1 / 32

How to Create A Killer Business Plan and Financing Pitch

How to Create A Killer Business Plan and Financing Pitch. Christine Comaford Managing Director. Bio. Engineer, entrepreneur, venture catalyst 5x entrepreneur, 2 IPOs, 3 M&A, $100 million raised in last 5 years

skip
Télécharger la présentation

How to Create A Killer Business Plan and Financing Pitch

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How to Create A Killer Business Plan and Financing Pitch Christine Comaford Managing Director Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  2. Bio • Engineer, entrepreneur, venture catalyst • 5x entrepreneur, 2 IPOs, 3 M&A, $100 million raised in last 5 years • Venture Catalyst specializing in Enterprise software & Internet enabling technologies • 1 other partner Kimball Atwood Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  3. Did You Know? Most business plans are never read by a VC partner? Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  4. Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  5. Did You Know? VC investments in Internet firms by 1H99 were over $6 billion -- nearly 2x of 1998 TOTAL! Source: IDC Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  6. Did You Know? The #1 reason a startup’s valuation is cut is an incomplete executive team Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  7. 7 Steps to A Compelling Business Plan & Financing Pitch Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  8. Know the Risks to Address • Financial • Market • Technology • Team Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  9. 6 Things You Must Have • Stable, working business models • Good business plan • Competent management • Great vision • Big markets • Good team Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  10. Business Model Components • Markets & Customers • Profile and Segmentation • Key Pain Points • Size of the Problem in Dollars • Location of those Dollars • Competition • Products & Services • Product Definition • Value Proposition • Total Cost Analysis • Add-on Product Strategy Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  11. Business Model Components (cont’d) • Marketing & Distribution • Marketing Strategy • Sales Process • Implementation Process • Strategic Alliances • Financial Engine • Pricing Model • Revenue Model • Cost Structure Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  12. 1 - State Credibility • Exec team • Pedigree (education, past startups) • Publicity (published pieces, notoriety, awards) • Connections (technology advisor to White House, etc) • Well-known board members, advisors (who are betting on this company) Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  13. Who You Need On Your Team • Visionaries (assorted positions) • Leaders (CEO, Managers) • Implementers (Sales, Marketing, Technology) • Infrastructure Builders/Supporters (Operations) Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  14. 2 - Be Clear • Have 3 key points to deliver • Show and tell your story (use words AND pictures) • Repeat the 3 key points at least 3 times • Only tell stories that enhance your points Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  15. 3 - Be Concise and Complete • Why is this a great idea? • How will it be executed? • How will risk be minimized, return maximized? • What are the sustainable barriers to entry? • 20 page plan (3-5 page exec sum with 1 page financials) Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  16. Complete Means… • Pain/Solution • Opportunity/Market Size/Market Analysis • Competitors: today and tomorrow • Product/Service Definition & Futures • Marketing Plan/Sales Strategy/Strategic Alliances • The Team: staff and extended • Financials (create a dynamic model) Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  17. 4 - Be Compelling • This is a HUGE opportunity, we’re the best to seize it, here are 3-5 specific reasons why • You think this opportunity is HUGE today? Check it out in 2-4 years! • There is major PAIN, we remove it -- no doubt • We have the team, technology, right market, “just add water” Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  18. 5 - Give Them a Reason to Believe • Create the excitement (greed), then… • Convey the long term vision (wow! Look at all the additional markets we can get into!), then... • Spell out the short term practicalities (hey -- these guys look like they could actually make this happen!) Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  19. 6 - Give Them the Right Info • What is your elevator pitch? In other words if you had to tell someone about your company on a short elevator ride, what would you say? • What product or service is sold? • Who is it sold to? • How much does it cost (average sales price)? Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  20. Right Info Cont’d • How big is the target market? • What percentage of that market do you need to penetrate to reach $30 million in sales? • What is your key competition? • What is your KEY differentiation from the competition? Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  21. Right Info Cont’d • How long would this differentiation last? • Do you have customers? How many? • Revenue? How much? • Strategic Alliances? With whom? • Is your technology complete? If not, when? Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  22. 7 - Present Properly • Practice and know it cold • Have backup slides for key areas (such as market segmentation, financials) • Be ready with a reference list (for all key execs, both personal and customer references) Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  23. How Long Should a Pitch Be? • A VC pitch should be 20 minutes long (goal: book next meeting) • A customer pitch should be 30 minutes long (goal: convince them to bring the decision maker in) • A recruiting pitch should be 30 minutes (goal: check them out,sell the vision, decide next step) Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  24. Rx for Not Naturally Born Speakers • Best speech coaches: Silicon Valley: Steve Mandel 408 475 8202 Boston: Cheever Communications 781 639 1516 Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  25. Great Entrepreneurial Resources • Read “Burn Rate” - Michael Wolff • Read “High Tech Startup” - John Nesheim • Check out www.vfinance.com, www.startupweb.com • www.artemisventures.com resources section has growing library of goodies Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  26. Entrepreneurial Resources Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  27. Do You Have These? • Right market • Right product/service • Right timing • Right info • Right priority • Right connections • Right team Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  28. Thank You Q & A/Lab Time Christine Comaford General Partner and Managing Director Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  29. Good Idea? Bad Idea? Your startup is HOT! You do 3 VC pitches and also get some fabulous press. 10 more VCs call you, and you book meetings with them. Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  30. Good Idea? Bad Idea? You get 2 term sheets for a $3mil investment both from 2 high value VC syndicates. One is for a $6mil pre money valuation and 1 board seat. The other is for an $8mil pre and 3 board seats. There are a total of 5 board seats. You choose the $6mil pre. Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  31. Good Idea? Bad Idea? Your startup’s product/service is nearly ready for beta. You can take $1mil to get through the beta, sign on a few customers, and make a few key hires, OR you can take $3mil to do even more. With the $1mil you’ll need to start fundraising again in 3 months, with the $3mil you’ll start fundraising in 12 months. You take the $1mil. Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

  32. Good Idea? Bad Idea? You have a skeletal exec team -- operations and technology only. You’ll hire a CEO, sales, marketing and business development once you’re funded. You set aside 15% of your pre-financing stock for the option pool. Artemis Ventures, LLC 1998

More Related