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By: Sandeep Ayyappan (Founder & CEO of Delve)

AskForIt

You walk into the coffeeshop with a pop in your step. This is the meeting you’ve been waiting for all week. The guy whose blogs you’ve been reading for months, who you’ve tried to get three separate intros to, who finally took one and agreed to get coffee with you. You click instantly, you sit down, your sentences falling into the others at such a pace that you don’t even have time to jot down a single word in your notebook. You’re completing each other’s thoughts, you’re sharing the same world views, you’re swapping stories of people you both know. And then, with total nonchalance, he pops the question: “So, how can I be helpful?” And you wonder what it possibly was in that coffee that’s causing this giant lump in your throat.

Asking for something of value, especially of those whose accomplishments and time we respect the most, is a very difficult thing for most of us to do. There’s a natural selfishness in the act that arouses every bit of the shyness that you thought you’d overcome. Who am I to request a favor of you, we wonder. Isn’t it enough that you’ve given me the past hour of your time? How can I be greedy enough to want more?

But here’s the truth: the person on the other end of the conversation likely took the meeting because they believed you’d be someone they’d like to get to know. They may have appreciated what you’re working on or who you knew in common. They very likely had a number of people who helped them become successful, and in you they might see an earlier version of themselves. So don’t be shy – you’re there for a very good reason, and now’s the time to make the most of the opportunity.

Four thoughts that will help you nail the ask:

1. Do your research: Even before you initially reach out to this person, you should be familiar with who they are and how they could be helpful to you. What’s their current role and primary occupation? Where were they before? What sorts of career shifts have they taken and what might that say about them? What networks do you share? What have they recently blogged about/tweeted/said in public appearances?

All of these points come together in some form of a story (though be careful not to create your own narrative on someone else’s career), and being able to casually make the point that you respect your subject enough to have done your homework on them goes an exceptionally long way in impressing them. After all, any of us who make such information public – our LinkedIn profile, our tweets, our blog – expect that someone doing the work to reach out to us will have taken five minutes to look at them.

Keep in mind that their previous meeting could’ve been with someone who did a ton of homework and came extraordinarily well-prepared, and if you haven’t, you can guess which of the two follow-up emails they’ll put more effort into.

2. Know what you’re asking for: In business, help can pretty much be defined within three categories:

a. Advice: on product, on strategy, on recruiting, on management, etc.

b. Money: usually just investment or sales.

c. Introductions: usually to other people who could provide one of the above.

3. Be shameless but be realistic: There are two failure scenarios at the end of a successful meeting (one way to measure it is by how hard either party is trying to wrap it up – if your subject is delaying their next one to wrap up yours or running beyond your budgeted time, you’re in great shape). One is having an ask that is so broad that they have no idea how to actually help you, and the other is stumbling your way through the ask that it’s clear you lack the confidence to act upon whatever they might offer (not having an ask at all = you’re a rookie). If you’re an entrepreneur, you probably have a number of areas where you could use help. Narrow down your list to the five where you need the most help, and overlay that with the five where you think they’d be able to offer the most help. Across those sets of five, you’ll likely find a couple of areas of overlap. Go into the meeting with one primary area where you have a couple of concrete action items for them: intros to people that you know they know, an investment, or product feedback on an area that you know they’re good at. And then have a couple of other areas that you could mention and see whether they pounce. If you think you’ll be too hesitant or shy to make the ask, keep it simple and practice it a couple of times. And don’t ask for something too audacious – taking a junior manager at Salesforce out for coffee doesn’t make it likely that they’ll introduce you to Marc Benioff.

4. Be gracious and return the favor: While you may think of yourself as a lowly entrepreneur who couldn’t possibly be helpful to someone like who you’re talking to, you probably have a number of potential introductions to offer them. If they’re an investor, you could introduce them to amazing entrepreneurs you know, a great Meetup to check out, or the incredibly helpful app you just found. You might know of a good workspace or class or even a coffeeshop or wine bar they might like. You can always send them an interesting article that you recently read that speaks to some part of your conversation. As you build your network, you’ll find that some of the people you know might be ones you can introduce them to as well. At the very least, the follow-up email, the LinkedIn connection, and the Twitter follow (and occasional retweet?) go a long way, especially when done with genuine respect and in good faith. After all, you should be looking to build a long-term professional relationship with your subject, and not just looking for a quick connection to someone else. That may not materialize – we’re all busy – but the intent counts for a lot.

If you keep the thoughts above in mind, you’ll ace your next ask, and you’ll soon be hearing people’s asks more often than you’re delivering them!

SandeepSandeep Ayyappan is the founder & CEO of Delve, which helps people find and share important reads with their coworkers. Delve was recently named to TimeSpace, the first ever startup incubator at The New York Times, as well as a Finalist at the SXSW Accelerator and the startup “Most Likely to Succeed” at the Software and Information Industry Association’s Annual Summit. Sandeep is a Yale grad and previously worked in Energy Tech Equity Research at RBC Capital Markets.

Orrick’s TOTAL ACCESS coaching sessions will be offered on a monthly basis (either in Silicon Valley or San Francisco) and are designed specifically to help entrepreneurs get the advice and business connections they need to take their companies to the next level.

Because space is limited, attendees must apply and be approved to attend.

Details and how to apply:

  1. Only entrepreneurs in the following industries will be considered: SaaS and B2B
  2. Please send your executive summary to Joyce Chuang by Friday, March 22, 2013 by 12:00 pm PST.  Click here to find a template.  Please follow the template as it makes it easier for the investor to review.
  3. We will notify you by Tuesday, March 26, as to whether or not you have been selected to attend.
  4. Once selected, you will be assigned a 30-minute time slot between 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm.  Each time slot consists of 5 minutes to present your company and 25 minutes for Q&A – if you have questions for the investor, please prepare them in advance. 
  5. Please feel free to bring your own laptop for brief demos.  Wireless internet will be provided in the room.

Investor Information:

mhs-capital-logo1

 

 

 

 

Meet:
Vijay Nagappan
Thursday, March 28, 2013
From 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm at Orrick’s San Francisco office

Executive Summaries Due:
Friday, March 22, 2013 by 12:00 pm PST

You will be notified by:
Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Please contact Joyce Chuang if you have any questions.

brand

By: Nick Gottlieb (Co-Founder & CEO of Mobozi)

Most startups begin with a clear idea of what they think their product and company mission will be, and often use that idea to name their company.  When my co-founder and I started our company last year, we thought we would build a mobile video contest platform and our mission would be to make it easy for anyone to enter and win directly from their phone.  We decided on the name ‘PrizeReel’ and chose a spiffy logo with a film reel and ribbon.

Five months later we had gone through two significant pivots and were now building a platform for handling photos and videos on the mobile web, and the name PrizeReel was significantly less clever.  We had been considering rebranding for about a month when we were admitted into the Mozilla WebFWD Accelerator.  It was at that point, in mid-February, that we finally decided to pull the trigger come up with a new name and brand.

We didn’t have a really clear idea of what kind of name we wanted, but we did know we wanted something with no inherent meaning (we were still unsure if we had made our final pivot or not) and an available .com domain name.  We spent a lot of time searching available domains (namestation.com is an amazing tool for this) and a lot surveying with friends, family, and colleagues.  We really liked several names with the prefix ‘mob’ as we at least knew we would be doing something in mobile, and wanted something that was relatively easy to spell.  After 4 days of searching and deliberation we eventually settled on ‘Mobozi’.

Once we decided on the name we chose a color scheme, designed a logo (again with a lot of feedback from friends, colleagues, and customers), and went through the annoying process of changing all of our social network accounts.

Branding is hard; there are large agencies that make tons of money doing nothing but helping huge corporations on their branding.  For a small early stage startup, branding is REALLY hard. On the one hand your company name, logo, and possibly a tagline are the first impression of your company, but on the other hand you are still working out the finer points of what exactly your product is, who your customers are, and what your company’s mission is.  My advice on branding for early stage startups is to keep your brand flexible and simple.  Until you have really figured out your product/market fit and have a customer base don’t be afraid to experiment.  Ask people their opinion, observe their initial reaction to different tag lines and logos.  You will certainly iterate and improve your product hundreds of times in early stages of your company, don’t be afraid to do the same thing with your brand.

Nick GottliebNick is a developer, designer, and is passionate about products.  When not working on Mobozi, he spends his time surfing, playing basketball, and traveling the world.  Before founding Mobozi, he worked for a consulting firm in Japan and an interactive agency in Dallas.

sequoia-capital-logo

We’re offering up another one of our coaching sessions, this time with Sequoia Capital.  See below for details and how to apply.  These coaching sessions have been great opportunities for entrepreneurs to sit down with an investor for 30-minutes and get their feedback and advice.  We try to do these on a monthly basis either in the Peninsula or in San Francisco, and only post them on our blog.  So subscribe to us to receive notifications of the next one!

Details and how to apply:

  1. Only entrepreneurs in the following industries will be considered: mobile, consumer, and SaaS
  2. Send your executive summary to Joyce Chuang at jchuang@orrick.com by Friday, February 15, 2013 by 12:00 pm PST.  Click here to find a template.  Please follow the template as it makes it easier for the investor to review.
  3. We will notify you by Tuesday, February 19, whether or not you have been selected to attend.
  4. Once selected, you will be assigned a 30-minute time slot between 9:00 am – 10:30 am.  Each time slot consists of 5 minutes to present your company and 25 minutes for Q&A – if you have questions for the investor, please prepare them in advance.
  5. Please feel free to bring your own laptop for brief demos.  Wireless internet will be provided in the room.

Meet:
Bryan Schreier
Thursday, February 21, 2013
From 9:00 am - 10:30 am at Sequoia Capital’s Office

Executive Summaries Due:
Friday, February 15, 2013 by 12:00 pm PST

You will be notified by:
Tuesday, February 19, 2013

elevatorHere’s a great opportunity for entrepreneurs in the NYC area!  Have you ever had a discussion with someone about your company and all that resulted from it was a blank stare? Here’s your chance to fix that and get first hand feedback from investors who are experts at reviewing pitches. The elevator pitch can make or break you for a follow up engagement with an investor. It’s the first impression you make on them so it’s important to make it count. Join us for our elevator pitch roundtables and workshop on February 26! If interested, details and information about how to apply are below.

Details:

You will be broken up into groups and placed in a room with 10-15 other entrepreneurs (numbers depend on applicants received) and one investor.

Each company will need to present their elevator pitch in 30 seconds or less. The investor will provide feedback immediately following the pitch.

You will not be able to use or bring anything with you. Just you and your elevator pitch that’s stored in your brain.

When everyone in the room has pitched, you will all re-group and each investor will choose their top finalists.

The selected finalists will have 5-10 minutes to make adjustments to their pitches by incorporating the feedback they previously received.

When time is up, the selected finalists will all be brought back into the main room and present in the final pitch off (all companies, even those that were not among the selected finalists, are encouraged to stay and listen).

Here are some best practices as you think about constructing your elevator pitch (or making it even better than it already is).

Space is limited. Please make sure to read the directions below on how to participate.

Investors:

Schedule (may change given the number of participants):

  • 9:00 am – 10:40 am: Pitch Event Roundtables
  • 10:40 am – 10:50 am: Brainstorming (selected companies to make adjustments to their pitches)
  • 10:50 am – 11:00 am: Final pitch off
  • 11:00 am – 12:00 pm: Networking

How to participate:

If interested, please submit a brief description of your company to Joyce Chuang @ jchuang@orrick.com by Friday, February 15 for consideration. Selections will be announced by Friday, February 22.

 

By: Arjun Dev Arora (Founder & CEO of ReTargeter)

You’ve probably heard the adage “it takes a village,” but you may not have thought about how that might apply to your tech startup. The importance of community is often overlooked, but it can do more for you, your business, and your employees than you probably think.

Why is Community Important?

Building or fostering community around your business can serve many crucial functions. Having a strong community can help you, as a founder or CEO, develop the skills necessary to run your company more effectively. Community can help you find beta testers or relevant users to help you hone early versions or updates to your product. Post-launch, your community can drive initial product traction by becoming early customers, using or testing the product, and by spreading the word. As you grow, your community can help you find partners and other opportunities.

When it comes to hiring (one of the bigger challenges many startups face), a strong community is one of the best sources of potential employees. For a lot of companies, employee referrals are one of the most trusted ways of finding the right hires and keeping them. If your startup is small, your network of employee referrals is going to be limited. Having a strong community means you’ll have a larger referral network and a bigger talent pool.

Types of Communities

There’s no one right answer when it comes to building a community around your startup. What you do and who you are determine the type of community that makes sense for you. Just like no two companies are exactly alike, no two communities are exactly alike.

To be as strong as you can be, think about building multiple communities, centered around different points of commonality. Here are a few examples of the different types of communities many startups belong to:

Communities in Your Industry:

One logical place to start is industry. My company, ReTargeter, is in the ad tech space, and we’ve focused on fostering relationships with many of the other companies in our industry (and in our industry, there’s no shortage of other companies). Find companies who do things in your industry and find ways to grow together.

Regional Communities:

My company is based in San Francisco, so finding other tech founders nearby is hardly a challenge. But if you don’t happen to be in the middle of the Valley, it may be even more valuable to build a regional community. Thriving startup communities in up-and-coming tech capitals like Austin can provide incredible resources to community members. Especially if you’re in a region that’s not quite so well known for its tech community, looking to your neighbors is a great place to start building.

Role-Based Communities:

It’s also valuable to build communities around your role. There’s so much to be learned from your peer group–the people who are doing what you’re doing can be an invaluable source of insight and inspiration. Whether you’re a founder, CEO, CMO, or lead developer, finding other people who share you challenges is invaluable.

Building a Community

Now that you know why and what, here’s the how:

  • Contribute thought leadership online or at industry conferences to get noticed by people in your industry, region, or role.
  • Whenever you have an opportunity, serve as a mentor or advisor to up and comers. Those relationships can turn into the early seed for a strong community.
  • Focus on relationships. Don’t miss opportunities to connect folks you know who have something in common. The ability to forge connections between different groups of people is the cornerstone of a community-building.
  • If you can, throw parties and host dinners or events as a way of bringing different people in your communities together.

Building a community is not impossible. You probably interact with many of the right people every day, they just aren’t all in the same place. Bring people together, and above all, don’t forget to have fun.

ArjunArjun Dev Arora is the founder and CEO of ReTargeter. He has bootstrapped ReTargeter from a one person company to a high-growth leader in the online marketing space with clients like Intel, Yamaha, and The Oakland Raiders. Prior to ReTargeter, Arjun was the Head of Business Development at Yahoo! Real Estate, and an investment banker specializing in the technology sector at Jefferies Broadview. Arjun also serves as a co-chair at the Young Entrepreneur Council, is an LP at 500 Startups, and is an angel investor and advisor to multiple Silicon Valley startups.

By: Renee DiResta (Associate at O’Reilly AlphaTech Ventures)

As a seed stage venture associate, one of my main responsibilities is evaluating new investments. There are typically upwards of 20 first-round meetings in any given week, so I see a lot of pitches. Let’s talk about the most common mistakes people make when presenting, with a particular focus on the first-time pitch.

Not targeting appropriate investment partners

First and foremost, before you start a conversation, it’s important to know that you’re pitching to the right type of investor. If you don’t have a prototype in at least the alpha or beta-test stage, chances are you’re a bit too early for most institutional venture capitalists. Your most likely source of capital will be angel investors. It’s still good to reach out to VCs – we like to form relationships early and watch a product grow – but don’t be surprised to hear, “Let’s keep in touch.”

Besides investor stage, it’s important to choose partners who are a good fit for the particular sector you’re working in. The ideal investor is more than someone who writes a check – it’s a partner who understands your market, and can add value via their expertise and their network. You should typically avoid pitching VCs who have invested in direct competitors, as they will generally not fund a company if there’s a potential conflict of interest.

Asking the VC to sign an NDA

It likely won’t happen. Here are a few great posts by other investors that explain why in more detail.

Not having a deck

A good pitch should be a conversation, with a lot of back-and-forth questions and answers. Some entrepreneurs take this to mean that they don’t need a deck, especially if they have a prototype to demo. While a demo is the best way to convey what you’re doing, many investors (myself included) still appreciate a deck because it acts as an outline for your story. It helps to frame and focus the conversation, and is particularly useful for calling attention to important metrics (signups, downloads, usage over time, etc). It doesn’t have to be anything complicated; in fact, it should be quite simple. A good deck should have around 10 slides, with maybe a few additional for appendix-style materials to respond to anticipated questions. There are many resources out there for how to put together a good deck.

Presenting yourself as technology in search of a problem

While investors love to hear about innovative new ideas, we’re also very interested in what pain point the technology addresses. I want to hear about why your product is necessary. What problem does it solve? Who has that problem? At the early stage, it’s common for an entrepreneur to be exploring several potential target markets, and it’s perfectly acceptable to offer visions for multiple potential markets. Just don’t be technology in search of a problem…make sure you have a sense of who your customer will be, and convey that to the investor.

Misrepresenting the market landscape

This mistake generally takes one of two forms: exaggerating the size of the market, or ignoring the competition. When you think about your market, it’s important to differentiate between “market size” and “addressable market size.” For example, if you’re a K-12 edtech company, don’t describe your market size to the investor in terms of total dollars spent on education across the board at all levels. Talk about it in terms of the market you’re capable of reaching – your specific niche.

Similarly, many entrepreneurs make the mistake of telling an investor that they have no competition because there isn’t a company out there with their exact feature set. You have competition, even if it’s simply pre-existing user behavior. Know what you’re up against, and why you’re different, and be comfortable explaining that to an investor. If there truly is no competition, it’s highly likely that’s because you’re not solving an actual problem.

Not emphasizing why you are the person the VC should fund

So much of early-stage investing is making a bet on the entrepreneur. The product can and will change, so early-stage investors want to fund founders who can adapt and execute. The best idea in the world isn’t going anywhere if the founder isn’t passionate about the problem he or she is solving. So tell us about yourself and your team, not just the idea.

One final point: Many entrepreneurs wonder if it’s worth their time to pitch a non-partner. The reality is that analysts and associates can’t write checks, so if you have a connection to the firm and can get right to a meeting with a partner, go for it. But if not, keep in mind that the junior investor’s incentives are aligned with yours – they want to find great companies, and if they believe in a deal, they will advocate for it and help it through the pipeline. So make sure that you don’t convey a sense that meeting with the junior person is a waste of your time. 

A good first meeting is like a good first date. You’ve told your story and piqued the investor’s interest. End the meeting with a discussion about next steps. And prepare for your next meeting by thinking about the questions you were asked; those questions are a pretty good indication of what the investor is most concerned about, and alleviating those concerns will increase your chances of getting funded.

Good luck!

Renee DiRestaRenee DiResta is currently an Associate at O’Reilly AlphaTech Ventures, where she researches emerging technology trends and supports portfolio companies. Prior to OATV, she spent six and a half years as a trader at Jane Street Capital, a quantitative proprietary trading firm in New York. Renee holds a B.S. in Computer Science and Political Science from the State University of New York at Stony Brook. Follow her on Twitter at @noupside.

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