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Investment Management Firms Fargo ND

Learn the three most important things to achieve in delivering an effective pitch to investors. Read on and know more.

Mr. Dennis Draeger, CFP®
701-232-8886
2731 12th Ave S
Fargo, ND
Mr. Roger Johnson, CFP®
(800)819-3904
1128 Westrac Dr S
Fargo, ND
Mr. Doyle Ranstrom, CFP®
(701)293-5789
808 3rd Ave S
Fargo, ND
Mr. Jay Matthews, CFP®
(701)241-9205
818 Main Ave
Fargo, ND
Mr. James Sanders, CFP®
(701)237-3453
1318 23rd St S
Fargo, ND
Mr. Kevin DeKrey, CFP®
(701)492-2413
2000 44th St S Ste 402
Fargo, ND
Ms. Mona Tedford, CFP®
(701)492-2632
1444 45th St S
Fargo, ND
Mr. Christopher Meier, CFP®
(701)298-6770
3103 31st St SW
Fargo, ND
Mr. Brien Krank, CFP®
701-492-2400 (2405)
Morgan Stanley Smith Barney
Fargo, ND
Mr. Paul Jarvis, CFP®
701-451-3059
3100 13th Avenue South
Fargo, ND
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The 3 Most Important Elements of an Effective Investor Pitch

You may have heard our Elevator Pitches or have been a voter in one of the Elevator Pitch Contests at our site. We’ve always highlighted pitching to help you learn about the ingredients and style that make for effective pitches to investors in very tight timeframes. And what could be more critical. If you can’t get an investor’s attention on the spur of a moment over the course of a couple of minutes, how are you ever going to get them to seriously consider an investment?

Below is our advice on how to think of and position your pitch and how to ensure that you have the best chance of raising money for your business.

First, take heart. Though the media would have you thinking otherwise, money is still out there. Even though angel investing was down 30% in 2009, it still tallied a whopping $9.1 billion with average investment in each deal around $327,000. And take heart further in the fact that most businesses are self-financed or are funded with small amounts of money from friends and family. With the average startup costs of a business running at approximately $10,000, and most home-based/web-based businesses requiring far less than that, starting up is within reach.

If you do need to raise money, give yourself the best chance of success by memorizing your pitch and then being able to modify on the fly as the situation demands. This is how you become “pitch perfect,” to borrow a phrase.

Use these three primary themes when formulating and delivering your pitch:

Build Confidence

You build confidence by reviewing the most credible aspects of your business opportunity. For example, if you have a track record in the field of the business, by all means, brag about it. If you have a stellar management team, mention that. Another credibility-builder is mention of any market traction or feedback based on what you offer. Overarching comments about the exciting market you’re in, hopefully with a nice growth rate would also help. And nothing creates confidence more than you demonstrating that YOU KNOW YOUR STUFF!

Create Excitement

This is related to building confidence but focuses more on the “soft” aspects of delivering a successful pitch. Remember, your primary objective is to inspire the investor to want to learn more. The best possible result is hearing this question, “Can we set up a meeting to talk more about this?” Or second best, “Send me some information on it.” To get that result, you have to show your passion and you have to trigger in the would-be investor all the possibilities that exist if they get on board. For example, talk about the positive social impact. Mention the speed of getting to profitability. Refer to positive customer experiences you’re tracking or third party data that shows huge upside. Do whatever it takes to make Mr. Moneybags salivate to be part of what you’re doing.

Note that more experienced investors will be sizing you up. If they see that you are capable of exciting them, they’ll be more confident th...

Author: Rich Sloan

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