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How to Answer the Investor’s Questions

1 min read In raising funding, the startup will meet with many investors, so how should they answer the investor’s questions? First, listen to the investor’s questions carefully. Answer each one directly and to the point. If a question requires a number, give that number. For example, if the investor asks how much revenue do you have, answer with: “We have $200K of revenue so far this year” or, “We have $10K of monthly recurring revenue”. Be careful not to answer every question with a story. Long-winded answers waste the investor’s valuable time and often miss vital information. If the investor wants to hear the back story for a particular question, they will ask. For example, “That sounds interesting. Tell me how you arrived at that model”. The investor often has a list of questions to go through and a limited amount of time. Not responding with direct and to-the-point answers only serves to lengthen the pitch process. Also, some investors may interpret the long and winding response as avoiding the answer, which raises a red flag. It’s best to be straight up. Read more in the TEN Capital eGuide: https://staging.startupfundingespresso.com/the-art-of-pitching/ Hall T. Martin is the founder and CEO of the TEN Capital Network. TEN Capital has been connecting startups with investors for over ten years. You can connect with Hall about fundraising, business growth, and emerging technologies via LinkedIn or email: hallmartin@tencapital.group

Five Things Investors Love to Hear in a Pitch

1 min read What are some things Investors love to hear in a pitch? Investors hear pitches continually throughout the year. There are so many that it can be hard to truly hear them all. But, from time to time, an entrepreneur will make a pitch that stands out from the crowd. Investors are listening for a few key things that show you have a real business with real growth. The rest is filler. Every entrepreneur has a story. Many are interesting; some are not. For investing purposes, there has to be five key elements to capture their interest: Real Traction Entrepreneurs who have sales and show it are head and shoulders above the rest. Most talk about the traction they will have in the FUTURE but not what they have today. In an investor’s mind, this equates to “No Traction.” Real Pain Point The entrepreneur has found a real pain point in the market and is filling it. Someone once said, customers pay for pain to go away. They don’t pay for nuisances or inconveniences. Real Team The company has someone building it and someone selling it, and those team members know what they are doing. Real Product The product works and is non-trivial to build. It’s more than just spin marketing. Real Growth Prospects The market opportunity has strong growth potential and will not run out of steam in a year or two. A startup pitching with each of these elements in place will always capture the investor’s attention. Read more in the TEN Capital eGuide: https://staging.startupfundingespresso.com/the-art-of-pitching/ Hall T. Martin is the founder and CEO of the TEN Capital Network. TEN Capital has been connecting startups with investors for over ten years. You can connect with Hall about fundraising, business growth, and emerging technologies via LinkedIn or email: hallmartin@tencapital.group

How to Pitch Investors Through Email

1 min read To pitch investors online is a skill one can learn. Here are some crucial steps in reaching out to potential investors through email to pitch your deal. Choose investor prospects carefully. Don’t spam an entire list but rather research each lead and identify qualified candidates. Search for connections to those candidates and topics of interest. Then devise strategies for how to reach out to them. Indicate why you are reaching out to them. Show why that person and company could be interested in your deal. They may be interested based on a past investment, a network connection, or a group affiliation. Answering the “why” will keep them reading. Show your connection to the reader. Finding a common link will significantly improve your chance of a response, so it’s worth looking for someone who is in their network that can provide social proof that you are legitimate. Show the problem you solve. And not just the problem, but the solution that you offer and the market that you target. Do this in one or two sentences and not one or two pages of text. Show indications of traction. Use 3 to 5 examples of traction such as leads generated, sales closed, number of users in a beta program, etc. Introduce yourself and show social proof. There’s a tendency to start the email with this information but showing your position in the community and credibility comes after establishing a topic relevant to the investor. Close with a one-sentence ask. Make clear the next step such as a conference call, a meeting, advice, etc. Also, remember the following points: Write in a conversational but business-style tone; not marketing-speak. Keep it short and to the point avoiding long blocks of text. Use numbers to make your pitch stronger as it shows specificity. Remember to attach the executive summary or pitch deck. Read more in the TEN Capital eGuide: https://staging.startupfundingespresso.com/the-art-of-pitching/ Hall T. Martin is the founder and CEO of the TEN Capital Network. TEN Capital has been connecting startups with investors for over ten years. You can connect with Hall about fundraising, business growth, and emerging technologies via LinkedIn or email: hallmartin@tencapital.group

How to Secure Investor Funding

2 min read How to Secure Investor Funding: A Guide to Your First Investor Meeting. Preparing for your first investor meeting can be daunting. You have to consider what you need to prep, how to answer investor questions, how to pitch the deal, and more. Preparing to Meet a Prospective Investor In meeting with a prospective investor, come prepared to discuss the following: Sales: ALWAYS have something to say about customer interactions. Even at the pre-revenue stage, you should talk about prospective customers and their reactions to your product idea. Team: Talk about your team and how they are closing sales, generating leads, building product, and in general, how great they are. Product: Talk about the customer’s ROI from the product, but don’t talk about how the product works in minute detail. Stay at the benefits level. Fundraise: You should talk about how other investors are interested in your product idea and demonstrate your fundraise traction. Also, ask questions of the investor such as: What do they invest in? What can they do for their investments beyond the check-writing? What advice do they have for you based on what they see so far? Who else do they recommend you talk to? How to Answer Investor’s Questions In raising funding, the startup will meet with many investors to answer their questions. So, how should the startup answer the investor’s questions? Listen to the question and answer it directly and to the point. If the problem requires a number, then give that number. For example, if the investor asks how much revenue you have, answer with: “We have $200K of revenue so far this year”, or “We have $10K of monthly recurring revenue”. Be careful with answering every question with a story, as this takes time and often misses the critical information. The investor usually has a list of questions to go through and a limited amount of time, and not responding with direct and to-the-point answers lengthens the process. Some investors may also interpret the long and winding response as avoiding the solution, which raises a red flag. It’s best to be straight up. How to Pitch the Deal to the Investor In pitching your deal to an investor, it helps to know your investor first. What type of investor are they- angel, family office, high net worth, or venture capital? What is their investment thesis- are they swinging for the fences, or do they want to make a series of doubles and triples? How much do they know about your market or application? What angle would be best for this investor? Should you focus on the market, the traction, or some other factor? In your pitch, emphasize the appropriate return for that investor and explain how your deal compares to other deals they have had. Spend time describing the market and how your product fits into the landscape. The best way to pitch an investor is to know something about them and adjust your pitch accordingly. Raising Funding Is Hard Lastly, raising a fund is hard. A Few Points to Remember: Build relationships first and find investors second. Divide your raise into tranches and give yourself a reasonable timeline for each. Investors will critique the business. Consider your business as an operational machine. Perform as much diligence on the investor as they are performing on you. Get a sense of which way it is going with your deal and adjust your approach. Just as you tailor the sale to the customer, tailor your pitch to the investor. Adjust accordingly. Start meetings with those you know and give you real feedback. Use analogies to help investors understand your deal’s value. Securing Investor Funding is a process; for every ten prospects, you’ll get 8 “Nos,” 1 maybe, and eventually 1 “Yes.” Keep going ‘til the money is in the bank. Read more in the TEN Capital eGuide: https://staging.startupfundingespresso.com/running-a-fundraise-campaign/ Hall T. Martin is the founder and CEO of the TEN Capital Network. TEN Capital has been connecting startups with investors for over ten years. You can connect with Hall about fundraising, business growth, and emerging technologies via LinkedIn or email: hallmartin@tencapital.group

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