In all my newsletters, Iâve always shared my own opinions, insights, and suggestionsâgained from personal experience, facing challenges, and finding my own solutions.
Todayâs topic isnât quite my forte. But itâs an interesting oneâsomething I personally sought to learn.
Weâre bootstrapped. I have never sought funding or found myself in a dire or impromptu situation where I must present my plan to investors.
So, for this newsletter (and, of course, my personal good), I went down searching for authentic resources and expert tips on the topic. AndâŠ
I found thisâone of the most insightful essays on presenting to investorsâfrom one of the most renowned investors.
Paul Graham, founder of Y Combinator, a startup accelerator company with 400+ companies valued at over $100M.
Someone most entrepreneurs admire (including me) for his work.
Enough intro, letâs cut to the chase.
Paul Grahamâs tips on how to present to investors:
Background info: Y Combinator (YC) hosts Demo Day twice a year, inviting investors to hear presentations from the startups theyâve recently funded.
Startups present what theyâve built so far, providing an opportunity to connect with investors and seek further support.
Paul and his partners noticed most startups face similar challenges, so the compilation of these suggestions might be useful for a wider audience.
And the suggestions are:
1. Explain what youâre doing
Investors need to quickly grasp your product or service.
Begin your presentation by briefly explaining what your company does. Avoid lengthy introductions; get straight to the point.
As Paul explains,
Say what you’re doing as soon as possible, preferably in the first sentence.
âWeâre Jeff and Bob, and weâve built an easy-to-use web-based database. Now weâll show it to you and explain why people need this.â
2. Get rapidly to demo
âA demo explains what you’ve made more effectively than any verbal description.â â Paul
After briefly outlining the problem you’re addressing, demonstrate how your solution works.
Ensure your demo is purposeful and directly relates to the problemânot just some show-off of your feature catalog.
3. A narrow description is better than a vague one
âYour primary goal is not to describe everything your system might one day become, but simply to convince investors you’re worth talking to further.â
While your product may have broad potential, provide a clear and specific description.
Overly broad explanations can be confusing. Start with a focused description and expand as needed.
4. Donât put too many words on slides
âWhen there are a lot of words on a slide, people just skip reading it. So look at your slides and ask each word “Could I cross this out?” â Paul.
Use slides to highlight key points, not to convey detailed information. Limit text and avoid reading directly from them.
âThey should be something in the background as you face the audience, not something you read to your audience sitting behind you.â
5. Donât over-explain your business model
Paul explained two reasons why you shouldnât explain too much about your business model:
(I) That’s not what smart investors care about in a brief presentation, (II) Any business model you have at this point is probably wrong anyway.
Solution? Paul said that if youâre solving a critical problem, youâll sound a lot smarter talking about it than about the business model.
So, instead of this, spend time discussing interesting things you know a lot about.
6. Specific numbers are good
Specific numbers are good and can make your case more compelling. If you have user metrics or other data, present them, even if theyâre preliminary.
âBut don’t give them more than four or five numbers, and only give them numbers specific to you. You don’t need to tell them the size of the market you’re in. Who cares, really, if it’s 500 million or 5 billion a year?â â Paul.
The important part isnât how much you can make in a year, but how you get there.
7. Have one person talk
As Paul mentioned, startups often want to show all the founders are equal partners. While itâs a great instinct, not all four founders should share the stage to presentâit often breaks the flow of the talk and can be distracting.
To maintain flow, have the most effective communicator lead the presentation. An exception is to ask an expert in a specific technical field to explain or walk through certain aspects. This adds credibility to your talk.
8. Tell stories about users
Itâs great if you can talk about the problems specific users had and how you solved them. It helps investors understand youâre solving an actual problemânot a problem you have a theory of it being a problem.
âThe best stories about user needs are about your own. A remarkable number of famous startups grew out of some need the founders had: Apple, Microsoft, Yahoo, Google. Experienced investors know that, so stories of this type will get their attention.â â Paul.
So, demonstrate your product’s impact with real-world examples. Stories about how users benefit can make your presentation more relatable.
9. Don’t try to seem more than you are.
You donât need to overstate your progress or capabilities. Youâre just a few months old and may not have an established workspace, so you donât need to seem more than you are.
âSmart investors can see past such superficial flaws. They’re not looking for finished, smooth presentations. They’re looking for raw talent.â â Paul.
All you need to convince them is that youâre smart and onto something good.
10. Leave them with a memorable soundbite
As an investor himself, Paul knows how investors hear a lot of pitches and they all blur together after a while.
To have an edge over others, you need to make a memorable soundbite in their heads about you or your business.
Paul suggests developing a one- or two-word catchphrase for a startup and launching it clearly (but casually) in your talk.
For example, Viawebâs was âthe Microsoft Word of e-commerce.â
A memorable tagline helps investors recall your company later.
I hope I did justice to what Paul Graham has already said on his website.
[paulgraham(dot)com]
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Until the next time,
Happy business planning đ
