Tips for a 60 Second Pitch
- Be memorable, whatever that means for your personality or product/company
- Don’t write a 5 minute pitch and then try to read it in 60 seconds, no one will process the it
- No demo, because it will either a) not work b) not finish in time c) just not work
- Answer how you’ll make money ASAP, because someone is bound to ask anyway
- If you have a working prototype say so and use 15 seconds to make sure people know where it is
- If you’re serious, give business cards to the panelists and ask people to raise hands if they want your card at the end (don’t tell then to find you, they won’t)
Contestants, Meet Your Judges
The judges are local media reps from Xconomy (Gregory Huang), TechFlash (John Cook), and Seattle 2.0 (Marcelo) but don’t go thinking that just because they’re the media they don’t know about business and tech.
Gregory Huang (Xconomy)
In addition to being a much-loved local tech beat journalist, Gregory has a Master’s and Ph.D. in electrical engineering and computer science from MIT, and a B.S. in electrical engineering from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He is published in 20 scientific journals and did research at MIT’s Artificial Intelligence Lab. He also co-authored “Guanxi” – a book about Microsoft in China and the global competition for talent and technology.
John Cook (TechFlash)
I think John might know a thing or two about running a business of his own, considering he took the bull by the horns almost a year ago to leave his job at the Seattle PI and co-found TechFlash (a subsidiary of Puget Sound Business Journal). John reminds me of many startup geeks I know, who work like crazy and occasionally come out of the proverbial cave to socialize. According to his bio, John has been a journalist since high school where he compiled obituary and election info. Sounds like the same single-minded focus entrepreneurs are encouraged to have.
Marcelo Calbucci (Seattle 2.0)
By now you’ve probably read about Seattle 2.0’s fearless leader and his experience with failed startup Sampa, which he co-founded. Fortunately, Marcelo also founded Seattle 2.0 and its going pretty well. He is also the creator of TweepML and codes on a regular basis. He’s an ex-Microsoft guy too, so he has a healthy appreciation for making money. Read his blog for a candid account of pretty much everything.
What to pitch him on: community-driven products, social media, travel, video
Upping the Stakes – Win Some Cash!
Before you start talking about how meaningless it is to have an Entrepreneur Idol contest in the comments, keep in mind that it is going to be fun and that practicing pitching is a great way for fledgling entrepreneurs to gain confidence. Let’s be the kind of community that can support this exercise, and we might even be surprised by the quality of pitches.
I guess the rules changed at the last minute./
I’m afraid I don’t follow…
@Rick: Hope to clear up any confusion. TechFlash is running a promotion to have the community pick one of our six presenters at EUIdol– that lucky winner will get a free ticket to EU and the chance at stardom. As John Cook mentioned, our steering committee is choosing the other 5 presenters from #EUIdol tweets. We used to just pick from the crowd in attendance that day but thought that this would be more democratic, and part of living the dream of social media that is a major theme throughout the event. So this year, we’re taking election day seriously and voting for the best tweeted pitches before the event. And to sweeten the deal (this is breaking news)– everyone who tweets their pitch will be entered into a drawing to have their $600 course fee waived for the Founders Institute! Yes, must be present to win, but hoping that’s not a surprise. EUIdol is the icing on the cake of our full-day Entrepreneur University, so we certainly hope you can join us Thursday. Please feel free to email me with any questions! @Danielle, thank you! awesome spin on the promotion. Looking forward to your “Plugging In” panel!
Why would someone pitch something to Marcelo???
Sampa shut down – it was a total failure!
Busy people have better things to do. Like making money.
So here’s the deal. I approved your comment, but I want to make it clear to you that the whole Marcelo bashing thing isn’t going to be tolerated on my blog. This blog is MY property, and I don’t think this negative nancy bullshit has any place here. Add value, or get out of the way… I’m all for open comments, but not cool with character attacks on my friends. Follow?