it up with numbers that make sense
and that you ‘get’ resource management
Demonstrate the rigour of your validation but you are still
having fun.
Have a sense of humour.
Can be serious, demonstrate tenacity and possess a bold but
believable vision.
You are generally going to get another meeting with
investors (regardless of your gender).
The goal is to tell a story, weave in a business idea and a
set of craving customers.
The pitch is step one in getting the cheque, so get your
cash flow right to survive until you are topped up.
I stress too, start-up success is anything but all about
pitching. In fact, ‘Pitching’ is a word I don’t really like anyway. It
presupposes the founder is trying to sell you their crazy and often meritless
business idea. However, you provide an insight into your resourcefulness and
ability to sell, lead, your emotional intelligence and your ‘likeability’.
Watch what happens.
Refocus on building a great business, defer your capital
raising until you have derisked as much as possible.
Post pitch: the negotiation begins
A pitch is a very different mode to a chat with investors in
a one-on-one setting.
A coffee meeting with a VC is all about building rapport and
demonstrating integrity, passion, and capability (without using any of those
words).
Make sure you get more than one investor to the table to
keep the negotiation strength in your court. Recognise they are chasing you
now.
Do your homework on the investor(s).
Scaling your business starts with you. I doubt many founders
are afraid of constructive feedback and just want to get better. This innate
drive differentiates the winners from the pack and is infectious. After all,
everyone wants to be on a good team and be a little inspired.
Final best wishes
Don’t forget pitching is taking you away from you working on
sales, the product, and your team. For survival, achieving long-term success
and your sanity these three factors are infinitely more important than your
slide deck. Bootstrapping a bit longer might be the tipping point for your
success too.
Control your cash (no matter how little that is) and focus
on getting better every day.
I would love to hear your stories.
Be formidable. This is the new you.
If you would like to learn more, check out our VCFO Services.
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