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Calling Entrepreneurs to Pitch for Capital  

If you are interested in pitching your ideas in front a panel of judges at the techVC Roundup, please submit a brief overview of your company and idea.

  • Must be a San Luis Obispo or Northern Santa Barbara County Company
  • Must be a technology company
  • 5 Companies will be selected to pitch at event
  • Cost to pitch is $100 per pitch (does not include event registration of $35 per person)
  • Pitch is exactly 10 minutes long followed by 5 minutes of Q&A
  • Investors, participants, and audience will get a copy of your submission summary
  • Networking opportunities will be available during registration and after the event 

Please complete the Submission Form 


Survey Questions from the Submission Form

  1. Are you a technology based company?
  2. Is your company located in San Luis Obispo County or Northern Santa Barbara County?
  3. Company / Contact Info
  4. In a few sentences, describe what your company does.
  5. In a few sentences, describe what problem your business solves.
  6. Describe your management team and why each person is uniquely capable.
  7. Describe your target customers and explain why they will buy your products or services.
  8. Describe how your business makes money.
  9. Describe your competition, why your business is better, and how you will stay better.
  10. Explain how much money you are trying to raise, and how you will use the money.
  11. Are you interested in attending a pre-event workshop to hone your executive summary?

Please complete the Submission Form

 

If you are Selected to Present

If you are invited to present at the techVC Roundup event, you will need to also create a slide presentation as outlined below:

  • 10-minute (7-10 page) slied presentation that communicates the high level aspects of your business
  • One-sheet company summary to include in the event book

These materials all communicate essentially the same information, just in varying levels of detail.

 

Format Tips

Format is important, but content is king, so recommendations about WHAT you include in your Executive Summary and your Slide Set are outlined in some detail below. If you follow these simple instructions, you will be much farther along on your way to clearly and concisely communicating your business opportunity.


GENERAL SLIDE PRESENTATION TIPS

• Large Font Size - Use 24 point or larger text for readability at the back of the room
• Use Minimal Text - You don't want the audience reading your slides, but rather listening to you. Keep the text short and speak to the concepts
• One Slide Per Topic - Use one slide for each topic in the executive summary. A couple of topics might require two, but be concise.
• Minimize bells and whistles - Keep the audience focused on what you are saying, not the fact you can use PowerPoint animation wizards. Animations are great, but make it work and make it count.
• Use Clean Design and a Folio - Slides should be clean and compelling (dark text, light background or vice versa) with some "folio" including company name and logo on each slide.
• Make A Statement with Your Headings - Headings on slides are more effective if they represent the conclusion you want the audience to draw from the slide, versus a generic statement about the slide subject
• End with Contact Slide - End your presentation with a contact information slide that stays on the screen while you address audience questions.


SLIDESHOW AND EXECUTIVE SUMMARY CONTENT COMPONENTS

Your presentation should cover these elements. They do not necessarily have to be in this order, but you should address all of them within the 10-minute timeframe.

HINT: Spend Less Time on the Tech, More Time on the Business

1. Company Overview

• Be sure to tell your audience what you do and what business you are in. This is a good place to hit highlights of your presentation, but very quickly (i.e. we have paying customers, we have met the milestones from our first round of capital, we have a management team with stellar credentials, etc. -- whatever is strongest)

2. Customer Pain / Problem Addressed / Market Need

• Discuss this specifically and succinctly. How painful is the problem? How strong is the need?

3. Product/ Solution / Technology

• How you address the problem/need. For the most part, your investor audience in this format will grant you that your technology does what you say it does (though always expect rigorous due-diligence). Often, graphics and/or diagrams are particularly useful here.

4. Market Size & Addressable Market Segment

• How large is the market, and what portion of that market is your addressable segment. Be as specific as possible and show the overall potential.

5. Customers

• If you have customers, who are they (logos are good). If you don't have them yet, who will they be and what do they say now (you had better be talking to them). Paying customers establish proof that someone is willing to pay for your product or solution.

6. Competition / Competitive Advantage

• Who are they, why are you different and better. How will you establish and maintain a sustainable competitive advantage. Often communicated in a scatter graph or features comparison grid.

7. Management

• Include names and brief credentials and achievements of important members of the team, board of directors and advisory board who add value to the enterprise because of what they have achieved.

8. Financial Projections

• What are the assumptions your "hockey stick" is based on. Bottoms-up revenue analysis is strongest.

9. Execution or Go-to-Market Strategy

• We've seen the hockey stick, now describe how you will do it.

10. Funding Stages & Milestones

• Milestones are significant value-creating events: product, revenue, customers. Include those you have achieved so far (so we know where you are in your business development) and those you project to achieve with each subsequent funding round (so we see how you get where you want to be). Funding rounds should be based on milestones achieved.

11. Capital Required, Uses of Capital and Exit Strategy
 
• How much you are looking for now, what you plan to use it for, and what are potential exits for investors. This is not a venue for discussion of terms. You can discuss amount of capital required to execute your plan, what you will use it for, and whether you will need additional capital in the future.
The items above are presented in one potentially logical order, but the order in which you communicate them will depend on your strong points.

Another helpful link on this topic you should definitely read:

• Executive Summary Tips from Amplify LLC

 

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