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10 vital tips to ensure your business pitch is successful
If getting someone interested in your business plan is half the battle in raising funds, the other half is the oral presentation. Researchers have shown that each of the following elements has a value in transmitting a message:
Words: 7%
Tone: 35%
Non-verbal or body language: 58%.
The importance of body language
You may disagree with these percentages, but think about it for a moment. You have complete control over the words that you use but you have less control over the tone of your speech so you must work hard to sound professional, interested, open to criticism and friendly without being over familiar. You have limited control over your non-verbal signals, your body language. Subconsciously your body will reveal what you really mean and think.If you sit with your arms and legs crossed, this is a defensive posture and indicates a hostile attitude towards the other person and/or the message. Sitting with your arms folded with your thumbs up, shows a superior attitude. Leaning forward indicates either interest or intimidation. People who rest their chin on one hand and have a finger in or near their mouth need reassurance. Those who rub their chins are thinking or making a decision and will not be listening to you.
Gestures are intentional movements and should not be confused with body language.
You may be able to control your body language at the beginning of a conversation, but the more you become involved, the more your subconscious will take over.
Body language at the beginning of a conversation is absolutely key to a successful presentation. Of information relayed, 87% comes from the eyes, 9% the ears, and 4% is via the other senses (taste, touch and smell).
Sell yourself as well as your business
Any organisation financing a venture will insist on seeing the team involved presenting and defending its plans – in person. They know that they are backing people every bit as much as the idea. You can be sure that any financiers you are presenting to will be well prepared. Remember that they see hundreds of proposals every year, and either have (or know of) investments in many different sectors of the economy. If this is not your firstbusiness venture, they may even have taken the trouble to find out something of your past financial history.Founding father of European venture capital Sir Ronald Cohen states: “The biggest mistake entrepreneurs who come pitching for capital make is that they deliver the pitch they’ve prepared instead of trying to find out what it is the person sitting on the other side of the table with the money is really concerned about. You find entrepreneurs going on for 25 or 30 minutes without giving anybody a chance to breathe, instead of asking ‘Could you tell me what concerns you about my business plan?’”
Keep these 10 key points in mind when preparing for the presentation of your business plan.
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