VC Minute

049. Learn From Every Pitch

August 11, 2022 Rich Maloy Season 1 Episode 49
VC Minute
049. Learn From Every Pitch
Show Notes Transcript

The vast majority of investors you pitch will pass, so use the time to ask for input & feedback. Ironically, it reflects better on you to ask questions than just pitch the whole time.

About SpringTime Ventures

SpringTime Ventures seeds high-growth startups in healthcare, fintech, logistics, and marketplace businesses. We look for founders with domain expertise, forging a path with a truly transformative technology. We only invest in software-based businesses in the USA. We bring a people-focused approach, work quickly, and reach conviction independently. Our initial check size is $400k to $600k. You can learn more about us and our approach.   

About Rich Maloy

Rich's mission is to rebuild the American dream through entrepreneurship. He works with early stage startups transforming the world, giving all people the opportunity to grow, learn and earn. With prior careers in finance and sales, he's now focused on startups investing through SpringTime Ventures where he is a Managing Partner. He's a father of two young children and loves sci-fi, skiing, and video games.



Rich:

The vast majority of investors you pitch will pass. If you pitch a hundred investors in 30 minute initial calls, that's 50 hours, an entire work week. And to what do you have to show for it? In the four plus years we've been investing, a significant portion of the pitch meetings have been spent with founders spending 25 minutes of walking through every painstaking detail in their deck. Then when we get to the end and I ask, what questions do you have for me? I get some flavor of what's your typical check size? Our check size is on the website! This is a missed opportunity. You need to learn something from every pitch. And you do this by asking good questions throughout the pitch. You can get feedback on the pitch itself. What did you think of my pitch? Or what didn't we cover that you're still wondering about? You can ask for specific advice. What do you think of our plans to scale? What have you seen that hasn't worked with this customer acquisition strategy? Or ask general advice. What's a major pitfall you think we're heading right for? If you were on our board, what would you recommend we focus on? After you spend time on introductions and small talk, start out by asking questions about the fund. What's important to them and their process? Then pitch to the deck for eight to ten minutes. And use the last 10 minutes to ask questions about your business, to learn something from them. You could tee it up by saying, even if we end up not being a fit for you, you've seen so much, and I'd love to learn from you by asking some questions about our business." Make sure that you're getting something out of these pitch meetings other than just... pitching another investor. Try to learn something, gather that feedback. The irony is that if you ask insightful questions, it reflects better on you than if you were to just talk at me for 25 minutes straight. So learn something from every pitch.