How Pitching Investors is Different Than Pitching Customers - Michael Seibel
Understanding the Difference Between Investor Pitch and Customer Pitch
In this section, Michael Seibel discusses the distinction between an investor pitch and a customer pitch, highlighting the key differences in approach and content required for each audience.
Investor Pitch vs. Customer Pitch
- Investor Perspective - Investors may not have a personal connection to the problem but are interested in the potential for building a successful company.
- Customer Engagement - Customers appreciate industry jargon, discussing their problems extensively, and understanding how the solution benefits them personally.
- Jargon Usage - Avoid jargon in investor pitches as it can hinder understanding; focus on clear, concise language that explains the product or service effectively.
- Effective Communication - Provide a straightforward explanation of your product/service like Google's search engine functionality rather than using vague marketing language.
- Pitch Content - Investors are interested in what you do, your progress, market size, revenue model, unique insights, team capabilities; customers focus more on product functionality and solving specific problems.
Navigating Investor and Customer Pitches at Y Combinator
This segment delves into the challenges faced by founders at Y Combinator when crafting distinct pitches for investors and customers.
Founders' Journey at Y Combinator
- Pitch Evolution - Initially, founders struggle to merge their customer pitch with their investor pitch but eventually learn to maintain separate approaches.
- Pitch Differentiation - Founders realize the necessity of tailoring pitches differently for investors (business-focused) and customers (solution-focused).