What are you trying saying? Rethinking the elevator pitch.

24 04 2009
The elevator pitch

The elevator pitch

Most elevator pitches are terrible. They try to do too much with too little time. Startups should think of them as teasers, not my 60 minute pitch in 15 seconds.

I started thinking about the elevator pitch this week after I received a PPT makeover candidate. I did do a makeover on their slides, which I will blog about in the next week or so. They had generally good looking slides, but the material was so heavy with words, I just kept thinking, “What are you trying to say?”

Here is their elevator pitch. It captured the issues I was having with the overall preso. Note: their bolding, not mine.

Product XYZ is a new generation Productivity suite that is connected to all the services that you already rely on : IM (gtalk, msn, twitter,…), Mobile (Nokia, iPhone, soon Blackberry and Windows Mobile), Email, Desktop (Adobe AIR application), and allows you to Collaborate with your colleagues thanks to exclusive and intuitive social features.

Two things seem to be happening here. One, they don’t communicate the value of their product (ie, pain relief) to the customer. Second, they are tripping over buzzwords.

First Attempt: Let’s try to make this plain english, and really extract the unique value proposition:

Product XYZ is a suite of collaboration web apps that is different from competitors because:

  1. It integrates directly with existing IM services, email and mobile phones.
  2. It’s offered as software as a service versus installed software.
  3. It connects with the major social networks.

I think this is easier to understand, but it is still “wrong”, as it is talking about how they built it, versus how it benefits the customer. I don’t know the product well enough to be accurate with this next attempt, but that has never stopped me.

Second Attempt: Let’s focus on pain versus how they solve it.

Collaboration applications have been left behind. Bloated install software, not integrated with the mainstay tools of business users like IM, email and mobile phones. And perhaps worst of all, today’s collaboration software is alarmingly unconnected to the social web. Product XYZ is different.

Third Attempt: What about poking a hole in the collaboration software market itself?

The primary competition for collaboration software like WebEx is substitutes: mainstream communication apps combined with social networks. Product XYZ is a different web collaboration service. It attacks this major market vulnerability by harnessing IM, email, and mobile phones and working with a users’ social network.

We still don’t know exactly what they do (which is true…I have never seen a demo), and you could argue I am still hypey with buzzwords like “social network” and “harnessing” and “market vulnerability”, but the audience are certainly hungrier to see the demo and see if Product XYZ pulls it off.

With Xobni, we typically combine both of these techniques. Here is a sample of what we might tell a potential investor:

MSFT’s Outlook is a massive mess of an application, and yet has over 400M users and an ecosystem over $10B. Xobni makes a plugin that makes Outlook suck much less. We add lightning fast search that knows the difference between a person and an email. And we automatically combine email addresses with rich profile data from the web like Facebook and Linkedin profiles. After just a couple of minutes using Xobni, like TiVo for your TV, it will be hard to use your inbox without it. Let me show you what I mean.

Often times, I edit this down even further. Again, I just need to earn the chance to tell them more, not to close the deal during the 15 seconds. This has been successful for me so far.

Anyway, I am curious to hear your thoughts on how to improve the startup elevator pitch, and certainly open to better examples.





“Mmmm, IE, I like it when you watch.”

26 02 2009

Hello Safari 4 (beta)
Hello Safari 4 (beta)

As I was downloading the most recent version of Apple’s browser Safari 4 (beta), I had a funny/sad thought about the browser: I can’t think of any other piece of software, which is used to assist in switching to a competitor. Imagine the humiliation our poor browsers endure by not just witnessing, but assisting the us to replace it. It is like asking your girlfriend to help you get ready for a hot date…with the girl next door.

I can just imagine the horror of browser as I start typing in www.apple.com/safari, like I did this morning with Firefox 3. I can hear the browser saying, “Hey! What’s going on here? There’s no need for this…I can do better, I swear. She’s not even pretty!” Or maybe it is like that scene from Wizard of Oz where the wicked witch melts away as we all watch on.

Keep reading… Read the rest of this entry »





Startups, send me your troubled slides. Cool opportunity for 2-3 startups.

17 02 2009

Hello Entrepreneurs:

I am going to do a free slide make-over for 2-3 startups. Here is how it works. Just send me an email with 1-2 slides from your pitch. They should be the important slides…slides that will act as either the foundation for the rest of the presentation. I am not talking about making you a template, I will remake the actual slides that could transform your pitch. Here are some examples: (a) your product roadmap slide, (b) you “strategy” slide or your (c) your business model slide.

Here are the things you must consider before sending me anything:

  1. I am going to blog the make-over (I will scrub/anonymize before doing so), but you have to be ready to let me show what I did on the blog to improve your slides.
  2. I am going to use Keynote 09 on a Mac. PPT is just too time consuming.
  3. No promises if I will pick yours, or how long it will take me, though I will notify you within a few days if you have been selected and give you a guesstimate when I will work on it.
  4. I will not sign an NDA…I don’t want crazy confidential info…I’m blogging it after all.

How I will make my decision on who to help:

  • Inspiration: I like your startup, idea or product (I am a product guy, after all…I need a muse). I don’t care what phase of the company or industry you are in.
  • Need: You need the help (you suck at slides but otherwise are a very talented team)
  • Potential: You have a bit of traction (product). Things are tough…I am looking for teams that just need that little extra help in telling their story. If you haven’t done anything yet to build your product or service, you need help there before your pitch gets a make-over

Here is what you should send:

  • A few pages of your preso. Feel free to clean out some of the info, but I need to know enough to help you out, obviously. I am going to only pick 1-2 slides to make over.
  • A description of your product, company, and its stage (team), etc
  • Some basic info on the audience of the preso (and your product, actually)

As a bonus, here is what I will do for the startups I select:

  • VCs: I will make a few, targeted introductions to a few appropriate top tier VCs in bay area and/or back East
  • Advisers: I will make an introduction or two to people in my network that might be able to help you (advisors or key team members)
  • PR: Perhaps I can help you get a “hit” with a significant blog/blogger or news outlet, assuming you have an interesting story.

If you are interested. You can send me your pitch to jeff at bonforte dot com. If you are reading this after Feb 2009, you can assume I am done with this offer.





What I Have Learned About Backing Up Our Computers

1 02 2009
iPhone Access and Unlimited Machines

SugarSync: iPhone Access and Unlimited Machines

I have become obsessed with backing up my computers. I started using computers in 1982. I don’t have any of my digital life from 1982 to 1995 (including everything I did in high school or college). In the last four years, I have 2x lost a poorly backed-up drive with significant file loss. My wife has also, 2x lost her data, including 95% of our honeymoon photos :(

If you have ever had a similar experience, you know how much you will pay to recover memories and files, so the relative cost of this solution, I believe, is reasonable at under $75/year and under $1k to set up all the elements, including a massive 2TB media server.

I have been trying for years to come up with a backup solution that was mostly automated and simple. Only in the past couple of weeks to I feel like I am getting there. But it was not easy to build up to this point…I had to work through a lot of crappy solutions. For example, I tried using Apple Script to run a Terminal rsync script with a FTP service…it constantly failed and I am not nerdy enough to want keep that all running.

This is a really long post…follow the link to get to the nitty gritty details…

Read the rest of this entry »





Really? AV receiver or Nascar?

30 01 2009

 

Look at all those logos!

Look at all those logos!

I recently replaced an old AV receiver with something newer from Onkyo, which could take 4 HDMI inputs and used just one HDMI output to my TV. And while it is generally a good receiver (as measured by sound and picture quality), There are so many things that drag down the aesthetic and usability of the receiver. The obvious ones that no AV manufacturer seems to get are: Read the rest of this entry »








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