Longtime friends Evan Baehr and Evan Loomis are the kind of entrepreneurs who learn lessons not only by doing things themselves, but also by studying others.
Baehr is a co-founder at Able, an online lender to small businesses.
Previously he was a co-founder of Outbox, a consumer internet company
backed by venture capitalists Peter Thiel and Mike Maples. Loomis is
co-founder of TreeHouse, a sustainable home-improvement store. In these
and other ventures, the tandem have raised more than $50 million and
survived the stress of multiple rounds of investor presentations.
All of which would qualify them to write a book like the one they just released: Get Backed: Craft Your Story, Build the Perfect Pitch Deck, and Launch the Venture of Your Dreams, from
Harvard Business Review Press. But on top of their own fundraising
experiences, the co-authors researched how others did it. Their book
includes actual pitch decks from 13 companies who raised more than $150
million combined.
Based on all they learned, Baehr and Loomis devoted a chapter to
crafting the perfect pitch deck. Here are their 10 "building block"
slides.
1. Overview. This should include your elevator pitch,
describing the problem your startup will solve. It should be easy to
understand what your company does.
2. Opportunity. Describe your industry--and your startup's
niche within it. Demonstrate that your market has explosive growth
potential--and that your offering is differentiated from everyone
else's.
3. Problem. Dive deeply into the problem you're solving--why
it exists, why it's emotionally painful, and how many people experience
it. That last piece will help you explain why any company with an
ability to solve the problem is a smart investment.
4. Solution. Now that your audience sees there's a problem,
show how you'd solve it. You might veer away from your slideshow to show
a video or a software demo. If your solution involves a physical
prototype, you might pause to explain key features.
5. Traction. Investors don't want to feel as if the venture needs
them. If you can demonstrate traction--growth in sales or users--your
audience is more likely to believe in your future success, with or
without their help.
Surveys aren't good enough. To illustrate why, Baehr tells a story
from his time at Outbox. The idea behind Outbox was saving customers the
time of going through their mail; instead, they could see digitized
versions of their mail on their phones. When Outbox asked potential
customers about the idea, they wanted to know when and where they could
sign up.
"We thought it was a sign of demand," says Baehr. But when people
landed on Outbox's signup page, they hesitated. Suddenly they realized
there were privacy concerns about having their medical results digitized
and stored on a server.
Instead of surveys, use data that's more tangible. Nothing beats actual sales. But if you're pre-revenue, you can conduct an AdWords
experiment, driving potential customers to a landing page, where they
can provide their email addresses. From this, you'll get data that
paints an early picture of your customer acquisition costs and
conversion rates.
6. Customer. Include a statement like: "We target the eight
million professional service providers in the U.S." You are describing
your customer and your market.
What a VC wants to see, say the authors, is a credible claim that you
can build a billion-dollar company. The right way to do this is to
calculate your total addressable market (TAM). First, figure out how
many people could possibly buy your product. Next, figure out how much
revenue you'd make from each one. Multiply those two numbers, and you
have your TAM.
Next, calculate your served addressable market (SAM). Whereas TAM
provides the macro view, your SAM is a reasonable subdivision of it,
filtered by region or demographic. Together, the TAM and SAM will show
you're playing in a large enough market--and have a plan to grab a piece
of it.
7. Competition. This is not the time to get drunk on the
uniqueness of your own solution. Show the investors how your customers
are currently handling the problem you aim to solve. Whatever they're
doing is your competition. Ideally, you'll map how alternative solutions
compare with yours in realms like price, region, access, speed, and
quality.
8. Business model. Detail your cost of customer acquisition.
Show that you'll be able to acquire customers for less than one-third of
their lifetime value. (For further reading on that ratio, the authors
suggest VC David Skok's seminal blog about key metrics for software-as-a-service startups.)
In addition, you'll need to make projections about your cash flow,
burn rate, and break-even point--and how any of these could change based
on pricing decisions and your success or lack in growing revenues.
9. Team. Who's going to pull this off? Provide brief bios. Paint a picture of expertise as quickly as possible.
10. Use of funds. How much do you want and what will you do
with it? The slide might say: "We're raising a $5M Series A with three
goals," and then list those goals: Scaling the inside sales team,
optimizing the platform for ROI, and generating leads through content
and partnerships. Don't worry about whether you're asking for the right
amount. The most important thing is clarity about how you'll reach
profitability or your next funding round.
In addition to the 10 building blocks and cover, the authors suggest
preparing extra slides, just in case you pique investor interest about
particular details. Extra slides might pertain to your patents, your
branding, your supply chain, or your exit strategy, and include detailed
team bios.
Above all else, the authors suggest staying flexible in your
approach--and not locking yourself into the same pitch deck. Early on,
you'll likely find that you're getting the same questions from
investors, over and over again. "It's a good indicator that the slides
you're using to tell your story are not complete," says Loomis. "The
deck should be constantly changing, based on the feedback you get."
The 10 Slides Every Killer Pitch Deck Needs
The 10 Slides Every Killer Pitch Deck Needs
Evan
Baehr and Evan Loomis have raised more than $50 million from investors
for various startups. In their new book, they spill their fundraising
formula to founders. Step 1 is a masterful pitch deck.
IMAGE: shutterstock images
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