Title: Course 5_Marketing & Strategy for Startups
Organizer: FITI, a gov-led startup program in Taiwan
Date: 2021/06/05
Format: online live course & workshop (Google Meet)
Attendees: teams from Top 15 of the FITI 2021-01 group
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FITI Workshop_Marketing and Strategy for Startups
1. 國際行銷與策略
International Marketing & Strategy for Startup
Albert Weng
2021/06/05
核心課程五
課前準備:
1. 設定 Google Meet 視訊軟體上的個人稱呼:
a. 團員格式:團隊編號 _團隊名稱_姓名_職務
b. 團長格式:團隊編號 _團隊名稱_1_姓名_職務
2. 測試 Google Meet 的攝影機與麥克風
3. 各團隊建立本課程使專用的 Line 群組 (Team Lead: 在Meet留言:Line group ok)
2. Something about me
Albert Weng
● Director, Europe, LATAM, Marketing, Hitron Technologies Inc. (www.hitrontech.com/)
● Past: Executive at BenQ America (Dallas, US), BenQ LATAM (Miami, US), D-Link (TW)
● Startup Coverage: Advisor, speaker, reviewer, instructor for government-led startup
program: FITI, LEAP, VP (MOST, 行政院科技部)
● Alumni: 97 BA, EMBA, NTUST
明基佳世達集團
4. Let’s try something really new for this workshop
Framework:
1. Spirit: Knowledge & Experience > Sharing & Advice
2. Type: Lecture > Dialogue
3. Output: Personal note > Co-Creation (Chat)
4. Q&A: Ask me anything (strategy, business model, funding, pitch)
Everyone in this workshop is your Startup Learning Partner!
5. Warm up hello!!!
What we’ll do:
1. Turn on the camera & microphone
2. Start from team 1 to say a few words to everyone
3. The speaker will handover to one of his/her team members to continue
10 sec for a few words:
1. Your team and your name
2. Your one line for everyone to start today
6. Heads-up
No standard answer in startup, nor in this workshop.
So, speak up to learn and grow TOGETHER.
“This is the best advice ever I wish you receive.”
7. Problem = Business
"Stop complaining about problems; problems are the
definition of business. The people who do best in
business aren’t the ones with the least problems, but
are the ones who solve their problems better and have
more fun doing it with better people.”
- Grand father of Daniel Meyer, Founder of Shake Shack
8. The color of the startup course: GREY
1. Grey: the normal color of life and biz (it feels you).
2. Grey: the status before a colorful success.
3. Grey + T = Great
T = TEAM (Together Everyone Achieves More)
= Transaction (your idea & effort -> $$$)
= Transformation (grow from challenges)
9. You think startup is...
➢ Create …
➢ Innovate …
➢ Improve ...
➢ Market …
➢ Sell …
➢ Believe ...
➢ Surpass …
➢ Challenge …
➢ Overcome …
● Customer
● Product
● Competition
● Business model
YOU
Congrats!! You’ve done 50% of the course, the impact of openness on this slide, decide the other 50%.
Action is the crucial/fatal factor for startup! (Knowing is not enough)
something regarding
about to but the reality is actually about to
➢ Create …
➢ Innovate …
➢ Improve ...
➢ Market …
➢ Sell …
➢ Believe ...
➢ Surpass …
➢ Challenge …
➢ Overcome …
10. Mindset: affect your brain, mind, smile, the LOOK
Mindset
determines the
boundary of your
business, as well as
your world in life.
Fixed, or growth,
your choice?
11. Startup DNA: why, how, what
1. Why: always challenge yourself about why
you do until you’re confident and comfortable
with the answer (can’t change unless your
mind changed).
2. How: align the steps with your why
(purpose) clearly with a strategy to succeed
(may change if better).
3. What: actions needed to fulfill the how for
why (may change if needed).
12. How to take this Startup course?
Student Mindset
Technical Mindset
Startup Mindset
Business Mindset
1. Attitude: Learn for score
2. Logic: Single-point gained
3. Expectation: Passed (the course)
4. Relationship: Behaved
5. Outcome: Note taken
1. Attitude: Learn for growth
2. Logic: Whole picture wins
3. Expectation: Growth (biz)
4. Relationship: Connected
5. Outcome: Action ready
13. How do you get new & valuable thing (in life)?
Reading People
Connection is power
You’ll know what’s valuable. You’ll know how to make things happen.
Reading Books
Knowledge is power
14. Choice: Startup Image
Unicorn Black Horse Shiny Pony
Utopia
(Dream)
Show
(Spotlight Effect)
Business
(Brutal Reality)
15. What to expect from this workshop?
International Marketing Strategy
Your Startup
16. What to expect from this workshop? (Cont.)
International Marketing Strategy
Your Startup
A critical effort that drives X times of sales, deals and
investment from international markets.
1. Digital exposure to international customer, partner or
investors. (Website, social page, blog, vid channel, etc.)
2. Digital commerce (product listing, campaign, logistics,
and transaction)
3. Pitch meeting (online & in-person, mostly in English).
A guide of actions to meet the goal under realistic
resources.
1. Business strategy.
2. Product development strategy.
3. Sales/marketing/channel strategy.
4. Pitch strategy.
5. Funding strategy.
The critical and initial set of assets to start a
potential new business on your own.
1. Idea and desire.
2. Technology, product, patent.
3. Industrial/academic experience & connections.
4. Determined to overcome obstacles for success.
5. Ambitious to lead and transform into a new you.
17. Before: Quick Live Pitch (one-line pitch)
Rule:
1. Every team use Line group to discuss: 60 sec.
2. Select your pitcher to present: 30 sec.
3. Pitch for:
a. Your team and your name
b. Your business
c. Your message
18. International marketing for startup
American Marketing Association
(AMA) “international marketing is the
multinational process of planning
and executing the conception,
pricing, promotion and distribution of
ideas, goods, and services to create
exchanges that satisfy individual and
organizational objectives.”
Startup Language:
“Build the operations to sell your products to
another country with a profit.”
19. Why go international (sell to another country)?
1. No new growth in local market, but good for a specific international market.
2. Your operation is strong for international expansion, that can bring
you more biz and profit.
3. Your research tells you that go for international biz is a
strategic move for growth, and your have a team or resource for that.
4. Your have biz partner to take charge on the international biz
that’s aligned with your biz, operation and strategy.
21. International Marketing Journey: all the way to the World
How to read the int’l biz?
1. Geographic factor.
2. Political factor.
3. Regulatory factor.
4. Economic factor.
5. Trading factor.
Steps for global MKT:
1. Local marketing
2. International marketing.
3. Multiple countries marketing.
4. Global marketing.
22. RSPL Marketing Framework: Startup new product campaign
Research Strategy Plan Launch
1. Study the market.
2. Benchmark the
competitions.
3. Size the business
(FCST by upside and
downside).
1. Map out the market.
2. Position within the
competitions (STP).
3. Build the steps from
here to there.
1. Set the campaign
goal and target.
2. Make the timeline.
3. Organize the team
and resource.
4. Outline the actions
and checklist.
5. Control the financial
in & out.
1. Warm up MKT
activities.
2. Run the MKT
campaign by
tracking, testing &
pivoting.
3. Review for
improvement.
4. Finalize the financial
metrics.
28. Visualization: Secret to Handle the Critical Uncertainty
Common Tools of
Visualization:
1. DAN (Data & Numbers)
2. Map (Geo/Mind Map)
3. Framework
4. Flowchart
5. Org Chart
6. Table & Form
7. Infographics
29. Reality Check
Reality Prep for Startup:
1. Frame the realistic view in mind.
2. Prepare for the ups and downs.
3. Learn the new skills for survival.
4. Key to survival/success: a new YOU.
Making a better YOU everyday!
36. Team: Key Stakeholders Checklist
Key Function Person In Charge Partner Advisor Readiness Strategy of Engagement
Business Plan
Product Dev
Marketing Dev
Sales Dev
Finance Planning
Pitch Deck
Fund Raising
38. Strategy
A clear guide of action to go
from here to there under
realistic resources.
- Albert Weng
● Strategy is one of the most crucial factors of success but yet ignored by
nature to those who hasn’t master this secret.
● Start today, you’ll surpass most of your competition by improving your
strategy in practice every day.
A general plan to achieve one or
more long-term or overall goals
under conditions of uncertainty.
- Wikipedia
39. Strategy by Steps
Situation
Target
Research
Action
Adaptation
Be fair about here, environment, competition, resource (mirror)
Defining the goal, direction, outcome (desire)
Map out the journey with sufficient data and details (visibility)
As simple as 123 for everyone to take their move (limits)
Be sensitive and resilient to react throughout the journey (alive)
47. Focus on winning, or not to loose?
1. No market need
2. Ran out of cash
3. Not the right team
4. Get outcompeted
5. Pricing / cost issues
6. User unfriendly product
7. Product without business model
8. Poor marketing
9. Ignore customers
10. Product mistimed
https://www.cbinsights.com/research/startup-failure-reasons-top/
48. Thinking Wide: How to view “Timing”?
1. Research the current market trend and need?
2. Benchmark the key competitors for timing validation?
3. Believe in your gut feeling?
4. Ask your team (include advisors, mentor) for their comment about your
timing?
5. Trial & error until it’s getting clear? Burn rate to last that long?
6. Any other good indicator to know if the timing of your business is right?
49. Product Life Cycle: a holistic view from start to end
1. Locate your product
correctly in its product life
cycle.
2. Apply the strategy for your
sales and business growth.
3. Do not forget or ignore #1
and #2. Period.
50. The Chasm: the invisible gap that most ignored
Chasm Crossing Guide:
1. Timing: before or after the Chasm?
2. Insight: why Chasm matters?
3. Strategy: how to cross the Chasm?
4. Research: market portfolio
5. STP: market selection
51. The Bowling Alley
1. Set the #1 (head) pin by its segment
(Seg1) and application (App1, the
use of the product) that you know the
most, as an easy start to launch.
2. #2 pin to be the same application
(App1) as #1 pin but aim for another
segment (Seg2).
3. Vice versa, #3 pin to be the same
segment (Seg1), and another
application (App2).
4. The logic, always start with one
factor of either segment or
application to be a familiar one
(reachable support) to expand into a
new move.
52. Whole Product v.s. MVP (Minimum Viable Product)
1. Define your core product.
2. Benchmark and feedback for the
critical support as the Whole
Product.
3. Whole Product will evolve over
time in different shapes and
elements.
4. Marketing the Whole Product as a
whole product so more feedbacks
will throw to you, that’s what you
needed before the Chasm, and key
to cross the Chasm.
54. Product Development Checklist (Example date of progress)
# Process Brief Development Validation Launch
1 Idea A thought of key elements/logics that would build a future product. 1/1 1/8 1/30
2 Market Research The essential study, feedback and insight from primary & secondary data per
target user group (TUG). (Justifiable market support/biz case)
1/8 2/10 2/20
3 Mockup A model/structure of the product for design & testing. (Look & feel) 2/5 2/15 2/20
4 Prototype Partially functional product for further design or testing. (functionable) 2/15 2/25 3/5
5 Demo Unit A selection of key features and demo scenarios are ready for initial demo. 2/20 3/2 3/15
6 Customer Test A process for potential customers to test for wish/buy list (WBL). (Testing
plan/scenario/feedback form shall be designed per TUG)
3/10 3/15 3/20
7 MVP Refined from customer test (WBL) with the minimum set of product features,
user interface, physical appearance designed per TUG.
3/18 3/25 4/5
8 Whole Product A set of product, service, video, manual, API, etc. per TUG, (Sellable) 3/15 4/10 4/20
Bonus Question: On pricing: when and how in the process shall you make a good/better pricing for your product?
57. Market Segmentation
Geographic
● ZIP code
● City
● Country
● Radius around a
certain location
● Climate
● Urban or rural
Behavioral Psychographic
Demographic
● Purchasing habits
● Spending habits
● User status
● Brand interactions
● Personality traits
● Values
● Attitudes
● Interests
● Lifestyles
● Psychological
influences
● Subconscious and
conscious beliefs
● Motivations
● Priorities
● Age
● Gender
● Income
● Location
● Family Situation
● Annual Income
● Education
● Ethnicity
58. Market Segmentation: Form & Flow (plan your research logic for action)
Category Expectation Question Answer Insight Action
Geographic
Demographic
Behavioral
Psychographic
59. Market Reach for Validation (4 Circles)
You and your team
Your closed connections
Your potential customer, partner (no deal, no $$$)
Your customer, partner (dealed, $$$)
2
3
4
When research the market:
● 50% and the majority stay only in Circle 1.
● 30% may go to Circle 2.
● 15% would probably try Circle 3.
● 5% or less push to reach Circle 4 for feedback.
1
60. Market Size & Sales FCST
Type Definition Relation to You Timeline Relevance Research
TCM Total Category Market Population & trend Per trend Category trend Secondary
TAM Total Available Market All players & alternatives Per trend Key players trend Secondary
SAM Serviceable Available Market All players Per trend Key competitors trend Secondary
SOM Serviceable Obtainable Market Your expanded biz (new) 3-10 yrs Scale to meet Primary
FCST Sales Forecast Your upcoming biz (now) 1-3 yrs Plan to meet Primary
● Primary Research:
○ You collect the market data by your own with unique effort for analysis.
○ Questionnaire survey for easy, useful, cheap and FAST approach.
● Secondary Research:
○ You use the data collected by others from their previous studies for analysis.
○ Market / industry report, forecast, GDP, population, economic index, etc.
Design
Distribution
Collect
Analysis
Iteration
61. Sales Forecast: Estimation of Your Customer Reach for Revenue
“How many customers you need to be survived/successful?”
62. Market Size: example (might not be a good example though, why?)
● Most use a top-down approach to size the makt
○ “The total health care market is $1.7 Trillion.”
○ “If we conservatively win 1% of that, we’ll make $17 billion.”
● Many entrepreneurs makes this mistake because
○ They believe that investor want to see a multi-billion dollar market opportunity.
○ The also see lage company excess saying it.
■ “957 million phones, 1% of that is 010 million phones in 2008.” Steve Jobs (2007).
● The top-down view might help you summarized and maybe sell the idea.
○ But it won’t help you develop a REAL product & strategy to win the buy-in from customers.
63. Product Market Fit: The V-Shape Model
Product Market
Fit Feature
Function
Advantage
Benefit
Situation
Problem
Impact
Need
Demand
Offer
Deal
64. Sales
Unique Selling Point
(USP)
Unique Buying Point
(UBP)
Sales Influence Guiding Leading
Visible Invisible
Listen up!!!
The bottom line is, as an entrepreneur, you
should always be the top sales inside out, unless
you don’t believe in your product and business.
65. Business Model
Principle:
● BM is a living thing, not
a statement on paper.
● The calling: “Show me
the money!”
● The demand: “How
much & when?”
Try outpace the normal:
● Make them smell the
money, NOW!
66. Startup Journey: type of Pitches to handle strategically
Stage Opening Activation Development Engagement Expansion
Type Elevator Pitch Startup event Accelerator Program Roadshow, funding event Commercial Meeting
TA Key person, VIP Advisor, reviewer, judge Advisor, mentor, alumni Reviewer, VC Customer, partner
TA Profile Wide & strong power Expert w/o funding Expert w/ or w/o funding Expert w/ funding Biz domain, connections
TA’s Mind Why you matter? Potential, trustworthy,
chemistry w/ the founder
Are they open to learn?
More effort on them?
What if they make it?
Similar deals/pitches.
Do I trust him/them?
When to exit w/ $$$?
Why you matter?
Cheaper, better, good fit?
Switching cost,
Formation Ad-hoc quick talk Formal pitch and review Series of training & pitch Formal pitch & tough Q&A Formal office meeting
Data Hot trend, key event Secondary Research Full market reach study Primary Research Company brief & product
Objective Connect for next
appointment
Be awesome in every way
for highest prize.
Build product, test market,
fix problem, hire team..
Locate your target VC.
Pitch specifically to them.
Business opportunity,
business partnership.
Strategy Unique & quick YMC Pitch YMC Pitch per TA Tie w/ a advisor to shape Customized YMC Pitch YMC Pitch for biz value
Follow-up Contact person for next? Ask for advice per TA Regular advisor hours Make them come to you Product demo, PO, etc.
67. Negotiation: YMC Pitch Model
Your Need My Offer
1 2
3
Pitch
Common Goal/Point
Steps Highlight
Goal matching ○ Your must, optional list
○ Their must, optional list
Picture in strategy ○ Start with plan A
○ Change for plan B when …
○ Move onto plan C if ...
Start from the
connection
○ Something in common
○ Something about their stuff
Reframe and stay
in the frame
○ Focus on the key points and boundary
○ Bring back if the topic is off the track
Create small yes
for the final big yes
○ Start from “you” for small yes.
○ Get more small yes on “we/me”
○ If I offer X, than you’ll give me Y.
68. Digital marketing on international marketing for startup
1. A decent website or FB page (the home of your startup that everyone can get online)
2. A clear digital presence designed for your very selected first group of TA
3. The digital effort by strategy:
1) Campaign: sales inquiry
2) Content driven: thought leadership (expert image)
4. As a startup, pitch is still the highly required skill to win the initial business, online or
in-person, and you also touch the market by different angle with solid business
experience and sense built up that no one can steal from you. One of the key thing
for startup that don’t scale. (Paul Graham)
70. Team: Key Stakeholders Checklist
Key Function Person In Charge Partner Advisor Readiness Strategy of Engagement
Business Plan
Product Dev
Marketing Dev
Sales Dev
Finance Planning
Pitch Deck
Fund Raising
71. Market Segmentation: Form & Flow (plan your research logic for action)
Category Expectation Question Answer Insight Action
Geographic
Demographic
Behavioral
Psychographic
72. Product Development Checklist (Example date of progress)
# Process Brief Development Validation Launch
1 Idea A thought of key elements/logics that would build a future product. 1/1 1/8 1/30
2 Market Research The essential study, feedback and insight from primary & secondary data per
target user group (TUG). (Justifiable market support/biz case)
1/8 2/10 2/20
3 Mockup A model/structure of the product for design & testing. (Look & feel) 2/5 2/15 2/20
4 Prototype Partially functional product for further design or testing. (functionable) 2/15 2/25 3/5
5 Demo Unit A selection of key features and demo scenarios are ready for initial demo. 2/20 3/2 3/15
6 Customer Test A process for potential customers to test for wish/buy list (WBL). (Testing
plan/scenario/feedback form shall be designed per TUG)
3/10 3/15 3/20
7 MVP Refined from customer test (WBL) with the minimum set of product features,
user interface, physical appearance designed per TUG.
3/18 3/25 4/5
8 Whole Product A set of product, service, video, manual, API, etc. per TUG, (Sellable) 3/15 4/10 4/20
Bonus Question: On pricing: when and how in the process shall you make a good/better pricing for your product?
73. Market Size & Sales FCST
Type Definition Relation to You Timeline Relevance Research
TCM Total Category Market Population & trend Per trend Category trend Secondary
TAM Total Available Market All players & alternatives Per trend Key players trend Secondary
SAM Serviceable Available Market All players Per trend Key competitors trend Secondary
SOM Serviceable Obtainable Market Your expanded biz (new) 3-10 yrs Scale to meet Primary
FCST Sales Forecast Your upcoming biz (now) 1-3 yrs Plan to meet Primary
● Primary Research:
○ You collect the market data by your own with unique effort for analysis.
○ Questionnaire survey for easy, useful, cheap and FAST approach.
● Secondary Research:
○ You use the data collected by others from their previous studies for analysis.
○ Market / industry report, forecast, GDP, population, economic index, etc.
Design
Distribution
Collect
Analysis
Iteration
74. Type of Pitch in Startup Journey
Stage Opening Activation Development Engagement Expansion
Type Elevator Pitch Startup event Accelerator Program Roadshow, funding event Commercial Meeting
TA Key person, VIP Advisor, reviewer, judge Advisor, mentor, alumni Reviewer, VC Customer, partner
TA Profile Wide & strong power Expert w/o funding Expert w/ or w/o funding Expert w/ funding Biz domain, connections
TA’s Mind Why you matter? Potential, trustworthy,
chemistry w/ the founder
Are they open to learn?
More effort on them?
What if they make it?
Similar deals/pitches.
Do I trust him/them?
When to exit w/ $$$?
Why you matter?
Cheaper, better, good fit?
Switching cost,
Formation Ad-hoc quick talk Formal pitch and review Series of training & pitch Formal pitch & tough Q&A Formal office meeting
Data Hot trend, key event Secondary Research Full market reach study Primary Research Company brief & product
Objective Connect for next
appointment
Be awesome in every way
for highest prize.
Build product, test market,
fix problem, hire team..
Locate your target VC.
Pitch specifically to them.
Business opportunity,
business partnership.
Strategy Unique & quick YMC Pitch YMC Pitch per TA Tie w/ a advisor to shape Customized YMC Pitch YMC Pitch for biz value
Follow-up Contact person for next? Ask for advice per TA Regular advisor hours Make them come to you Product demo, PO, etc.
75. Negotiation: YMC Pitch Model
Your Need My Offer
1 2
3
Pitch
Common Goal/Point
Steps Highlight
Goal matching ○ Your must, optional list
○ Their must, optional list
Picture in strategy ○ Start with plan A
○ Change for plan B when …
○ Move onto plan C if ...
Start from the
connection
○ Something in common
○ Something about their stuff
Reframe and stay
in the frame
○ Focus on the key points and boundary
○ Bring back if the topic is off the track
Create small yes
for the final big yes
○ Start from “you” for small yes.
○ Get more small yes on “we/me”
○ If I offer X, than you’ll give me Y.
76. After: Quick Live Pitch (one-line pitch)
Rule:
1. Every team use Line group to discuss: 60 sec.
2. Select your pitcher to present: 30 sec.
3. Pitch for:
a. Your team and your name
b. Your business (a new version)
c. Your message (a new version)
78. Stand-up Pitch & Quick Advice:
1. The core pitch
2. The pitch meeting
79. Stand-up Pitch & Quick Advice: the core pitch
# Topic Element Discussion Pitch
1 Vision (why) Market, background, need, your story 2 min 30 sec
2
3
4
5
80. Stand-up Pitch & Quick Advice: the core pitch
# Topic Element Discussion Pitch
1 Vision (why) Market, background, need, your story 2 min 30 sec
2 Product (what) Feature & uniqueness 2 min 30 sec
3
4
5
81. Stand-up Pitch & Quick Advice: the core pitch
# Topic Element Discussion Pitch
1 Vision (why) Market, background, need, your story 2 min 30 sec
2 Product (what) Feature & uniqueness 2 min 30 sec
3 Biz model (how) Supply, customer, profit 2 min 30 sec
4
5
82. Stand-up Pitch & Quick Advice: the core pitch
# Topic Element Discussion Pitch
1 Vision (why) Market, background, need, your story 2 min 30 sec
2 Product (what) Feature & uniqueness 2 min 30 sec
3 Biz model (how) Supply, customer, profit 2 min 30 sec
4 Team (who) Qualification, profile, passion, synergy 2 min 30 sec
5
83. Stand-up Pitch & Quick Advice: the core pitch
# Topic Element Discussion Pitch
1 Vision (why) Market, background, need, your story 2 min 30 sec
2 Product (what) Feature & uniqueness 2 min 30 sec
3 Biz model (how) Supply, customer, profit 2 min 30 sec
4 Team (who) Qualification, profile, passion, synergy 2 min 30 sec
5 Timing (when) Why invest now 2 min 30 sec
85. Stand-up Pitch & Quick Advice: the pitch meeting
# Topic Element Discussion Pitch
1 Angel talk What you want, how to get it 2 min 30 sec
2
3
4
5
86. Stand-up Pitch & Quick Advice: the pitch meeting
# Topic Element Discussion Pitch
1 Angel talk What you want, how to get it 2 min 30 sec
2 Startup program The rule, the preference, the strategy 2 min 30 sec
3
4
5
87. Stand-up Pitch & Quick Advice: the pitch meeting
# Topic Element Discussion Pitch
1 Angel talk What you want, how to get it 2 min 30 sec
2 Startup program The rule, the preference, the strategy 2 min 30 sec
3 VC conference Money talk, simple & promising math 2 min 30 sec
4
5
88. Stand-up Pitch & Quick Advice: the pitch meeting
# Topic Element Discussion Pitch
1 Angel talk What you want, how to get it 2 min 30 sec
2 Startup program The rule, the preference, the strategy 2 min 30 sec
3 VC conference Money talk, simple & promising math 2 min 30 sec
4 Mentor meeting Show your work and ask for help 2 min 30 sec
5
89. Stand-up Pitch & Quick Advice: the pitch meeting
# Topic Element Discussion Pitch
1 Angel talk What you want, how to get it 2 min 30 sec
2 Startup program The rule, the preference, the strategy 2 min 30 sec
3 VC conference Money talk, simple & promising math 2 min 30 sec
4 Mentor meeting Show your work and ask for help 2 min 30 sec
5 Commercial meeting Value proposition, why you & why now 2 min 30 sec