Stop Trying to Sell the Investment First and Sell this Instead

Stop Trying to Sell the Investment First and Sell this Instead

Every week, here on LinkedIn I receive dozens of pitch decks, PPMs, cap tables, and links to videos, blogs, and About Us pages for a variety of different ventures and ‘characters‘.

Lately, it’s gotten so bad over the last year I’ve had to hand over the exciting task of managing my LinkedIn Inbox to a junior member of my team, Brian.

In other words: I now have an employee who gets paid to spend 2 hours each week on social media pressing the “delete” key. And Brian is very good at his job. But every now and then instead of hitting “delete”, she hits “forward” and the message gets passed up to a senior member of my team. And if it looks interesting to him the message makes its way to my assistant, who, finally, assigns it to me.

But 99.9% of these requests never even make it past Brian.

So what, exactly, is it about the vast majority of these messages that prompts him to send them straight to the trash heap without passing ‘go’ and without collecting $200? And, more importantly, what distinguishes those rare exceptions when a message actually makes it all the way to me?

Here’s an example of a message that came through last week. This particular one was deleted in a matter of seconds...

—————————————————

Subject: Exciting Investment Opportunity!

Body: I hope you're doing well. Steve my business partner and I would like to share our pitch deck with you! We have an extremely exciting investment opportunity! Once you review our pitch deck, watch the videos, and go through our website, we can set up a conference call! Go to my calendar and schedule a call with me to discuss how you can invest with us!

—————————————————

He seems to expect me to spend considerable time reviewing his pitch deck, watching his videos and browsing his website – then to schedule a call so I can listen to him pitch me for an hour.

Does that sound like a realistic response to a cold email in ANY industry?

Sure, I get it—startups aren’t just ‘any industry’. Startups are cool and sexy and everyone is convinced their little company is going to get bought out by Facebook or Google in 3 years for a few hundred million.

If you’re looking for investments from your uncle or your college roommate or a guy you met in line at Starbucks, maybe this approach could work. But accredited investors don’t buy into “Exciting Investment Opportunities”.

Moreso, they will not spend the time to review all your collateral without some relationship or nurturing period.

And let me help you out with this.

Step 1 is NOT reviewing your pitch deck, watching a 32-minute video on your origin story...And it’s NOT sending your offering out to investors nor sending investors for you to pitch.

This guy is trying to sell me an investment before he’s even determined if I’m interested. He’s moving too fast. That’s why his email was deleted by my LinkedIn ‘firewall’ team.

His inquiry could have had much greater success if he would STOP trying to pitch me the whole investment in one email and instead just focus on selling me the next step: which is responding to his message.

If your first email doesn’t get a response, nothing else matters. That is Step 1!

He could have tried:

Hi Matt,

Great profile picture and your track record is incredible. Quick question for you:

Do you have an interest in _______________?

or he could have asked...

What is your capacity for_________?

Simon

Or what about:

Hi Matt,

Your LinkedIn Profile is great but your website was intriguing. Nice work.

Are you currently investing? If so, what type of investments are you interested in?

——————————————

Sell them on responding to you.

Stop trying to sell the investment in one email or message. If you start the dialogue and maintain it over 5 messages, you’ll have a much better chance of selling them on you and the investment

Can you think what's next?

Get them to respond to your 2nd email.

If you follow this and not rush the process, you'll raise more capital.

UPDATE: TAKING A PAGE FROM JEFF MCDERMOTT I'VE REVISED MY BIO AND ABOUT SECTION

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REFERENCE: https://www.dhirubhai.net/in/jeffmcdermott175/

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Lonnie Hayward

Founder @ Timberwise ?? | Transforming Timber Industry with Cutting-Edge Submerged Timber Harvesting Technology | Driving Sustainability & Profitability

5 年

Very much appreciated. I know this is a general article but i felt we could take some great points from this. Thx again and let me know if we can discuss your interest level in investing in the underwater timber industry. Lonnie

回复
Ivan Barratt

Founder and CEO, The BAM Companies | Private Equity | Asset Management | Fund Management LAV 1.73B | AUM 1.1B | Audited Net IRR 33.85% and Net MOiC 2.46X

5 年

Matt Scott?great post. thanks for sharing this via email. Your simple: "It's been a while since we connected..." was simple. Call to action was easy. Bravo my friend!

Matt Scott

Entrepreneur | Investor |

5 年

Everyone should read Jeff McDermott?LinkedIn Page - and learn how to develop your own list of connection request rules. Thanks Jeff

Patrick Driessen

Healthcare Entrepreneur | Women's Health | Impact Investor | SHE Health Clinics | FemTrials | Digital Health | FemTech | HealthTech

5 年

Spot on Matt! Thanks for sharing.

Brian G.

?The Bitcoin Alchemist?? Energy | Mining | Trader | Zero Knowledge | PGP Fprint: C775B3477EADB61E2A5561AE2C4DA0B32E37CF2B

5 年

Everything is eventually about relationship building, not selling opportunities or materialistic crap.

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