(S)heStarts: How demographics affect views of your pitch

September 29, 2015  |  Elizabeth Usovicz

Photo by Benjamin Child

Welcome to our new series exploring news and views on men, women, start-ups and the entrepreneurial experience.

Elizabeth Usovicz

Elizabeth Usovicz

In July of 2015, Startland News collaborated with WhiteSpace Consulting to conduct a whiteboard conversation with women entrepreneurs in the Kansas City region. Women entrepreneurs shared their perceptions about launching and leading companies, and identified topics for ongoing discussion. As a result of this conversation, Startland News and WhiteSpace Consulting have developed (S)heStarts, a blog series that explores the entrepreneurial experience that women and men share, as well as perspectives on how their experiences are unique.


 

Regardless of an entrepreneur’s gender or industry, investors consistently look for opportunity in a pitch: solid management team, sizable market, scalable business model and numbers that point to momentum. But what happens when entrepreneurs pitch to investors with demographic and professional backgrounds different from their own?

For women founders, that can mean pitching to investor groups who are predominantly men. Based on the informal conversations with both founders and investors, a successful pitch entails a nuanced understanding of the investor’s point of view.

A successful pitch entails a nuanced understanding of the investor’s point of view. 

Small Steps or Big Vision
The investors perceive that women founders sometimes focus their pitch on the company’s history and the initial steps to building their business. As one investor expressed, “This may or may not be the case, but when I hear a pitch that begins this way, my take is that the founder is executing small steps and that she may be developing a niche business. What I want to know is, how are you going to impact your marketspace?”

Longtime Kansas City business advisor, entrepreneur and investor Joe Kessinger, agrees. “It’s a generalization, but men founders seem to talk more about revenue goals, and have higher revenue goals. They tend to talk more in terms of numbers that indicate what they’re doing and where their company is heading.”

Gender-Specific Products
Women may also need to consider ways to generate interest from male investors if their target markets are predominantly women. Kessinger observes that male investors may initially find it challenging to be interested in a product or service that they don’t envision using themselves. They may be more engaged by the metrics and growth momentum of the business. Reframing your pitch to tell your story from this point of view can be especially useful for women entrepreneurs.

Tips for the Pitch: Build Your Credibility
Callie England, founder of Kansas City-based Rawxies, has successfully raised funds to expand production of her company’s line of healthy, vegan snack products, Rawxies. England advises, “Sell investors on your own credibility before you sell them on your company.” Establishing your credibility, for England, includes building a relationship with your potential investor. If you’re approaching a group of investors, get introduced to one of the investors and establish a relationship of trust. Be open and honest, and learn from their advice, even if it’s not what you want to hear. Cultivating a relationship takes time, but as England notes, “eventually, the contacts you build this way pay off.”

Let the Numbers Tell Your Story
Stories are compelling – and numbers tell a powerful story to investors. Center your pitch on describing your vision and the metrics behind your vision. Don’t gloss over these details; they are what investors want and need to hear. If you tend to focus on your back story, keep it short, and play that story forward into the future.

There’s much more to explore on these and related topics – please share your thoughts, and watch for more news and views on the experiences of women and men entrepreneurs.

Elizabeth Usovicz is a topline revenue strategist and principal of WhiteSpace Consulting. Her career includes leadership roles in corporate, start-up and consulting environments. She can be reached at elizabeth@whitespacerevenue.com or @eusovicz on Twitter.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2015 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        KC’s PlaBook, Erkios selected for coveted $50K Arch Grants, boosting St. Louis startup scene

        By Tommy Felts | October 5, 2021

        Two Kansas City companies are expected to be part of Arch Grants’ largest-ever selection of startups, earning spots in the highly competitive St. Louis grant program’s 35-member, nearly $2 million 2021 cohort. PlaBook, an edtech reading platform, and Erkios Systems, a cybersecurity hardware startup, were announced Oct. 1 as winning candidates for the program, which…

        Professor Ranan Aktas, Maltepe University

        Ronawk using stem cell tech developed at Olathe lab to advance liver cancer research in Turkey

        By Tommy Felts | October 5, 2021

        A Kansas City-based biomanufacturing startup announced its first international customer Tuesday: a university team in Istanbul that was among the first to beta test Ronawk’s lauded T-Blocks. The maker of 3D cell culture products said the collaboration with Professor Ranan Aktas and the Cancer and Stem Cell Research Center at Maltepe University in Turkey will…

        TechAccel St. Louis offices and lab space at the Bio Research Development & Growth (BRDG) Park on the campus of the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center

        TechAccel expands in St. Louis with new facilities in ‘premier ag innovation ecosystem’

        By Tommy Felts | October 4, 2021

        A Kansas City-based tech and equity company investing in scientific breakthroughs to produce healthier plants, animals and foods is tapping into abundant lab space at the other end of I-70, announcing Monday new offices in St. Louis. “It’s only fitting that we locate our team in the heart of the nation’s largest concentration of plant…

        New Frontier Mobile Diagnostics

        Startup led by serial entrepreneur expands into women’s health ahead of $1.5M seed round

        By Tommy Felts | October 1, 2021

        Portable diagnostic imaging for women’s health will help bridge a care gap in Kansas and Missouri, said Jeff Blackwood, as his startup expands the scope of on-site ultrasound capabilities available to patients in Kansas City and beyond. “New Frontier Mobile Diagnostics is directly addressing health equity and access to care with our services, and we’re…