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April 30, 2015
Ashu Garg
The following is a Chiefmartech.com guest post written by Ashu Garg, general partner at Foundation Capital, with special advice from Julie Bernstein, COO for Stitch Fix and former CMO at Sephora.
I get pitched all the time — and I’ve heard it all. From the good to the bad, to the disastrous. As an early stage investor in martech companies, it’s part of my job to get pitched and to help the companies I ultimately invest in make stronger pitches to their prospective clients. I also regularly meet with CMOs and marketing leadership to better understand their needs and wants in a marketing partner.
Recently, I had the chance to speak with Stitch Fix COO, Julie Bornstein during our MarTech and the Decade of the CMO event in SF, and she offered some great advice as to what makes for a solid CMO pitch, and some pitfalls to avoid at all costs. I’d like to share some of her insights with you, as well as some of my own that I regularly share with entrepreneurs.
Describe what you do in one succinct, well-articulated sentence. To get a positive reply from a CMO or pass-along within an organization, you’ll want to stand out. Here’s a good rule of thumb: if your mom or dad could understand it, you are on the right track.
Set the stage right off the bat so the CMO understands your offering. Julie Bornstein noted, “Share one line that explains who the established player in your space is. For example, if you’re competing with Google Analytics, you can say, ‘We do what Google Analytics does only we’re easier to implement.’ Or, ‘We’re cheaper. We’re faster. We’ve done a better version of what they do.’ Whatever you’re offering, it should be instantly understandable.”
If emailing the CMO, don’t ask for 20 minutes that they don’t have. Instead ask to be referred to the best person in the organization with whom you should speak with. Julie says, “This is a logical and respectful approach that will get the best reaction.”
Connect with a person who can be your advocate with decision makers in the company. This person doesn’t need to be a senior decision maker, but should be someone who can help champion you and influence the organization from within. If you do reach out to the CMO directly, make sure to include your common connection, or even better, get a warm introduction. Julie says, “This will help cut through the clutter and make the CMO more inclined to connect further.”
Julie had this to say, “Many startups or vendors want to understand all their potential clients’ problems first, so they can pitch a solution. CMOs have a million needs, you need to clearly deliver your value proposition and not put the onus on your potential client to set the stage.”
Don’t offer CMOs an easy, breezy, free trial. Understand that a free trial will cost the CMO and their team time and resources they can’t always spend trying out your product. Instead build an intellectual partnership first, and decide on the parameters of a trial period later.
If the CIO or product team needs to be in the meeting, it’s the CMO’s job to determine that—not yours. Having the right team in the room will make for a more focused conversation for their business and your pitch. Why leave it to the CMO? As I discuss in my whitepaper, MarTech and the Decade of the CMO, CEOs are already giving the CMO and CIO relatively equal importance on driving digital. And Gartner reports, by 2017 CMOs will begin to spend more on technology than their CIO counterparts.
The CMO is focused on driving business through their marketing and technology initiatives. In fact, as I cite in MarTech and the Decade of the CMO, CEOs surveyed by Gartner singled out their top three business driving initiatives all fall under the purview of the CMO. So instead of focusing your attention on solving marketing problems, solve business-critical challenges.
Whether you are getting ready for your first pitch at a new startup or you are a seasoned founder looking to hone your story for the C-suite, we hope these tips are as useful to you as they have been for the entrepreneurs I work with here at Foundation Capital.
Thank you Ashu and Julie!