Startups

Don’t send VC a cold deck ever again: Start sending video pitches

Comment

A woman is sitting in front of a video camera and some lighting gear.
Image Credits: CoWomen/Unsplash (opens in a new window)

Evan Fisher

Contributor

Founder of Unicorn Capital and Minimal Capital, Evan Fisher‘s pitching and investor strategy has helped startups raise more than $2.5 billion.

More posts from Evan Fisher

Let’s play out this scenario. Your deck is ready and you’re just about to start reaching out. What does conventional wisdom say that you should send? A three-paragraph overview, four bullet points outlining the problem, and three bullet points on how you solve it and why you’re the best. You went through all that work … but who is going to read it? A junior person. Not even a senior VC.

Even if you do end up with a meeting, odds are that your deck didn’t even get read. The biggest lie in venture capital is: “Yes, I read through your deck.” Because those words are immediately followed by, “ … but why don’t you run us through it from the beginning?”

At that point, it’s safe to assume that no one has actually taken the time to read through what you sent, the junior guy thought it would be an interesting meeting considering the fund’s current themes of interest, and no one objected to taking the meeting. But no one has really taken the time to read through your deck.

According to DocSend, the average pitch deck review time over the last 20 weeks is less than three minutes. Let’s break down how much time you’ll be given for a 12-page deck (a very concise deck):

  • Cover — 5 seconds.
  • Back cover — 5 seconds.
  • All the rest — 2:50.

That also includes time for that critical-to-understand diagram that illustrates and distills your unique system or view of the world. Do you think 25 seconds is long enough to fully comprehend that diagram and connect the dots with your value prop? Not likely.

What should you do about it?

Don’t send cold decks, ever. Instead, you should be video pitching — this is a video walkthrough of your deck, with your face in a camera bubble talking through it and giving added color in a video no longer than six-and-a-half minutes. Your objective for this video: Get in, provide a basis of understanding, and get out with a punchy CTA. Nothing flashy, nothing fancy.

More investors are embracing video pitches (prime example: Ashton Kutcher’s Sound Ventures), and in the age of the Zoom-based pitch meeting, it’s quickly becoming the standard.

The rapid but notable shift is because in video pitching, founders get to showcase the preparedness, commitment and passion VCs are looking for, all while telling their story. None of that is effectively transmitted in a cold pitch deck. Further, it allows you to create a deeper connection even before a meeting ever takes place. In a sense, it allows you and the investor to skip a step in the relationship-building process.

Why you have to do video pitches

Cold decks get blown out of the water when compared with the benefits of the video pitch:

  1. You can connect the dots in an easy-to-digest manner. Instead of simply reading the slides, you’re adding context as you go through them. Basically, you’re doing investors a favor by doing the mental heavy lifting for them.
  2. You control the interaction. It’s a recorded video, so you get to pitch with the added benefit of not getting interrupted.
  3. People might not give three minutes to skim a PDF, but they will watch a six-and-a-half minute high-relevance video!
  4. You get to put a face to your name and showcase your ability to sell to clients and investors. It gives them everything they need to know about how you run your business without having to say it in person.
  5. The replay button gives them the option to watch it again.
  6. Bonus: Email notifications. ‘Nuff said.

One thing’s for certain, the person who talks to an investor 10 minutes after they watched the video to follow up and answer questions is in a very different boat than the one that sends a cold PowerPoint. So if you thought having pro-level Zoom meeting chops was highly valued, it’s now time to raise your video pitch skills to the same level.

Video pitches maximize conversion rates

Typically, when using the video pitch correctly, we have seen founders book 2x to 5x the number of investor meetings, and 3x to 5x the amount of investor commitments from your first 20 investor meetings. Founder Adelle Archer of grief wellness pioneer Eterneva explains, “Using a video pitch goes far beyond the cold-deck approach. First, you’re bringing additional warmth, energy and personalization to your opening elevator pitch. Second, it helps you gauge which investors are really interested based on watch time. And third, it’s a powerful way to get ‘face time’ with partners you didn’t speak with but who are part of the investment committee.”

Even if the only benefit was that other investment committee members heard the story direct from the founder, that alone would make your video pitch worth it.

There’s an intangible power dynamic shift, too

When an investor has already heard you speak and explain your vision, the power dynamic of that first 30-minute meeting fundamentally changes. You’ve come to the table not telling, but showing that you’re operating at pro level. Founders we’ve spoken with have reported that after video pitching, instead of feeling like a lowly startup asking for capital, they felt more on an equal footing with prospective investors they spoke with. They got a lot farther, faster. They were perceived as mature and seasoned. This strategy was their great equalizer in the power equation.

The right way to prepare a video pitch

  • Practice, part 1: Script your pitch first. Your verbal talk track should be sectioned by deck page, on a single Word doc. Choose whether you work best from bullets or full text. Print out your verbal talk track and read through it out loud with a pen in your hand. Make a little dot wherever you verbally trip up and edit every place you made a dot (because surprise! Reading out loud sounds different from what you put on paper). Go through this process twice without your deck. Just read your verbal talk track aloud, don’t record on the first two read throughs. But on read through #3, still with no deck, this time, record yourself and listen through it with a careful focus on how it flows. Speaking of which …
  • Practice, part 2: Flow is key. Solid narrative transitions are actually more important than what’s on your slides. On read through #3, tweak the transitions between your deck pages so that the story all ties together. Bold, underscore, italicize, do whatever you need to do to remind yourself to read that part with inflection and power.
  • Practice, part 3: Nail your timing. Six minutes and 30 seconds or less. Video length separates the good from the unwatched. Under four minutes, you’re probably too rushed. Over 7 minutes, you need to cut it down because it probably won’t get watched. Our totally unempirical founder feedback indicates that 6:00-6:30 is the sweet spot. With superwarm investor intros, you can get away with a longer video, but don’t venture past the dreaded 7-minute mark unless you have a damn good reason. This is where you do read through #4, to get a baseline time and practice flipping through the slides.
  • Telegraph that you will intentionally gloss over content. In your verbal talk track intro, acknowledge that you’re going to be giving a 30,000-foot view. You should become best pals with this phrase: “I’m sure you’re going to have a ton of questions, so let’s do a Zoom and talk through it.” Read through #5 is for cutting down things that are noncore or already on the page, that you can and should just gloss over in your video pitch. Rinse and repeat until you’ve got your timing nailed down to below the 6:30 threshold.
  • Throw out your script. Watching a founder read from a script is cathartic. At this point, you should be able to run through your pitch in your sleep.
  • CTA is paramount. This is not an info video. Your ask, or closer for your video, should be to suggest getting on a call. “Shoot me an email and we’ll coordinate, or if you want to just book a time for tomorrow or the next day, I’ve included a link in the email.”
  • Yes, personalize it. It’s a lot faster to do 20 clearly personalized, high-relevance and high-converting six-minute videos than to spend hours trying to create a one-size-fits-all version. The latter do not convert anyway (everyone knows the template game). When you personalize, you’re far more likely to have a solid interaction and actually get a message back from a Tier 1 VC with a video that begins, “Hey Tina!” That means fewer contact outreach emails, fewer videos, faster raise and faster growth. Don’t forget: In their portfolio, they’re looking for quality, not quantity.
  • But don’t overproduce. Don’t overthink it. A rougher, clearly imperfect video pitch — even one where you screwed up — is worth far more than a polished, corporate video. Authenticity is king. That means you should be using Loom, not Final Cut (and if you use Gmail, use the clickbaity Loom plugin too). Focus on high-quality audio more so than sexy visuals.

So the next time you get asked for your deck, send a video pitch instead. Just don’t hold the deck hostage — if after they’ve watched the video, your prospective investor asks you to send a copy of the deck itself, then that’s where DocSend comes in — PDF it and let fly. Until that point, you’ve gotta be rockin’ the video!

If you need help crafting your verbal talk track, aligning your deck to the video pitch strategy or maximizing investor conversion, come see us — we geek out on this stuff.

How to fundraise over Zoom more effectively

More TechCrunch

Meta’s Oversight Board has now extended its scope to include the company’s newest platform, Instagram Threads. Designed as an independent appeals board that hears cases and then makes precedent-setting content…

Meta’s Oversight Board takes its first Threads case

The company says it’s refocusing and prioritizing fewer initiatives that will have the biggest impact on customers and add value to the business.

SeekOut, a recruiting startup last valued at $1.2 billion, lays off 30% of its workforce

The U.K.’s self-proclaimed “world-leading” regulations for self-driving cars are now official, after the Automated Vehicles (AV) Act received royal assent — the final rubber stamp any legislation must go through…

UK’s autonomous vehicle legislation becomes law, paving the way for first driverless cars by 2026

ChatGPT, OpenAI’s text-generating AI chatbot, has taken the world by storm. What started as a tool to hyper-charge productivity through writing essays and code with short text prompts has evolved…

ChatGPT: Everything you need to know about the AI-powered chatbot

SoLo Funds CEO Travis Holoway: “Regulators seem driven by press releases when they should be motivated by true consumer protection and empowering equitable solutions.”

Fintech lender SoLo Funds is being sued again by the government over its lending practices

Hard tech startups generate a lot of buzz, but there’s a growing cohort of companies building digital tools squarely focused on making hard tech development faster, more efficient and —…

Rollup wants to be the hardware engineer’s workhorse

TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 is not just about groundbreaking innovations, insightful panels, and visionary speakers — it’s also about listening to YOU, the audience, and what you feel is top of…

Disrupt Audience Choice vote closes Friday

Google says the new SDK would help Google expand on its core mission of connecting the right audience to the right content at the right time.

Google is launching a new Android feature to drive users back into their installed apps

Jolla has taken the official wraps off the first version of its personal server-based AI assistant in the making. The reborn startup is building a privacy-focused AI device — aka…

Jolla debuts privacy-focused AI hardware

OpenAI is removing one of the voices used by ChatGPT after users found that it sounded similar to Scarlett Johansson, the company announced on Monday. The voice, called Sky, is…

OpenAI to remove ChatGPT’s Scarlett Johansson-like voice

The ChatGPT mobile app’s net revenue first jumped 22% on the day of the GPT-4o launch and continued to grow in the following days.

ChatGPT’s mobile app revenue saw its biggest spike yet following GPT-4o launch

Dating app maker Bumble has acquired Geneva, an online platform built around forming real-world groups and clubs. The company said that the deal is designed to help it expand its…

Bumble buys community building app Geneva to expand further into friendships

CyberArk — one of the army of larger security companies founded out of Israel — is acquiring Venafi, a specialist in machine identity, for $1.54 billion. 

CyberArk snaps up Venafi for $1.54B to ramp up in machine-to-machine security

Founder-market fit is one of the most crucial factors in a startup’s success, and operators (someone involved in the day-to-day operations of a startup) turned founders have an almost unfair advantage…

OpenseedVC, which backs operators in Africa and Europe starting their companies, reaches first close of $10M fund

A Singapore High Court has effectively approved Pine Labs’ request to shift its operations to India.

Pine Labs gets Singapore court approval to shift base to India

The AI Safety Institute, a U.K. body that aims to assess and address risks in AI platforms, has said it will open a second location in San Francisco. 

UK opens office in San Francisco to tackle AI risk

Companies are always looking for an edge, and searching for ways to encourage their employees to innovate. One way to do that is by running an internal hackathon around a…

Why companies are turning to internal hackathons

Featured Article

I’m rooting for Melinda French Gates to fix tech’s broken ‘brilliant jerk’ culture

Women in tech still face a shocking level of mistreatment at work. Melinda French Gates is one of the few working to change that.

1 day ago
I’m rooting for Melinda French Gates to fix tech’s  broken ‘brilliant jerk’ culture

Blue Origin has successfully completed its NS-25 mission, resuming crewed flights for the first time in nearly two years. The mission brought six tourist crew members to the edge of…

Blue Origin successfully launches its first crewed mission since 2022

Creative Artists Agency (CAA), one of the top entertainment and sports talent agencies, is hoping to be at the forefront of AI protection services for celebrities in Hollywood. With many…

Hollywood agency CAA aims to help stars manage their own AI likenesses

Expedia says Rathi Murthy and Sreenivas Rachamadugu, respectively its CTO and senior vice president of core services product & engineering, are no longer employed at the travel booking company. In…

Expedia says two execs dismissed after ‘violation of company policy’

Welcome back to TechCrunch’s Week in Review. This week had two major events from OpenAI and Google. OpenAI’s spring update event saw the reveal of its new model, GPT-4o, which…

OpenAI and Google lay out their competing AI visions

When Jeffrey Wang posted to X asking if anyone wanted to go in on an order of fancy-but-affordable office nap pods, he didn’t expect the post to go viral.

With AI startups booming, nap pods and Silicon Valley hustle culture are back

OpenAI’s Superalignment team, responsible for developing ways to govern and steer “superintelligent” AI systems, was promised 20% of the company’s compute resources, according to a person from that team. But…

OpenAI created a team to control ‘superintelligent’ AI — then let it wither, source says

A new crop of early-stage startups — along with some recent VC investments — illustrates a niche emerging in the autonomous vehicle technology sector. Unlike the companies bringing robotaxis to…

VCs and the military are fueling self-driving startups that don’t need roads

When the founders of Sagetap, Sahil Khanna and Kevin Hughes, started working at early-stage enterprise software startups, they were surprised to find that the companies they worked at were trying…

Deal Dive: Sagetap looks to bring enterprise software sales into the 21st century

Keeping up with an industry as fast-moving as AI is a tall order. So until an AI can do it for you, here’s a handy roundup of recent stories in the world…

This Week in AI: OpenAI moves away from safety

After Apple loosened its App Store guidelines to permit game emulators, the retro game emulator Delta — an app 10 years in the making — hit the top of the…

Adobe comes after indie game emulator Delta for copying its logo

Meta is once again taking on its competitors by developing a feature that borrows concepts from others — in this case, BeReal and Snapchat. The company is developing a feature…

Meta’s latest experiment borrows from BeReal’s and Snapchat’s core ideas

Welcome to Startups Weekly! We’ve been drowning in AI news this week, with Google’s I/O setting the pace. And Elon Musk rages against the machine.

Startups Weekly: It’s the dawning of the age of AI — plus,  Musk is raging against the machine