Donna Griffit

Donna Griffit

The Corporate Storyteller

1,500+ Happy Clients | $1.5B Raised | 20+  Years

Talking About Your Competition

Ultimate Way to Talk About Your Competitive Landscape In Your Investor Pitch

“Oh we don’t have any competitors.”



When I hear that from a startup I know it’s going to be a painful pitch session.

On more than one occasion I’ve had to awkwardly show a startup a competitor that they’d never heard of, sending them to do some homework before working on their pitch. (Hey, better me than an investor!)

First, let’s get something straight — competition is a great thing! With no Jerry we’d have no Tom, with no Roadrunner we’d have no Coyote and then there’s the Microsoft/Apple, Samsung/Apple, Google/Apple rivalries that fuel the tech game and keep things fresh and interesting.

So how should you address your competition when pitching to investors?

The “Magic Quadrant” — a graph attributed to Gartner, shows how you measure up to competition based on 2 main metrics. Here’s Airbnb’s original competition slide:
They use Affordability and Online Transaction as the metrics.

The “Petal Diagram” — steve blank, Serial Entrepreneur, Lecturer and Author of Startup Owner’s Manual, suggests at a different approach, especially helpful if you have more than 2 metrics to measure your differentiation by:
As you see to the left, the ever popular slack is at the center, touching on business communication/chat, collaboration, file sharing, unified communication and task management. It competes with them all but it actually does all the things the petals do in one tool!
Put your startup in the center, think of the main competitor types that you have — you don’t have to have 5 petals — even 3 is enough. Don’t overcrowd — only about 3 of the top companies in each petal. —
Put your startup in the center, think of the main competitor types that you have — you don’t have to have 5 petals — even 3 is enough. Don’t overcrowd — only about 3 of the top companies in each petal. —

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