Investor Connect Podcast

Survivorship Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Survivorship bias is defined by Wikipedia as concentrating on the people or things that "survived" some process and inadvertently overlooking those that didn't because of their lack of visibility.

Incubators often measure their results based on startups that get funded rather than all the ones who go through the program.

Taking out the startups that failed early can skew the results by only counting the ones that are up and running.

To overcome survivorship bias, consider the following:

Maintain awareness of the survivorship bias when evaluating a metric.

Consider what has been left out of the calculation.

In our incubator example consider how many companies applied, were accepted, and started the program but were never counted in the metric because they didn’t build a running company.

Find alternative data sources.  

In this example, look for companies that went through the program and talk to both those who succeeded and those that did not.

Go beyond the initial statistic as it often measures only a part of the story.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

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Direct download: Survivorship_Bias.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Subjective Validation

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Subjective validation is defined by Wikipedia as the perception that something is true if a subject's belief demands it to be true. 

In developing products founders look for information that matches their own view of the problem and solution.

Founders build their products for a market based on their own view of the customer's needs.

Founders will find customer research that matches their experience more valuable than information that doesn’t fit their views.

To overcome the subjective validation bias, consider the following:

Use a checklist so all collected information gets equal consideration.

Build teams of observers instead of single ones so they can check their observations with each other.

Move from qualitative to quantitative in the research.

It’s important to look holistically at the problem in order to devise a workable solution.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

Check out our other podcasts here: https://investorconnect.org/ 
For Investors check out: https://tencapital.group/investor-landing/ 
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Direct download: Subjective_Validation.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Pseudo-certainty Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The pseudocertainty effect is defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to make risk-averse choices if the expected outcome is positive, but make risk-seeking choices to avoid negative outcomes.

As the startup finds success, the founder becomes more risk-averse because something at stake can be lost.

For startups that are flailing, risk-taking becomes the norm with all projects.

To overcome the pseudo-certainty effect, consider the following:

Maintain awareness of the pseudo-certainty effect and how it can shift your risk-taking based on the current status of the startup.

Probability assessment is not a natural skill most people have.

It’s best to analyze the outcome of a proposed project by looking at other startups and their track record with projects such as generating leads and closing sales.

Assess the probability of the outcome based on actual evidence.

Take calculated risks that don’t put your startup in danger of going out of business.

Avoid the ‘go for broke’ plan unless you have solid evidence that it will work.

If things are going well, then know you can take more risks.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

Check out our other podcasts here: https://investorconnect.org/ 
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Direct download: PseudoCertainty_Effect.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Authority Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Authority bias is defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to attribute greater accuracy to the opinion of an authority figure and be more influenced by that opinion.

Founders seek experts in various roles to help grow their startups.

In particular, this occurs when the founder is working in unfamiliar areas.

Problems arise if one follows blindly what someone else says without understanding what lies behind the advice.

To overcome authority bias, consider the following:

While experts have experience there is no guarantee of success.

Think through the advice of an expert to see if it makes sense logically.

Question the expert to learn more about the basis of the advice.

Ask yourself, what if this advice came from someone with no authority?

Finally, test out the advice before committing to it.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

Check out our other podcasts here: https://investorconnect.org/ 
For Investors check out: https://tencapital.group/investor-landing/ 
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Direct download: Authority_Bias.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Optimism Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The optimism bias is defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to be over-optimistic, overestimating favorable and pleasing outcomes 

Startup founders often focus solely on the opportunity while ignoring the risks.

Skeptical investors do the opposite by focusing on the risks.

Startups succumb to the optimism bias because they believe more things are under their control and they can influence outcomes by their own efforts.

To overcome the optimism bias, consider the following:

Identify the average time it takes to perform each step in a startup such as hiring the team, building the first product, onboarding the first customer, etc.

Then use those averages in building out the schedule.

By using industry averages one can overcome the optimism bias.

In addition, conduct a premortem with the team in which you ask “Pretend we are in the future and the project failed.  Ask why it failed.”

Consider the negative outcomes to identify the risks in the plan.

This will reduce overconfidence in the plan and identify areas for improvement.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

Check out our other podcasts here: https://investorconnect.org/ 
For Investors check out: https://tencapital.group/investor-landing/ 
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Direct download: Optimism_Bias.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes Ethan Rigel, Founder, and Managing Partner at Gore Range Capital.

Located in New York City, New York, USA, Gore Range Capital is focused on investments in early-stage skin health businesses. Their approach is simple: they invest in what they know. Over the course of their respective careers, the Gore Range team has built domain expertise and extensive networks across multiple areas of healthcare. Through Gore Range Capital they are channeling their capabilities to focus on our largest organ and the most visible manifestation of who we are - the skin.

At Gore Range, they blend the hands-on approach of operationally focused private equity with the early-stage guidance needed in venture capital. They were formed in 2015 with the goal of partnering with industry pioneers, working closely with portfolio companies to bring skin health innovations to market. To accomplish this mission, they leverage their team of experienced healthcare investors, leaders, and practitioners to bring strategic, financial, and scientific expertise to their investments.

Ethan has more than 15 years of investing experience and spent most of his time actively working with small businesses with limited resources. During the course of his career, he has invested more than $900 million in companies with a combined enterprise value of greater than $2 billion across dozens of investments. Most of Ethan’s investments have been very hands-on, and he has taken an extensive role in the operations of the business in order to help drive the company’s success.

Ethan has two degrees from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Bachelor of Science in Economics and Bachelor of Science in Management Science) and a Master of Business Administration from the Fuqua School of Business at Duke University.

Ethan shares about the ins and outs of the skin healthcare industry, the opportunities and challenges, and how to thrive in this competitive industry.

Visit Gore Range Capital at www.gorerangecapital.com/, www.linkedin.com/company/gore-range-capital, and on twitter.com/gorerangecap?lang=en.  

Reach out to Ethan at ethan@gorerangecapital.com, and on www.linkedin.com/in/ethanrigel.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org  

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Direct download: Ethan_Rigel.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Ostrich Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The ostrich effect is defined by Wikipedia as ignoring an obvious negative situation.

It’s common among founders to ignore the challenging parts of the startup such as competitive position or weakness of the product, and more.

Some founders handle it by not paying attention to it.

Others misinterpret the situation as something else so they don’t have to deal with it.

Founders do this to avoid the difficult emotional effects of the situation.

To overcome the ostrich effect, consider the following:

Treat the situation as if someone else has this problem and you are analyzing it from the outside.

This takes your personal emotions out of it and gives you more freedom to explore solutions.

Take the situation and engage others to help you and hold you accountable.

Finally, set up a program that reviews the situation on a regular basis so you can work on it consistently over a period of time.

This lets you break down the problem and start solving it one piece at a time. 

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

Check out our other podcasts here: https://investorconnect.org/ 
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Direct download: Ostrich_Effect.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Planning Fallacy

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The planning fallacy is defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to underestimate task completion times.

Projects take twice as much time and cost as planned.

First-time founders don’t have previous experience and cannot rely upon past projects when making plans.

Some founders recall selected cases in the past that went well and plan optimistically.

To overcome the planning fallacy, consider the following:

Break the project down into its component parts to make the analysis easier.

Analyze previous projects to determine how long it will take and use that information to build the timeline for the current project.

Have others review the plan to see if there are any tasks that have overly optimistic timelines.

Build accountability into the project timelines to make sure that the team stays on track.

Perform scenario analysis on what could go wrong and how to manage it.

Avoid ego, peer pressure, and other factors that drive optimism into the planning.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

Check out our other podcasts here: https://investorconnect.org/ 
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Direct download: Planning_Fallacy.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Pro-Innovation Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The pro-innovation bias is defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to have an excessive optimism towards an invention or innovation's usefulness throughout society, while often failing to identify its limitations and weaknesses.

Startups overestimate the speed of adoption of new technology.

Users are often slow to adopt new technologies due to the cost of time and dollars to integrate them into their workflow.

To overcome the pro-innovation bias, consider the following:

Estimate the cost of switching and design your product to help transition customers from the current technology to the new one.

Make the transition seamless and automatic.

Promote the ease of transition and the cost savings that come from adopting the new technology.

Innovation often creates inequality in that some have access to new technologies while others do not.

Make sure everyone has the ability to access it.

Both startups and startup investors see technology as a solution to all problems and discount the risks and costs associated with it.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

Check out our other podcasts here: https://investorconnect.org/ 
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Direct download: Pro_Innovation_Bias.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Projection Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The projection bias is defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to overestimate how much our future selves share one's current preferences, thoughts, and values, thus leading to suboptimal choices

Founders who hire team members in the early stage come to realize that different skills will be required later in the life of the startup.

To overcome projection bias, consider the following:

In making decisions with long-term implications, maintain awareness of the projection bias.

On a regular basis make future projections to consider what will be needed in contrast to what is needed today.

Experienced founders often jump to their own conclusions based on their experiences. 

It’s best to engage others in the decision-making process.

Some founders project their views on a situation and assume others believe the same.

It’s best to keep an open mind and allow for other points of view in the decision-making process.

Over time priorities and values shift so it’s helpful to remember that today’s values may be different tomorrow.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

Check out our other podcasts here: https://investorconnect.org/ 
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Direct download: Projection_Bias.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Omission Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The omission bias is defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to judge harmful actions (commissions) as worse, or less moral, than equally harmful inactions (omissions).

Founders will often omit details rather than give outright lies when pitching their startup to an investor.

Ultimately, in due diligence, all the facts will become known.

It’s not a matter of if, but rather when.

To overcome the omission bias, consider the following:

While you can’t put everything in the first pitch, it’s important to inform investors of key issues rather than letting them find out on their own.

Coming from the founder the investor will consider it a new fact about the startup.

Coming from their own diligence the investor will consider it something being covered up.

Instead of procrastinating make sure you are timely with the information as you are building a relationship with the investor.

Trust is the foundation of that relationship.

It’s best to put everything on the table as soon as possible with the investor so there are no surprises later.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

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Direct download: Omission_Bias.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes Sarah Jennings, Director of Beyond Angels, and Co-Founder at Beyond Capital Funds.

Located in Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex, Texas, The Beyond Capital Funds invests alongside established VCs targeting Late-Seed to Series A investment opportunities in disruptive innovation such as Artificial Intelligence, Next Generation Internet, Software as a Service, and other attractive industry segments.

Beyond Capital Funds invests in faith-driven founders with rapidly scaling investment opportunities with near-term exit options 5 years or less from the initial investment.

Sarah Jennings is a co-founder of Beyond Capital Funds and the Director of the Beyond Angel Network. Sarah is also a co-founder and one of the managing members of Beyond Capital Management, a management company for venture funds.

Sarah has been a panelist and podcast speaker for venture capital and entrepreneurship podcasts and events across the United States. Sarah resides in Dallas, Texas, and is a magna cum laude finance graduate of Cedarville University. In her free time, Sarah enjoys being outdoors, watching a sports game, and reading a good book.

Sarah talks about her background, the kind of investments they are looking for, the challenges and rewards, and all you need to know about The Beyond Capital Fund. 

Visit Beyond Capital Funds at www.beyondcapitalfunds.com, and www.linkedin.com/company/beyond-capital-funds.

Reach out to Sarah at sgjennings@beyondangels.org, and on www.linkedin.com/in/sarahgjennings.

 

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org  

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Direct download: Sarah_Jennings_2023.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Observer Expectancy Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The observer expectancy bias is defined by Wikipedia as when a researcher expects a given result and therefore unconsciously manipulates an experiment or misinterprets data in order to find it.

Startups will take customer feedback and ignore the elements that don’t match their expectations.

This is a problem that many startups face when gathering data about the problem to be solved and engaging with prospective customers about the solution.

To overcome the observer expectancy bias, consider the following:

Maintain awareness of the bias and check to make sure that all the customer feedback is making its way into the decision-making process.

Have multiple people review the data separately and draw their own conclusions.

Then combine the conclusions into one report.

Design customer feedback questions to avoid observer expectancy bias such as the wording of the questions that lead the respondent one way or another.

Design customer feedback interviews so it doesn’t presume the stated problem is confirmed but rather let the customers confirm it.

Set up customer feedback interviews in a double-blind format so the one asking the questions and those answering are unaware of the hypothesis under discovery.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

Check out our other podcasts here: https://investorconnect.org/ 
For Investors check out: https://tencapital.group/investor-landing/ 
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Direct download: Observer_Expectation_Bias.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Normalcy Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The normalcy bias is defined by Wikipedia as the refusal to plan for, or react to, a disaster that has never happened before.

First-time startups suffer from the normalcy bias as they have limited experience with what can happen to startups over time.

Founders with previous experience tend to prepare better for the unexpected as they have encountered it before.  

To overcome normalcy bias consider the following:

Plan for all potential contingencies such as 

What to do if revenue goes in half.

What to do if revenue goes up 4X in one year.

What if your systems are hacked?

Know your financial numbers and how they interact, particularly what costs are fixed and variable.

Write out your contingency plans and add to them as you hear about challenges other companies face. 

Explore what you don’t know.

Reach out to experienced founders to explore what you don’t know you don’t know.

There’s no way to prepare for every possibility but you can focus on those events that are probabilities.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

Check out our other podcasts here: https://investorconnect.org/ 
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Direct download: Normalcy_Bias.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Money Illusion

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The money illusion effect is defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to concentrate on the face value of money rather than its value in terms of purchasing power.

In pricing the product, a startup should list their product price in the smallest unit possible such as daily cost rather than annual cost.

For example, if the price of the product over a year is $2000, then list the price as $5 per day rather than $2000 per year.

The smaller dollar number will attract more customers.

Startups raising funding should focus on what the funds will buy rather than the dollar amount alone.

In fundraising, the founder needs to take into account the impact of inflation.

Funding buys services that build a business and grow it.

Inflation eats into those funds and reduces the runway of the company.

Founders should keep in mind the impact of inflation on their cash runway.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

Check out our other podcasts here: https://investorconnect.org/ 
For Investors check out: https://tencapital.group/investor-landing/ 
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Direct download: Money_Illusion.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Illusory Truth Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The illusory truth effect is defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to believe that a statement is true if it is easier to process, or if it has been stated multiple times, regardless of its actual veracity. 

In a startup pitch, facts repeated several times can increase believability.

Repetition reinforces a belief because it becomes easier to remember.

The easier it is to take in the more likely the investor will believe it.

This is how advertising works.

To overcome the illusory truth effect, review the proposed facts.

If the facts are not correct, then repeat it back but with the correct information such as

The market size is X, not Y, so let’s use X in our decisions.

Don’t repeat the incorrect information but instead lead with the correct information in all statements such as

Since the market is X, we can estimate the maximum revenue as Y to determine if that will lead to a sufficient profit.

It’s important to verify the data offered as facts and not assume they are true.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

Check out our other podcasts here: https://investorconnect.org/ 
For Investors check out: https://tencapital.group/investor-landing/ 
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Direct download: Illusory_Truth_Effect.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Singularity Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The singularity effect is defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to behave more compassionately to a single identifiable individual than to any group of nameless ones.

People in general feel compelled to help individuals. 

In a disaster scenario such as an earthquake, donors will feel numb to the large number of people impacted by it.

But they will find the individual stories compelling.

Investors feel a stronger connection to one or two people in a startup rather than the entire startup.

To raise funding, the founder should build a relationship with the investor.

The investor will have stronger affective feelings for the founder than the entire group.

In fundraising promote the story of the founder.

Follow up to build the relationship between the founder and investor.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

Check out our other podcasts here: https://investorconnect.org/ 
For Investors check out: https://tencapital.group/investor-landing/ 
For Startups check out: https://tencapital.group/company-landing/ 
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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes David Hurwitt, CEO & Founder at Troove.

Located in Burlington, Vermont, USA, Troove is the first technology to harness the power of alumni and current student experience to help potential students make the biggest decision of their life.  

Troove use predictive AI to gather, mine, and decode experience data from schools and align it with the values, abilities, and priorities of prospective students. Troove provides a Learning Culture fit and a Social Culture fit score for each school.

From just a quick 15 minutes of questions, Troove delivers every applicant's Learning Culture and Social Culture fit scores, explaining how well they align with the people who have come before them and earned the degrees they want. 

David is an innovator. Over the course of his career, he’s led the development and launch of new products and services – from toothpicks to wind turbines – that have generated well over $1 billion in sales.

If you have a large, front-loading washing machine in your house, that was David and his team at Whirlpool. They re-envisioned the traditional, small European washer for the US market and took front loaders from 1% of the market to over 50% today, saving billions of dollars in electricity and water consumption in the process.

David has lived and worked around the world, and is now based in Burlington Vermont with his wife and two Golden Retrievers. Their 3 “kids” have now graduated from college, but his experience with them on their college journeys started his innovator’s brain cranking on what became Troove.

David talks about the American higher education system, the challenges and flaws in the system, and how Troove changed how students get into and successfully through higher education. 

Visit Troove at www.troove.me, and on www.linkedin.com/company/trooveme.

Reach out to David at david@troove.me, and at www.linkedin.com/in/davehurwitt.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Reactive Devaluation  

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Reactive devaluation is defined by Wikipedia as devaluing proposals only because they purportedly originated with an adversary.

Founders skip the lessons that can be learned from competitors because they view the competitor as wrong in their approach.

This also applies to situations in which the founder discounts advice given from a source that is not well-liked.

To overcome reactive devaluation, consider the following:

Maintain awareness of reactive devaluation and watch for it when making decisions.

Separate yourself from the situation and view it as an impartial bystander to evaluate the information without bias.

Consider the same information but coming from another source.  Would you perceive it differently?

Check with others about their view of the situation and if the information is worthy of consideration.

If so, review the information with other founders to verify it is legitimate.

It’s helpful to separate the information from its source in order to remove any bias either for or against it.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Product Segmentation

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Product segmentation creates different versions of the product for different users.

Novice users may get a version that is simple to use while power users have access to tools that are more complex.

One can achieve product segmentation by using a platform approach to the product.

A platform approach provides a basic architecture upon which you can build easier-to-use tools as well as modules that provide more access and control over the system.

The key to product segmentation is finding customers who will pay for the differentiated versions.

A platform approach provides a basic system that can be customized for different use cases.

By looking at lost customer reports you can identify new versions of the product for development.

It’s best to test the product concept before committing resources.

A good product segmentation strategy should accommodate the good, better, best pricing strategy.

This captures the low-end user as well as the high-end power user.

A strong software and hardware architecture is required to run a successful product segmentation strategy.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Illusion of Control

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The illusion of control phenomenon is defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to overestimate one's degree of influence over other external events.

Startups often display an illusion of control about how their product and sales efforts will take over a market.

Just as the gambler in the casino cannot make the dice come up the way he wants so the startup cannot predict how fast his product will gain adoption.

A few organic sales often lead startups to believe they have a working sales and marketing plan when in fact they have not yet developed a way to drive the process.

To convince investors the startup must show a repeatable, predictable process for generating leads, qualifying, and closing the sale. 

Even at the early stage startups can track the number of leads generated through a channel and how many leads convert to a sale.

By showing this on a unit economics basis, you can overcome the illusion of control and provide clear evidence that you have a customer acquisition process in place. 

Those with strong organic sales that come without much effort are the ones most likely to believe that they can grow sales without a program or process.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Hindsight Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The hindsight bias is defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to see past events as being predictable at the time those events happened.

When an investor sees a  startup fail or succeed, early indicators come back to the investor's mind.

In some cases, investors selectively remember certain events or facts that later confirm the outcome. 

This can lead to overconfidence.  If one believes he can predict the outcome then he’ll make mistakes erroneously thinking he can predict the outcome of any startup.

Oftentimes, success or failure is a combination of factors such as market selection, timing, and team dynamics, and not just one facet of the business.

To overcome the hindsight bias remember you cannot predict the future.

Review the facts of the startup and not just how you feel about it.

Write out your thought process including the facts at hand and the justification for making the investment.

When the outcome of the investment becomes known, you can refer back to the notes to check your decision-making.

Consider other outcomes aside from the one you expect and keep an open mind throughout the process.

Build a decision-making process and focus on it rather than guessing the outcome. 

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Benefits of a Platform-Based Approach

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

A platform-based approach to your business brings many benefits 

Platforms make it easier to use a recurring revenue model. 

Investors appreciate the value of this revenue model.

It brings predictability to the forecast and makes it somewhat easier to manage the business and raise funding.

With three metrics, cost of acquisition, churn rate, and growth rate you know how well you are doing. 

There are other benefits to a platform-based approach.

By focusing your development on one platform the product gets better every day increasing your reach to new customers and keeping existing ones.

It also reduces your cost because you are continually adding to your base platform and not spending resources creating new products from scratch.

It helps you focus your team as everyone works on the same platform,  reducing distractions.

All development results are available to all customers so there’s no resource spent on porting features to other products.

Platforms bring efficiency and revenue gains compared to the individual product approach.

Consider focusing your product development on a platform.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes Pedro Sorrentino, Founder & Managing Partner at Atman Capital.

Located in San Francisco, Miami, and NYC, Atman Capital is an early-stage startup, investing in technology and technology-enabled startups in the US and Latam. They invest in the following themes: B2B software, Commerce, Consumer, and Fintech. At Atman, they partner with their customers for life. They try to offer a life-long product that improves over time from work done via Atman Bequest and the Atman Egregore. 

Atman Capital is specialized in scarce structured opportunities not available at traditional asset managers. Divided into tailored pods, founders vibe with each other and work together to build the best version of themselves, personally and professionally.

Pedro started his career in Venture as an associate at FCVC. This remarkable firm seeded category-defining companies such as Coinbase, Instacart, Gitlab, Flexport, Shippo, Webflow, RapidAPI, Bigfinite, Aircall, and several others. Later, he co-founded ONEVC, where he led investments in Rappi, Pipefy, Kovi, CodeCov, Immi, RocketChat, Maximus, EmCasa, HeyDoctor (acquired by $GDRX), and Apozy.

Pedro has an MS Degree from Colorado University. During his time at Colorado University, he founded two startups. The first was Recomind.net, which he later sold to an e-commerce conglomerate in Brazil called Buscape. The second was Slumdog Productions, a profitable events company that connected startups and investors.

Pedro talks about the VC industry, the ethos of his company, the connection between VC and AI, and much more.

Visit Atman Capital at www.atman.vc and on www.linkedin.com/company/atmancap.

Reach out to Pedro at p@atman.vc, www.linkedin.com/in/pedrosorren, and on twitter.com/pedrosorren

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Applying AI to E-commerce

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

AI brings new capabilities and benefits to e-commerce businesses.

AI can enhance e-commerce companies in the following ways:

Create better search tools for customers seeking products and services online.

Retarget customers for related products.

Provide better recommendations to customers for similar products.

Enhance the customer shopping experience through voice or chat prompts.

Personalize the shopping experience for customers.

Provide virtual shopping assistance to premium customers to find specific products.

Enhance recommendations to customers based on their buying history.

Improve voice assistants used in e-commerce applications.

Identify the ideal price points for each product based on customer shopping history.

Monitor reviews for activity including negative comments and fake reviews.

Monitor for counterfeit products and misleading information.

Identity new products to carry based on customer feedback.

AI can enhance the buying experience for the customer and the operational capabilities of the e-commerce provider.

Consider adding AI to your e-commerce platform.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Applying AI to Current Product

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

AI can be applied to your current products.

Here are some benefits of integrating AI with your product line:

Add new capabilities to the existing product.

This could be a better analysis of the information coming out of the product.

Reduce costs.

AI capabilities could replace more expensive search algorithms.

Improve the performance of the product.

AI can provide better results at a faster rate.

Promote ‘AI-enabled’ as a way of building the product brand.

Add recommendation features to the product.

Recommendations guide the customer on how to work with the product. 

This provides the customer with a better experience.

Enhance data analytics from the product.

Many products provide data that can be mined for insights and monetization.

AI can analyze the data and provide new insights to the customer.

Add more intelligence to the product.

By combining AI and data sets, the product can bring better results to the customer.

Consider these opportunities in adding AI to your product line.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

How To Use Data With AI

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Data is a key component of Artificial Intelligence systems.

AI looks for patterns in the data and draws conclusions from it.

The better the quality of the data, the better the output.

AI requires a substantial amount of data with which to discover insights.

As AI acquires new data it increases its capabilities.

Data comes in structured and unstructured forms.

The data must be clean and well-structured for AI to use it.

In many applications, the majority of the time is spent capturing and cleaning the data.

Example applications include streaming services that capture the audience's viewing habits to make recommendations.

Some use AI to personalize their marketing campaigns and outreach programs based on what the customer has bought in the past.

Others use AI to predict customer behavior based on similar customer actions.

In launching an AI initiative, ensure you have access to the right data in sufficient quantities to run the program.

Lack of data is a key failure point for many AI projects.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

The Use of Data and Algorithms in AI

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Artificial intelligence utilizes data and algorithms to create technical solutions.

Data and algorithms could be open or closed giving the business a competitive advantage.

Here’s a list of the business models and how open and closed data and algorithms impact the business.

The Black Box -- both data and algorithms are closed.  

This gives the business complete protection against competitors reviewing the data and algorithms.

The drawback is a lack of trust and transparency by the users of the system as they don’t fully understand how it works.

Open-source model -- both data and algorithms are open.

This gives competitors access to the methodology and the data leaving nothing proprietary to the company.

The advantage here is users can see how the system is working and adapt to it.

Open data model -- the data is open but the algorithm is not.

This makes the algorithm proprietary.

This model works well for customers with their own data so the company monetizes the output.

Open algorithm model - the algorithm is open but the data is not.

This makes the data proprietary.

This model works well for customers who understand the processing aspect but have access to little data so the company monetizes the data.

In building your business model in AI consider what the customer has and does not have relative to the algorithm and the data.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Why Add AI to Your Business

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

AI brings many advantages to your business.

Here’s a list of benefits to consider for your company:

Automate repetitive tasks such as those found in sales, administration, and customer service.

For support, AI can enhance help desk functions by searching the network for potential solutions.

Personalize customer support by using AI to make custom recommendations based on the customer's application and configuration.

Access and analyze new data sources to bring new capabilities to customer needs.

Use AI to improve marketing by customizing the outbound email for the customer’s specific interests.

Many companies have an ideal customer profile and then build marketing campaigns to identify and target those customers.

AI can search for potential customers on social media and customize the message to them.

AI can customize advertising campaigns for customer types making them more effective.

Use AI to enhance cybersecurity in your business.

By identifying standard patterns of data usage, AI can detect abnormal patterns and raise a red flag.

Consider adding AI to your business operations.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Direct download: Why_add_AI_to_your_business.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes Dr. Harvey Castro, author of the book ChatGPT and Healthcare.

Written by a highly experienced healthcare professional and medical correspondent, this book presents a compelling case for using ChatGPT to transform the way we approach healthcare. With a strong leadership and mentorship track record, the author offers valuable insights and solutions for creating a more efficient and effective healthcare system. Whether you're a healthcare provider, patient, or industry professional, this book is sure to inspire and inform you as we work towards a brighter future for healthcare.

Dr. Harvey Castro is a critically acclaimed author, writer, and sought-after medical media expert & speaker who shares his experiences and knowledge nationally and locally in the Dallas/Fort Worth areas. Dr. Harvey attended Texas A&M and graduated with a BS/BA in Biomedical Science and Political Science. 

Dr. Castro went to Medical School at UTMB, Galveston, Texas. He began writing books for other medical students to pay for his medical books. He went to Emergency Medicine Residency in Bethlehem, Pa., and started his heart vitamin company. When arriving in Dallas/Fort Worth TX area, his first job was to create over 30 iPhone Andriod apps in health care, as a speaker for ACEP ( American College of Emergency Physicians) for health care applications. Then as a consultant for healthcare companies, he founded the 'Trusted ER in DFW.' Dr. Castro has always had a passion for helping others and is currently working on his MBA and looks to graduate in December 2020.

Dr. Harvey discusses what inspired him to write his book, the latest in Chat GPT, all the AI advancements in the healthcare sector, and his predictions for the future of the industry.

Buy Dr. Castro's book here: www.amazon.com/ChatGPT-Healthcare-Key-Future-Medicine.

Reach out to Dr. Harvey at harveycastro4@gmail.com, www.linkedin.com/in/harveycastromd, and on twitter.com/harveycastromd

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Types of AI

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

There are many types of Artificial Intelligence.

Here’s a list of the types:

Narrow AI -- focuses on a single task or narrow range of functions.

Applications include image recognition, voice recognition, and translation applications.

Generative AI - focuses on a wide range of topics and seeks to generate answers to prompts.

Applications include marketing content generation, sales administration, and general education queries.

Reactive AI -- responds to a current state of the situation such as a game and responds with the next potential move.

IBM’s Deep Blue, which plays chess games, is an example.

Limited Memory AI -- uses past data to understand the situation and react to it.

Self-driving automobiles are an example.

Theory of the mind -- uses physical cues to determine the emotional or psychological state of someone.

Robotic applications that can sense human emotion through visual signals are a good example.

Self-awareness AI -- the ability to understand human conditions and detect human emotion.

This is a type of AI that is shown in films for what the future may hold.

Consider these types of AI and how they may apply to your application.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Issues in adding AI

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

In adding AI to your business consider these best practices:

Create a list of potential applications and order them by the ease of use and value to the company.

Identify a simple use case for the first effort.

Check to see if you have the skills necessary to implement the program.

Build a team to run the implementation and make sure you have sufficient resources.

Identify key data sources and take the time to clean the data and organize it into clean well structured sets.

Implement the project in steps and stages.

Define success in the early stages as MVPs and demos and not completed products.

Reserve enough data storage for the project.

Educate the company on AI and data terminology.

Build an MVP and test it with the target audience.

Identify key points of value and open gaps.

Prioritize the gaps and work to close them.

Continue to test with the target audience and measure the value the program provides.

Consider these best practices in your AI implementation.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Business Benefits of AI

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

AI brings many benefits to a business.

Here’s a list of key benefits that can help your business.

Improve existing products with new features.

AI adds another layer of functionality to current products.

Optimize the business.

AI points out ways to improve business operations by reducing costs.

Reduce costs by optimizing the use of your resources.

AI augments the employee so the team can do more work with the existing headcount.

Create new products.

AI can add new products to the lineup.

Optimize sales and marketing.

AI can enhance the operational aspect of sales and marketing.

Create new markets for the business.

AI creates new applications that must be done creating new business opportunities.

Share knowledge.

AI can capture, store, and relate one group's knowledge to others in the company.

Consider these benefits of AI for your business.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Direct download: Business_benefits_of_AI.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

How AI Can Be Used in a Business

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

AI can enhance the operations of a business.

Here are some steps to implement AI in your startup:

Identify an application where AI can enhance your operations.

Define the outcome of the solution and what it should do.

Choose an AI tool that is built for the application you want to pursue.

Capture data from your business systems to load into the application.

Train the application with your data and other relevant data sets.

Test the implementation to see how it performs.

Tune the application with more data to improve performance.

Test the application with a user to see how well it works for them.

Determine metrics of performance.

Continue to tune the application with new data.

Test with new users to see if the system maintains the performance metrics.

Train the team on how to use the application and roll it out to the broader company.

Finally, monitor the ongoing performance.

AI can be another tool for your business. 

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Direct download: How_AI_can_be_used_in_a_business.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

AI Art Generators

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

AI brings new capabilities for generating art.

There are many tools now available to create art of all styles, subject matter, and formats.

One can even generate a new piece of artwork using the same style as an original work.

By using machine language, algorithms and data structures AI can reconstitute an image for a set of criteria.

Art generators create imaging for sales, marketing, and other applications.

It provides a greater variety of images and can be customized to the use case.

The disadvantage of AI-generated art is that it may appear unnatural.

There is also a cost to using AI art generators that goes beyond what one paid for stock photos.

In using an art generator try the incremental approach in which you generate an image and then modify it one step at a time removing the steps that don’t add value.

There are many parameters so you’ll need to test each one several times to get the right result.

AI art generators work well for quick image generation for business projects where time is short.

Consider using an AI art generator for your next project.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes Salvatore Buscemi, CEO and Co-Founding Partner at Harlem River Navy ("HRN").

Located in Las Vegas, NV, USA, HRN  is a referral-only private investment platform that makes principal investments into private opportunities operated by world-class, pedigreed entrepreneurs and operators.

HRN was formed as a direct result of the successes the founding partners and their respective families have enjoyed across statement-class real estate assets and venture capital. Their partnership leverages their reputation, capital, and relationships to sustain and grow the legacy of their member families.

Salvatore has a 20-year career managing cross-asset investment strategies across privately held assets, including real estate principally, institutional-based credit, equity and venture fund creation and management, and private direct investment structures. 

Salvatore has a strong track record of creating value through the challenging environments of 2008 and the extreme environments in 2020. He is experienced in building world-class investment teams and creating a powerful culture that thrives on entrepreneurialism.

Salvatore shares about investment in sports, common founder's mistakes when raising money, how to provide value to your investors, and much more.

Visit HRN at www.harlemrivernavy.org, and on www.linkedin.com/company/hrnllc.

Reach out to Salvatore at sal@hrn.llc, www.linkedin.com/in/salvatore-buscemi-b829305, salvatorebuscemi.com/, and on twitter.com/SMBuscemi.  And buy his book at callingthecapital.com.

Direct download: Salvatore_Buscemi.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

AI in Gaming

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

AI brings many new capabilities and enhancements to gaming.

Here’s a list of how AI improves gaming:

Image improvement -- AI can enhance the imagery in games by using neural networks to increase the number of pixels in the image.

Level generation -- AI can create new levels increasing the complexity of the game.

New characters -- AI can create new characters for a game through the use of avatars who can respond to the players.

AI includes technologies such as neural networks, decision trees, and heuristic algorithms.

There are many games on the market today using AI.

Some of the higher profile games include IBM’s Deep Blue which plays chess and can beat world champion players.

The possibilities are endless with AI through the creation of new worlds, characters, levels, and outcomes.

Even the scenery and play action can be created through AI generating an endless source of content.

Consider how AI may be used in your gaming business.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Direct download: AI_in_gaming.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 6:39am CDT

AI Applications in Business

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

AI solves many business problems.

Here’s a list of AI business applications:

AI can create content for marketing campaigns building copy for social media, email, and website pages.

It can assist sales in prospect management by searching all past correspondence with the lead.

It can augment cybersecurity by tracking vulnerabilities of your network.

It can assist in machine vision for applications such as autonomous vehicles and healthcare.

It can manage large data sets and find key insights in the information.

It can improve natural language processing through its large language model structure.

It can be used to manage a network of IoT devices.

It can be used for video game development.

It can be used in finance by searching large data sets for companies that fit key criteria.

AI continues to increase in capabilities and performance through the expansion of large language models and generative algorithms.

Consider how AI may help your business.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Direct download: AI_application_in_Business.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Generative AI Use Cases

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Generative AI even in its earliest stage provides meaningful use cases.

Here’s a list of use cases it can handle:

Creating marketing copy such as product descriptions and social media content.

Assisting in sales work such as screening prospects and completing sales contracts.

Code generation for software applications including code verification.

Analysis of a data set without requiring knowledge of database query languages.

Software application development through a series of prompts.

Video game development includes both visual content and gameplay structures.

Image creation for website and promotional work.

Graphics design interfaces for UI work.

Website generation including content, images, and application code.

Email content creation for outbound marketing campaigns.

Social media content creation for influencer campaigns.

Generative AI can act as a content creator, an assistant, a research tool, and more.

Consider using Generative AI to automate basic tasks in your startup.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Direct download: Generative_AI_use_Cases.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Generative AI

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Artificial intelligence has been around for over fifty years.

Through the use of large language models and machine learning tools, it is possible to mimic human output.

Generative AI is artificial intelligence that uses algorithms to generate text, data, or images, that is new information.

Generative AI models are trained with enormous amounts of data and processed with machine learning algorithms.

While the output appears to be sentient, it’s merely a construct of words and images compiled from a large data set to mimic human thought.

Using a series of prompts one can create a new form of computer output that mimics human expertise and experience.

Its algorithm predicts what words and phrases might come after a prompt.

Through a series of prompts, one can use generative AI to create a sophisticated answer to a question.

There are simple examples of this in word processing which can predict what words might come next while typing a message.

There are many startup opportunities with this new level of computing for assisting and enhancing one's work.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Direct download: Generative_AI.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Curse of Knowledge

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The Curse of knowledge is defined by Wikipedia as when better-informed people find it extremely difficult to think about problems from the perspective of lesser-informed people.

Startup founders are often experts in their field and find it difficult to discuss with investors who are not experts.

They are so close to the project that they often forget that others unfamiliar with the deal need more information.

To overcome the curse of knowledge in a startup pitch, consider the following:

Avoid using jargon and acronyms in the pitch.

Assume your audience is not familiar with your sector or technology and state keep points to clarify.

For example, don't assume the investor knows what your startup does.  

Instead, state what your business does in five words or less.

Don’t assume they understand your market and how it works.

Instead, outline the market structure and the key dynamics.

Don’t assume they understand the importance of your metrics.

Instead, show how your metrics compare to others in your industry.

It’s often the case that the investor fails to grasp the pitch because there are too many key points missing from the presentation.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes James Frinzi, CEO at Multiband Global.

Located in Austin, Texas, USA, Multiband Global offers a solution for the complete IT and Network Lifecycle from deployment to decommissioning. They are backed by logistics, enterprise field service systems, and a global technician base.

At Multiband Global, they specialize in large-scale telecommunications, system/network planning and engineering, fire and life safety systems, low voltage cabling, electronic security, audiovisual, installation services, 5G, electronic waste recycling, and data destruction.

They custom design each project to meet the specific needs of our clients. Their design and planning stages are very thorough to ensure industry standards and maximum effectiveness. With unmatched engineering and project management methods, they ensure that every project is fully aligned and completed in accordance with the client’s goals.

James is focused on providing a complete lifecycle of telecom services in the US, and across the globe, and in this episode he shares about the latest in the telecom world, the future of 5G and 6G, the importance, and the challenges he faces in the industry and much more.

Visit Multiband Global at multibandglobal.com/, www.linkedin.com/company/multiband-global, and on twitter.com/MultibandGlobal

Reach out to James at james.frinzi@multibandglobal.com, JAMES@FRINZI.NET, and on www.linkedin.com/in/jamesfrinzi

 

_______________________________________________________

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Direct download: IC_James_Frinzi.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Default Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The Default effect is defined by Wikipedia as when given a choice between several options, the tendency to favor the default one.

It’s also called the Status Quo bias in which people choose the default option because it’s less risky.

Startups should position their deal as the default so that in case of a tie, the investor will choose their startup over others.

To make your deal the default, consider the following:

In many investment groups, the favorite pitch is the one investors choose to invest in even if diligence shows other deals to be stronger. 

Some investors favor deals that are similar to past investments and so choose them because they consider the deal to be the current standard.

So make your deal the favored pitch by presenting it as a standard deal.

Align your deal with past investments by the investors to position it as the ‘default.’

Startups that are outside the norm are considered riskier.

Show how other investors are already in the deal and why they invested.

Position your deal as the ‘safe’ choice because the risks have been mitigated and other investors have ‘set the standard’.

It’s often the case that the investor fails to grasp the pitch because there are too many key points missing from the presentation.

Make sure you include in the pitch all the values in the deal.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Direct download: Default_Effect.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Expectation Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The expectation bias is defined by Wikipedia as the tendency for experimenters to believe, certify, and publish data that agree with their expectations for the outcome of an experiment, and to disbelieve, discard, or downgrade the corresponding weightings for data that appear to conflict with those expectations.

Startups select market and customer data that aligns with their own view which may or may not represent market reality.

Ralph Waldo Emerson once wrote, “People only see what they are prepared to see.”

To overcome the expectation bias, consider the following:

Recognize the expectation bias and how your attention moves to evidence that supports your current beliefs.

Actively question what you see and what conclusions you draw from it.

Review your assumptions to see if they still hold true.

Look for conflicting information and probe further into it to understand how it may impact your view.

Examine the source of the information to see how credible it is or is not.

Be willing to see the data from another side.

Consider a different potential outcome and imagine what that would look like.

This will help overcome the expectation bias and give a clearer picture of the market.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Direct download: Expectaion_Bias.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Fading Affect Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The fading affect bias is defined by Wikipedia as a bias in which the emotion associated with unpleasant memories fades more quickly than the emotion associated with positive events.

Startups encounter both hard times and good times.  

People forget the hard times but remember the positive moments.

The harder the times, the faster the memory fades.

Founders can use this to help carry their business forward through difficult times.

Those with a higher level of grit and persistence have a higher fading affect bias.

This can be used by founders for motivation and team-building activities by recalling the good times and the bad times.

The bad times provide examples of the team’s grit and perseverance.  

The team won’t feel the pain of the bad times but will consider those days as building blocks for who they are and how far the company has come.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Framing Effect Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The framing effect bias is defined by Wikipedia as drawing different conclusions from the same information, depending on how that information is presented.

How you frame the startup in a pitch can determine how an investor regards it.

One can use framing to position a startup so it’s more relevant to the investor.

If the investors are tech investors then position the startup as a tech deal.

If the investors look for recurring revenue then position the startup based on its revenue model.

If the investors are impact investors, then position the startup to show the impact it makes.

By positioning the startup for the investor you can increase the chance that an investor will align with it.

Also by framing the pitch to show the accomplishments of the startup rather than the work left to be done, one can position the startup as successful and on track rather than falling behind.

Use framing to put your startup in the best position to connect with the investor. 

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Direct download: Framing_Effect_Bias.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Ambiguity Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The ambiguity effect is a bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to avoid options for which the probability of a favorable outcome is unknown.

Startups are risky and make proposals about the outcome of their deal. 

Investors avoid engaging with startups when they do not have confidence in the proposed outcome.

Startups should make clear what is currently known about the business and the potential prospects of the deal.

By clarifying the risks associated with the deal the startup makes it easier for investors to evaluate it.

For each risk in the deal, the startup should identify it and make clear how they will mitigate it. 

If there are too many risks and they are not clearly articulated then investors will not engage with the deal.

Missing information often leads investors to the ambiguity effect. 

Startups should cover all the basic elements of the business including the team, the market, the business model, and current traction. 

Startups pitching their deal must convince the investor that the proposed outcome is certain to happen. 

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes Yaniv Sneor, Founder of Mid Atlantic Bio Angels (MABA).

Mid Atlantic Bio Angels is a NY-based life science angel investment group that was formed in 2012 with the goal of bringing together the expertise required by investors to make informed investment decisions in scientific, regulatory, and commercially-complex healthcare investment opportunities. MABA invests exclusively in early-stage, private life science companies (primarily therapeutics, devices, diagnostics, and some digital health), with no geographic restrictions.

Participation in MABA is limited to accredited individuals and corporate MABA members who are actively involved in company screenings and diligence, requiring a time and financial commitment, as well as scientific, regulatory, and commercial expertise in the life sciences.

Yaniv Sneor is one of the founders of MABA, where he also administers MABA’s internal investment pools, and MABA’s co-investment Sidecar Fund, for non-MABA member investors.

Yaniv is originally a physicist, who made the transition into the business world about 30 years ago, at which point he took the helm of his first company. Mr. Sneor has senior merger, acquisition, capitalization, and turnaround leadership experience with companies ranging from start-ups to growth. He has held positions of CEO, COO, President, and General Manager at a number of companies, including a bio-informatics company, a surgical laser company, a manufacturing and distribution company, a software and network integration company, and several others.

Yaniv discusses what it means to be a life science angel investment group, the challenges that they face, and the rewards of working in this field. 

Visit Mid Atlantic Bio Angels at bioangels.net, and www.linkedin.com/company/mid-atlantic-bio-angels.

Reach out to Yaniv at yaniv@bioangels.net, www.linkedin.com/in/yaniv-sneor-5534131 , and on twitter.com/ysneor?lang=en

 

_______________________________________________________

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Direct download: Yaniv_Sneor_Polished.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Attribute Substitution

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The attribute substitution is a bias defined by Wikipedia that occurs when an individual has to make a judgment that is computationally complex and instead substitutes a more easily calculated heuristic attribute.

Startups presenting a complex concept such as how their technology works should replace it with a heuristic or analogy that is easier to understand.

Complex concepts can be difficult to communicate to investors in a pitch.

Instead of explaining the concept in detail, the startup should replace it with an analogy or metaphor to explain it.

The investor doesn’t need to know the specific details of how a concept works but rather why it’s important as there’s typically not enough time to explain it.

In discussing intellectual property it is better to highlight the benefits of the technology rather than how it works in detail.

Oftentimes the technology is proprietary and kept as a trade secret.

Explain complex concepts with analogies to show the benefits and importance of the concept.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Direct download: Attribute_Substitution.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Backfire Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The backfire effect is a bias defined by Wikipedia as the reaction to disconfirming evidence by strengthening one's previous beliefs.

Investors can reject a startup’s pitch if they doubt the premise even if confronted with the facts. 

Providing more facts will only make the investor dig in further. 

To overcome the backfire effect, avoid the topic if at all possible and steer away from it.

Don’t confront it head-on as it will distract from the pitch.

Coming on strong will only make the investor dig into their original beliefs.

Keep emotions out of it.

Step back and take a look at it from the big-picture perspective.

Identify the core reason the investor does not like your deal and focus on that.

Acknowledge how the investor's belief was true at one time but that times have changed and things are moving in a different direction.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Belief Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The belief bias is a bias defined by Wikipedia as an effect where someone's evaluation of the logical strength of an argument is biased by the believability of the conclusion

Similar to the confirmation bias, investors bring their experience to the startup pitch and make judgments on the proposed pitch while underway.

Investors will believe more strongly in a startup pitch if they agree with the proposed fundraising plan and exit strategy.

Startups that propose outsized forecasts and out-of-the-norm exit valuations will find it harder to gain the support of the investor.

To overcome the belief bias, investors should consider the market sector, the strength of the technology and product, and the skills of the team before estimating the outcome.

Startups should make clear the facts behind the proposed valuation and exit plan using comparables and other factors that impact the outcome.

The startup continues to grow and change so it’s important to stay up to date with the latest valuations and fundraising plans. 

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Ben Franklin Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The Ben Franklin effect is defined by Wikipedia as a person who has performed a favor for someone is more likely to do another favor for that person than they would be if they had received a favor from that person.

This effect comes from a statement by Ben Franklin:

“He that has once done you a Kindness will be more ready to do you another, than he whom you yourself have obliged.”

Those who help you do so because they like you and not because you have done a favor for them. 

They will want to remain consistent in their beliefs and will continue to help you.

Startups should ping potential investors for advice and support.

Once an investor or mentor provides support for your startup they will most likely continue to do so. 

To make use of this effect keep track of those who help you.

Return to them for more support.

Avoid asking too much and instead spread out the requests over time.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Shared Information Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The shared information bias is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency for group members to spend more time and energy discussing information that all members are already familiar with and less time and energy discussing information that only some members are aware of.

Investors focus on information their investor group already knows and talks about but spend less time on information that is not well known.

In diligence, investors focus on the areas they already know and give less attention to the areas that are unknown.

To overcome shared information bias, consider the following:

Create a checklist of key topics to discuss and move the group forward through the list.

Give weight to the voices discussing diverse opinions.

Look for those who have experience with the topics and highlight their opinions.

Expand your group to include others who have more diverse experiences.

Capture the dialog into written form for follow-up review.

It’s easy to talk about the things you know and more difficult to discuss that which is new.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes Hayden Blackburn, executive director of TechFW and director of Cowtown Angels.

Based in Fort Worth, TX, Cowtown Angels is an angel network that connects entrepreneurs seeking early-stage funding with local investors in an environment that accelerates growth and rewards strategic risk-taking. Cowtown Angels is a program of TechFW, and is a member of the Angel Capital Association and the Alliance of Texas Angel Networks.

TechFW is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that has been helping entrepreneurs launch and grow emerging technology companies since 1998. TechFW identifies entrepreneurs and startup companies with technologies that have a high potential for success in the marketplace.

Hayden has centered his career around social entrepreneurship and economic development. He is passionate about helping people realize their dreams and creating a positive impact in the world. Hayden coaches entrepreneurs commercializing innovative technologies, facilitates connections between entrepreneurs and angel investors, partners with universities to commercialize technologies, and is a leader in the development of an entrepreneurial culture and mindset across the Dallas-Fort Worth region. 

Hayden has helped organize multiple community staples for entrepreneurs, including Startup Weekend and 1 Million Cups Fort Worth. Hayden serves on the boards of organizations working in economic development and education, including Near Southside Inc., the Fort Worth Public Library Foundation, and the International Business Innovation Association.

Hayden dives deep into the role of investors and founders, the importance of learning, and the future of Angel groups. 

Visit Cowtown Angels at www.cowtownangels.org, www.linkedin.com/company/cowtown-angels-investor-network. And, TechFW at www.techfortworth.org/, https://www.linkedin.com/company/techfw-incubator-accelerator/. 

Reach out to Hayden at hayden@techfortworth.org, and www.linkedin.com/in/haydenblackburn.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Picture Superiority Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The picture superiority effect is a phenomenon defined by Wikipedia whereby the notion that concepts that are learned by viewing pictures are more easily and frequently recalled than are concepts that are learned by viewing their written word form counterparts.

Investors identify and remember more from images than words.

Startups should use pictures rather than words wherever possible in the pitch presentation.

Use pictures that are relevant to the content and clarify the message.

When this is not possible then the startup should use distinctive words.

These are words that are descriptive and create an image in the listener’s mind.

Startups should capture what they do and how they do it into mantras and taglines. 

Mantras and taglines create mental images that help the investor remember what you do.

Startups can also use video, animation, charts, and graphs as well.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Modality Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The modality effect is a phenomenon defined by Wikipedia whereby memory recall is higher for the last items of a list when the list items were received via speech than when they were received through writing.

In a startup pitch, the last slides are the ones that the investors will remember most.

These are not necessarily the most important slides to consider.

Investors should be aware of the modality effect to mitigate it.

To overcome the modality effect, consider the following points:

Investors should take notes during the pitch and capture the most important aspects of the deal.

Identify the key risks that must be overcome.

Also, take note of the key value propositions in the deal.

In diligence consider these factors.

Raise questions on the key risks and value propositions in the deal to understand it better. 

Investors should consider what are the most salient features of the deal and explore those before investing.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Levels of Processing Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The level of processing effect is a phenomenon defined by Wikipedia whereby different methods of encoding information into memory have different levels of effectiveness.

Different forms of communication and listener processing will affect the investor’s ability to remember.

Shallow learning results in short-term knowledge retention.

Deep learning results in long-term knowledge retention.

It’s important to understand one's learning style.

To overcome the levels of processing effect, consider the following:

Focus on the core message and internalize it.

Apply critical thinking to the process and ask questions throughout the pitch.

Review the key points to see what you can remember and what you missed.

Consider the palace method in which you build a mental picture of a room and fill it with objects that remind you of the key points of the pitch.

It’s important to develop listening and learning skills when analyzing startup deals.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Lag Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The lag effect is a phenomenon defined by Wikipedia whereby learning is greater when studying is spread out over time, as opposed to studying the same amount of time in a single session. 

Investors learn more about the startup if the information is spread out over time.

It helps to understand the startup if you have multiple interactions rather than one long session.

To overcome the lag effect, consider the following:

Set up a series of meetings and calls in which to engage the startup to learn more.

Spread out the meetings over a period of time so you can track their progress.

In addition to the founder, talk to the other team members to gain multiple perspectives on the startup and their status.

Track the startups’ progression with sales, the team, product development and their fundraise.

This process will help you understand the startup better and retain more information about them.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Semmelweis Reflex

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Semmelweis reflex is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to reject new evidence that contradicts a paradigm.

Some investors reject startups if it goes against conventional wisdom.

In the startup world, there are always new technologies, markets, and business models to support them.  

It takes some effort to learn about these new areas and so can be easily dismissed as not important. 

To overcome the Semmelweis reflex, investors should bring some level of curiosity to the process.

The investor should set aside some time to learn about new markets and technologies.  

Confronted with a new market or business model, the investor should learn more about it before making a decision.

Startups presenting new ideas must make it real to the investor with concrete examples and facts.

Startups must bring evidence of how a new business model can work to show validation. 

The startup world is filled with new technologies and markets so it’s important to remain open-minded in startup investing.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes Archil Cheishvili, CEO, President & Director at GenesisAI.

Located in Boston, Massachusetts, USA, GenesisAI is a Machine Learning protocol. On top of this protocol, they are building a marketplace for AI (Artificial Intelligence) products and services - Amazon for AI. The marketplace connects companies in need of AI services, data, and models with companies interested to monetize their AI tech.

Archil is a serial entrepreneur who graduated from Harvard University. He worked at Bridgewater Associates and went on to co-found The Bears, which he later sold and made a 6x return on. He went on to become the VP of Artificial Intelligence at venture capital firm IDFEC. He is recognized by media outlets including the New York Post, Forbes, and Yahoo Finance.

Archie advises entrepreneurs in the AI sector. He shares how he sees the industry evolving and discusses the biggest challenge they face.

Archil talks about the present and future of AI, the groundbreaking potential of ChatGPT, practical AI applications, and his Genesis AI project.

Visit GenesisAI at www.genesisai.io/, www.linkedin.com/company/genesisai, and on twitter.com/OfficialGenAI.

Reach out to Archil at archil@genesisai.io, and at www.linkedin.com/in/archie-archil-cheishvili-854aa792/.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Stereotyping

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Stereotyping is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as expecting a member of a group to have certain characteristics without having actual information about that individual.

Investors can stereotype startups based on their previous experience.

This can be a bias against a sector of business, a leadership style, or another.

To overcome stereotyping, investors should set aside preconceived notions and examine the facts available.

Investors should look at the deal, the team, and the market as a growth opportunity.

Investors should also look at similar investments by other investors to learn more about the deal.

Investors need to generate self-awareness to understand biases that come into their decision-making.

With awareness, it becomes easier for investors to change their thought processes.

The startup world is constantly changing and old methods are being replaced by new ones.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Halo Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The halo effect is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency for a person's positive or negative traits to "spill over" from one personality area to another in others' perceptions of them. 

Investors often presume those who are good at pitching and are passionate are also good at running the business. 

This often leads to investments in startups that are missing key success factors.

To overcome the halo effect, investors should be aware of it and look for evidence that the founder can run the business.

Investors should have specific criteria for making an investment and should assess the startup for that criteria.

Investors need to have an accurate understanding of the startup's strengths and weaknesses as the investor may need to step in and help fill any gaps.

Keeping in mind the cognitive bias will help investors overcome it and focus on the core aspects of the startup.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Ingroup Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The Ingroup bias is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency for people to give preferential treatment to others they perceive to be members of their own groups.

Investors give preference to those in their network over those outside their network.

This can be a challenge as startup investing is often based on network referrals and personal recommendations.

Investors prioritize those in their network over those outside their network.

To overcome ingroup bias, build relationships with other groups and formally syndicate deal-flow. 

Develop formal criteria for deal-flow and apply them rigorously to deals coming from your own network.

Poor investments often come from personal recommendations that are well-known but don’t meet the investors criteria.

For each deal both within your network and from outside, apply your screening criteria.

Every group has some number of quality deals so consider deals from other groups in your deal-flow process.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Self-Serving Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The self-serving bias is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to claim more responsibility for successes than failures.

Investors use successful investments as proxies for their skill but attribute the failures to other causes.

Investors are naturally optimistic.

When things go wrong it’s easy to blame external factors.

To overcome the self-serving bias, consider the following:

Maintain awareness about the self-serving bias.  

Check yourself when giving yourself the credit and give credit to other factors for the success.

For failures, take some time to review it so you understand it well. 

Make yourself accountable for any failures on your part. 

And look for ways to improve your skills and process.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Selective Perception

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Selective perception is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency for expectations to affect perception.

Investors tend to see what they want to see in a startup deal.

Investors choose those elements in the pitch that match their experience and expectations.

Selective perception comes from previous experiences with startups both good and bad.

To overcome selective perception, perform active listening.

Take in what is being said without judgment or interpretation.

Ask confirming questions to make sure you are hearing what is being said.

Try to understand the startup completely before making a decision.

Check with other investors for their perception to see how it matches and differs from your own.

It’s easy to focus on parts of the deal that matches your understanding and ignore those elements that don’t fit. 

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes Kristina Chapple, Director at 11 Tribes Ventures.

Located in Chicago, IL, USA, 11 Tribes Ventures is an early-stage venture fund that proactively invests in the well-being of entrepreneurs. The fund is radical in its allocation of resources to fund founder well-being, putting real dollars toward their mental, emotional, and spiritual health. Thesis-wise, 11 Tribes invests in purpose-driven entrepreneurs disrupting legacy industries. The company provides innovative, founder-focused venture capital investment to early-stage technology companies in non-traditional technology hubs across the county. 

11 Tribes Ventures is disrupting the business model of venture capital. The traditional “growth at all costs” mentality produces founder burnout, unsettling ethics, and failed investments. By rejecting this status quo of dollars-driven, people-indifferent investing in lieu of an approach that centers around building businesses that are profitable and sustainable, they’re changing the narrative from burnout to flourishing by redefining the ecosystem of support around each founder.

Kristina is a Director at 11 Tribes Ventures. Originally, she joined the firm as employee #1 to be the point person for all things pipeline: sourcing, screening, and diligence. In 6 months, alongside the growth of 11 Tribes, Kristina’s responsibilities have expanded to encompass fundraising and operations. She serves as 11 Tribes’ boots on the ground in the Chicago Tech & Venture ecosystem.

With interests in the disciplines of City Planning and Entrepreneurship, Kristina has a track record of taking ownership in building initiatives that unleash measurable, constructive impact on her communities. Throughout her life, she has been fiercely attentive to gaps in human connection and has creatively responded: she launched a school-wide movement to combat social isolation by equipping students to engage in better conversations. Today, the “Whisper” Movement has now scaled to 18 schools across Atlanta.

Kristina talks about her background, how to invest in early-stage venture funds, and the best practices for running venture funds.

Visit 11 Tribes Ventures at 11tribes.vc, www.linkedin.com/company/11-tribes, and on twitter.com/11tribesvc

Reach out to Kristina at kristina@11tribes.vc, www.linkedin.com/in/kristina-chapple-48052717a, and on twitter.com/KristinaChapp.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Present Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Present bias is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency of people to give stronger weight to payoffs that are closer to the present time when considering trade-offs between two future moments

Early exits weigh stronger on investors than further-out exits even if substantially larger.

Under present bias, investors forgo longer-term gains for immediate gratification.

To overcome present bias, consider yourself in the future compared to today.

Ask what your future self wants rather than your present-day self.

If holding the investment longer will make your future self happier, then that can outweigh what your present self wants. 

Another way to overcome present bias is to set goals and criteria for buying and selling and use those for determining when to buy and sell. 

Finally, there’s the time value of money which measures how much future returns are worth based on the time to return.  

By using these calculations you can see the quantitative difference between the two investment choices. 

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Outcome Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Outcome bias is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to judge a decision by its eventual outcome instead of based on the quality of the decision at the time it was made.

Investors judge an investment based on the outcome alone and often disregard the circumstances under which it was made.

Results can come from factors other than the original decision.

To overcome the outcome bias, an investor should take notes about the information available and the decision process at the time of investment.  

The investor can later review the information available to determine the quality of the investment decision.

By separating the decision-making process from the results one can distinguish between good or bad decisions from good or bad results.

There are many exogenous factors in startup investing. 

Investors should gather relevant information and make careful decisions about each investment. 

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Not Invented Here

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Not invented here is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the aversion to contact with or use of products, research, standards, or knowledge developed outside a group. 

Investors can be biased toward startups that have developed the idea and strategy with the investor's input. 

This leads to investments into startups that are substandard.

Investors should be aware of the bias and recognize it in their decision-making process.

To overcome this bias, the investor should develop a criteria for investment and check to see how the startup does or does not meet that criteria.

On the other hand, investors may overlook a good startup because they had no part in developing the idea.

To overcome the bias, the investor should become familiar with the business and assess it for what has been done.  

The investor should look for first principles such as the strength of the team and how much traction has been generated.

The investor should be open to new ideas and types of startups as the startup world is constantly changing.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Neglect of Probability

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Neglect of probability is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to completely disregard probability when making a decision under uncertainty.

Investors can be biased by their previous experiences and ignore the probability of success or failure in potential startup investments.

Those who lost money on previous investments may be slow to invest while those who made money are more likely to invest.

The probability of success or failure is the same for both.

Recognize the probability bias in making decisions. 

Intuition, while helpful, can be tricky to use in startup investing. 

To overcome the bias, determine an amount to invest and a criteria.

Invest according to the criteria till the funds are deployed.  

By making the decisions based on specific criteria and for a predetermined amount of money, the probability factor is taken out of the process.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Law of the Instrument

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The Law of the instrument is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the over-reliance on a familiar tool or method, ignoring or under-valuing alternative approaches. 

"If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail."

Investors use the deal flow and screening process they are most familiar with.  These tools can favor some deals over others.  

Deal flow channels provide a certain type of deal flow which may or may not be the best available.

Explore other deal flow channels to find better deals.

Also, the investor’s screening process focuses on specific aspects of the startup such as team, traction, or market size.

Consider other screening criteria to find better deals.

From these efforts consider updating your deal flow and screening process overall.

As startup markets change and evolve, new business models and market conditions prevail.  

New models and markets often need new deal flow and screening processes.

Explore how other investors find and screen startups and compare them to your own.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes Brett Calhoun, Managing Director and Partner at Scale VC.

Located in Columbia, Missouri, USA, Scale VC is an accelerator fund and venture studio investing monetary and social capital in early-stage tech founders who are strengthened by struggle. 

Scale brings a team of dedicated operators who have the insights & support from building billion-dollar companies to remove unnecessary barriers, so founders can focus on the hard stuff that matters.

Brett, is the Managing Director and Partner at Scale, building and investing in startups at the earliest stages. He is the Co-Founder of lending startup CharlieMike and a founding team member of tax software startup CapGains. Prior, he had investing experience at The LegalTech Fund and was an early employee at VC-backed Paytient.

Brett shares the challenges of starting a venture capital business, the opportunities, and the right "venture capital lifestyle".  

Visit Scale VC at www.scale-vc.com, and on www.linkedin.com/company/scale-incubator.

Reach out to Brett at brett@scale-vc.com, www.linkedin.com/in/brettcalhoun393 , and on twitter.com/brettcalhounn.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Loss Aversion

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Loss aversion is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the disutility of giving up an object is greater than the utility associated with acquiring it.

Investors will continue to hold a position in losing startups because of hating to lose and clinging hopefully to a potential turnaround.

To overcome loss aversion startup investors should consider these points:

When making an investment consider the funds lost from day one.  Any returns will be a pleasant upside. 

Consider the fundamentals of the business and not just the current status.

Treat the investment as a financial transaction and not a personal win or loss.

Diversify your investments so one loss is relatively small.

Keep in mind the overall position of investments rather than each specific deal.

Develop a plan for each investment including follow on funding, early exit options, and tax write-offs if it all goes to zero. 

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

IKEA effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The IKEA effect is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency for people to place a disproportionately high value on objects that they partially assembled themselves, such as furniture from IKEA, regardless of the quality of the end product.

Investors will have more affinity for a startup if they’ve had a hand in helping build it.

This leads to bad investment decisions as the investor is supporting the work they put into the startup even though the startup doesn’t meet their criteria for funding. 

To overcome the IKEA effect the investor should separate their personal contribution from the investment decision.

Compare the startup to others on each aspect of the business such as team, traction, and market.

Review the data to see what it says about the startup.

Seek out independent analysis and perspective about the startup.

Check to see how it compares against your investment thesis and criteria.

The IKEA effect is subtle and can distort one’s perceptions.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Direct download: Ikea_effect.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Groupthink

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Groupthink is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the psychological phenomenon that occurs within a group of people in which the desire for harmony or conformity in the group results in an irrational or dysfunctional decision-making outcome. 

Since many investors invest as a group and use social proof as part of their decision process, it’s easy to fall into the trap of groupthink.

In pitch sessions, investors often follow the lead of other investors so as to fit in even if they don’t necessarily find the startup to be attractive. 

To overcome groupthink, build diversity into your group with different skills and investment strategies.

Maintain a neutral position throughout the process. 

Encourage discussion among the members to surface counterarguments and questions.

Schedule time for independent research to find out more about the deal from other sources.

Dedicate someone as the devil’s advocate to vocalize counter opinions.

Look for the naysayers and encourage a healthy debate with alternative points of view about the deal.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Mere Exposure Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Mere exposure effect is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to express undue liking for things merely because of familiarity with them.

Angel investors are much more likely to invest in deals in which they have more exposure to it. 

This can lead to investments in substandard startups.

To avoid the mere exposure effect, the investor should first recognize it as a bias and keep it in mind when reviewing startups for funding.

The investor should ask the question, "why invest in this startup?" and check for the answer.

If it’s because the startup is familiar but the team, product, or market is not outstanding, then it should be a pass.

While familiarity may give the investor more information about the startup it should not stand in for proper diligence.

The investor should have a set of criteria by which to judge startups and should use that criteria in testing them for funding.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Gambler's fallacy

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The gambler’s fallacy is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to think that future probabilities are altered by past events when in reality they are unchanged. 

Investors bet on startups that follow what other recent successful startups have done even though the potential of the startup is no better than before.

For example, after a startup proves successful in a sector, investors rush to that sector to fund similar startups.

While the market may be ripe for startup success there are many other factors that come into play to achieve a successful exit.

To overcome the gambler's fallacy, the investor should focus on the data describing the future. 

Past events don’t predict future success.

Each startup is unique and success is driven by many factors.

Investors should be aware of the gambler's fallacy and judge each startup on its merits.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes Christian Kameir, Managing Partner at Sustany Capital.

Located in Newport Beach, CA/USA, Sustany Capital is a deeply thesis-driven investment firm, applying a first principles approach and scientific rigor to investments in technologies positioned to reshape global economic activity. Having invested in network technologies for more than twenty years, Sustany’s managing partners started researching investment opportunities in the blockchain and Web3 space in 2013.

The combined innovation power of these technological paradigms opens the door for moving more than one-third of global GDP away from incumbent middlemen to new solutions providers. After four years of thesis development and successful principal investments, Sustany’s first fund was formally established in January 2018. 

Christian, a managing partner at Sustany Capital, has been a successful tech entrepreneur since the internet dial-up days and led the merger of the leading internet service providers in Europe during the Web1 area. In 2000 he moved to California to co-found his first technology venture fund. 

Christian studied linguistics, and natural language programming, and is a graduate of Muenster's School of Law. He serves as a board member at the data standards organization Open Travel, chairs the Banking and Financial Services Interest Group at the Decentralized Identity Foundation, and is a financial fiduciary board member at a human rights foundation. 

Christian shares his background and discusses Web3, blockchain, and much more.

Visit Sustany Capital at www.sustany.co, and on www.linkedin.com/company/sustany-capital.

Reach out to Christian at chris@sustany.co, www.linkedin.com/in/kameir, and on twitter.com/kameir.

 

_______________________________________________________

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Direct download: Christian_Kameir.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Frequency Illusion

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Frequency illusion is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the illusion in which a word, a name, or other things that have recently come to one's attention suddenly seems to appear with improbable frequency shortly afterward.

This comes from the mind's selective attention kicking in when hearing something new. 

The mind then starts to look for that pattern elsewhere.

After an investor learns of a startup solving a new problem the investor seems to hear about that problem more often even when there’s no true frequency.

This gives the investor the impression the startup’s application is more prevalent than it really is.

To overcome the frequency illusion, an investor just knowing it as an effect can realize the startup’s focus is no more prominent than other startups' focus.

The investor should research the application area to fully understand the magnitude of the problem and its prevalence.

Quantitative analysis will clarify the market size providing a better understanding of the startup’s potential.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

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Direct download: Frequency_illusion.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Dunning-Kruger Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The Dunning-Kruger effect is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency for unskilled individuals to overestimate their own ability and the tendency for experts to underestimate their own ability.

Investors reviewing deals in an unfamiliar sector often consider their skills to be greater than they are.

Investors who are familiar with a sector often don’t realize how strong their perceptions are.

To overcome the Dunning-Kruger effect, an investor should slow down and take time to analyze the deal more carefully. 

Write out the assumptions about the deal and test each one to see if it holds true.

Investors often impute their own industry practices on the startup’s industry which does not always hold true.

Mentally assume you know less than you think you do.

Reach out to others who know the industry better to understand it.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Disposition Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Disposition effect is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to sell an asset that has accumulated in value and resist selling an asset that has declined in value.

Investors find it difficult to sell startup investments since they are no longer growing but hold the promise of “coming back.”

Investors fund many startups most of which will not return the original value.

Many investors hold onto the investment with the hope that they eventually will achieve success.  

Investors should review their portfolio of investments to determine which ones have a strong enough case to continue.

For those startups that don’t have a case, the investor should explore selling out of the deal.

In follow-on fundraises, the investor could look for someone to take their place and buy them out. 

Another path is to write redemption clauses into the investment documents so the investor has a choice about leaving the deal.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Decoy Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Decoy effect is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as a situation in which preferences for either option A or B change in favor of option B when option C is presented, which is completely dominated by option B (inferior in all respects) and partially dominated by option A

Investors will find a deal more attractive when additional deals of lesser quality are presented at the same time.

During pitch sessions, investors change their preferences based on the quality of deals shown as the session proceeds.

An inferior deal will make a previous pitch look more attractive.

Investors subconsciously compare each deal to the others in the lineup and choose the best one among them.

As an investor, it’s important to maintain an absolute criteria rather than a relative one.

Criteria such as revenue levels, team experience, and target growth rates will help you avoid selecting the best deal in a group as that deal may fall below the investor's standards.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

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Direct download: Decoy_effect.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Continued Influence Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Some investors will hold onto their preconceived notions even when presented with corrected information.

For example, a startup positions their company as providing a service but they don’t mention they have recurring revenue.

Recurring revenue shows scalability while service businesses typically do not.

Even after the investor learns about the recurring revenue, they will continue to view it as a service business lacking scalability.

The startup may correct its misinformation which is often an omission. But the investor may not consider the startup as valuable as if they had started with the correct information.

To correct the misinformation, having the CEO make the clarification as an authority can help overcome the bias.

Show the reason why the misinformation occurred so it’s clear it came from faulty or outdated information.

Have a third party confirm the corrected information as it brings a neutral perspective which can often sway investors.

It’s best to avoid misinformation to begin with as it can take a great deal of time and work to overcome it.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

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Direct download: Continued_influence_effect.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes Alicia Cramer, host of The Mind of Business Success Podcast and Business Mindset Mentor at AC Intl LLC. 

Located in Tucson, Arizona, USA, AC Intl LLC helps business owners retrain their minds to create a life and business they love. Her clients have referred to her as their "secret weapon" for achieving massive gains in life and business. Alicia can spot limiting beliefs and bad mindset habits, and help you shift them fast. 

The Mind of Business Success Podcast is the place for high-growth business owners to fill their minds with game-changing strategies and principles for success in life and business. Host Alicia Cramer is an Inner Game Strategist who works with business owners to accelerate to multiple 7-figures by learning the esoteric and scientific art of reconditioning their subconscious mind for massive success.

Alicia, is an internationally recognized business mindset expert, a best-selling author, coach, consultant, and a serial entrepreneur. Having worked with hundreds of private clients for well over a decade - from startups to owners of multimillion-dollar companies, Alicia has an intimate understanding of the mindset pitfalls that affect entrepreneurs. Her clients include successful business professionals, executives, and entrepreneurs who are driven to take their personal and professional success to the next level. 

She is the Author of: 

Hypnosis For Success;

The "Outside the Box" Entrepreneur; 

Co-Author of the International Best-Seller: Uncensored. Untamed. Unleashed. 

Alicia shares her journey into entrepreneurship, how she became a Business Mindset Mentor, and much more. 

Visit AC Intl LLC at aliciacramer.com , and reach out to Alicia at aliciacramer@outlook.com, www.linkedin.com/in/aliciacramer , and on twitter.com/aliciacramer.

 

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Courtesy Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Courtesy bias is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to give an opinion that is more socially correct than one's true opinion, so as to avoid offending anyone.

Courtesy bias arises when an investor tells the startup what they think the startup wants to hear rather than what the investor actually thinks.

The investor spares the feelings of the startup but in the process withholds feedback the startup needs to hear. 

Feedback should be candid and honest even if it’s not all positive.

If the feedback is all positive and nothing negative, it may be a sign that the investor is under courtesy bias.

Consider giving a more balanced view of the startup with both positive and negative feedback so the startup will learn from the experience and have something to work on.

Another form of courtesy bias is investors who hide their social, political, or other leanings.

For example, some investors believe that only those from their social or political circle are reliable investments but they call out some other facet of the startup for passing.

To overcome the courtesy bias, investors should take note of the deals they fund and identify factors swaying their decision.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Base Rate Fallacy

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The base rate fallacy is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to ignore base rate information (generic, general information) and focus on specific information (information only pertaining to a certain case).

One-off sales to specific companies while helpful do not define the startup's growth forecast. 

Investors should look at the core systems of a startup to understand their acquisition, conversion, and revenue.

Consulting work and other non-recurring revenue models make it difficult to predict revenue.

Recurring revenue becomes a strong indicator of future revenue growth.

To overcome the base rate fallacy look for metrics across a broader range of customers and not select ones. 

The presence of metrics is a good sign.  

The absence of metrics is a bad sign.

Focus on recurring revenue metrics to understand the acquisition, activation, and retention rates.

Hockey stick projections should be avoided as it assumes something will occur outside the normal operations of the business to take the company’s revenue higher.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Clustering Illusion

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Clustering illusion is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to overestimate the importance of small runs, streaks, or clusters in large samples of random data (that is, seeing phantom patterns).

Investors will see a few deals in a space exit and consider it a hot spot for success when in the big picture the sector is no better than any other.

Sectors rotate in and out of favor based on investors' interest in funding that sector.

When a few startups in a sector raise funding, investors often consider the sector a good area to invest in.

After only a handful of deals receive investing interest other investors will flock to the sector to find more deals to invest in.

In analyzing the field of startups, it’s often the case that that sector is no better than any other sector for investment.  

They’re looking for patterns where none exist.

To overcome the clustering illusion, use data analysis to statistically analyze the data.

This will tell you if there’s a real pattern or only the appearance of one.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Bias Blind Spot

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The bias blind spot is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to see oneself as less biased than other people or to be able to identify more cognitive biases in others than in oneself.

All investors have blind spots and biases.

Investing in experiences causes one to be biased unconsciously.

To overcome biases, focus on self-awareness.

Learn more about the common types of bias such as anchoring and confirmation bias.

Watch how you react and respond to different pitches.

Question your judgment to see if it’s based on fact.

Identify what type of deals and founder types make you uncomfortable.

Question your judgment process to see where it may be flawed.

Are you biased against certain types of people because of past experiences?

If certain types of startups and founders make you uncomfortable then spend more time with them.

Becoming familiar with them will make you more aware of potential biases you may have.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Confirmation Bias

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Confirmation bias is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to search for, interpret, focus on and remember information in a way that confirms one's preconceptions.

Investors bring their recent investment experiences to fund new startups.

If the investor recently lost their investment in a deal in a certain sector, then the investor will most likely look unfavorably at other deals in that sector.

On the other hand, if the investor found success in investing in a particular type of company, then most likely the investor will look for similar companies.

It’s important to understand these forces when setting up an investment thesis and criteria for funding startups.  

To overcome confirmation bias consider the following:

Try to view the deal from other angles than you traditionally use.

Ask other investors for their views on it and note the ones with strong objections.

Discuss your thought process with other investors to see where you might be off the mark.

Expand your connections to include people with other experiences and viewpoints.

Give prominence in your thinking to views divergent from your own. 

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes Derren Burrell, Founder & Managing Partner at Veteran Ventures Capital.

Located in Knoxville, TN, USA, Veteran Ventures Capital (VVC) is a veteran-owned growth-equity investment fund & firm focused on veteran businesses. VVC interacts exclusively with companies that have military veteran leadership, recognizing the value of military experience, training, and character in business operations.

VVC’s team is comprised of distinguished former military officers and seasoned financial experts from across the country. Their value proposition lies in their granular understanding of the military culture, significant connections within the federal government & defense industry, and working knowledge of the government procurement process.

Derren is a retired Lieutenant Colonel with over 28 years as a professional financial manager in both the public and private sectors. He is the Founder & President of Veteran Ventures Capital, an investment and consulting firm focused on scaling veteran-owned businesses. In this capacity, he oversees all aspects of the company operations and fund management of the Veteran Fund, which invests in early stage/growth companies.

He is a graduate of the Citadel and past recipient of several awards including the Defense Meritorious Service Medal, Air Force Commendation Medals, Joint Service Achievement Medal, Air Force Budget Officer of the Year twice, Air Force Financial Management Officer of the Year, Comptroller of the Year, and USAFE James E. Short Award for Outstanding Contribution to Mentorship and Career Development.

Derren shares his experiences working both in the public and private sectors and his passion for helping veteran-owned businesses.

Visit Veteran Ventures Capital at www.veteranventures.us/, www.linkedin.com/company/veteran-ventures-capital-llc/, and on twitter.com/VenturesVeteran

Reach out to Derren at derren@veteranventures.us, www.linkedin.com/in/derrenburrell/, and on twitter.com/dp_burrell

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Availability Heuristic

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The availability heuristic is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as a mental shortcut that relies on immediate examples that come to a given person's mind when evaluating a specific topic, concept, method, or decision. 

The availability heuristic operates on the notion that if something can be recalled, it must be important, or at least more important than alternative solutions which are not as readily recalled. 

Subsequently, under the availability heuristic, people tend to heavily weigh their judgments toward more recent information, making new opinions biased toward the latest news.

In the startup world, investors bring their recent memories about a startup into the diligence process for investing.

That which they recall is given more weight than that which must be researched.

This puts the investor at a disadvantage in working with incomplete information.

Investors should take good notes on the startup during pitch sessions and use those notes in the diligence phase. 

This will reduce the prominence of easily remembered items and bring important ones to the surface.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Availability Cascade

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The availability cascade is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as a self-reinforcing cycle that explains the development of certain kinds of collective beliefs. 

Investors who repeat a belief among themselves will reinforce that belief even if it’s not true.

One investor will state his recollection as a fact to a group of investors.

Another investor repeats the statement as a fact.

As this continues around the group the initial recollected memory becomes a fact that every investor believes.

To overcome the availability cascade presume nothing is true until proven. 

For example, if the startup doesn’t state revenue numbers, then assume they have no revenue.

In the diligence process write out the assumptions you have and then test each one by going through the dataroom to verify or debunk the assumptions.

This applies to the team, the product, the revenue, and the fundraising details in particular.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Bandwagon Effect

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

The bandwagon effect is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to do (or believe) things because many other people do (or believe) the same.

Investors follow the lead of others. The more investors following a deal, the more investors are willing to join.

Investors look for lead investors who will negotiate the terms and diligence it.

To avoid the bandwagon effect in funding a startup, look for experienced investors to follow 

Review carefully the diligence report to see if it matches your expectations.

Verify stated information with other sources.

Challenge the assumptions to understand the deal in more detail. 

For example, if the startup indicates they have revenue, investigate further the quality of that revenue.  

Is it recurring revenue?  Is it concentrated revenue?

Avoid situations where the investors are excited about the deal but no one is actually leading the deal and no one is reviewing the diligence. 

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: http://investorconnect.org 

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Anchoring

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Anchoring is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to rely too heavily, or "anchor", on one trait or piece of information when making decisions (usually the first piece of information acquired on that subject)

Investors tend to attach to the first thing startup pitches and stick with it.

If the startup positions its deal as a service such as providing education technology, investors will view it as an ed-tech service.

On the other hand, if the startup positions their deal as a software as a service business, investors will home in on recurring revenue streams and will look for metrics in that category.

How you position your business at the beginning of the pitch is how most investors will look at it throughout the pitch.

Consider positioning your deal upfront for the investor audience you have.

Position it as an ed-tech service for investors focused on education.

Position it as a software-as-a-service deal for investors focused on recurring revenue.

Position it as a social impact deal for investors focused on impact investments.

Don’t fight the anchoring effect by mispositioning your deal for the investors you are pitching. 

Use anchoring to connect your deal with the investor.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Build a Moat

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Warren Buffet once said, “I look for economic castles protected by unbreachable moats.”

In the startup world, investors look for a competitive advantage that can build a moat around the business.

"Me too" businesses are difficult to fund because anyone can start one and compete.

To build a moat around your business consider the following:

Build switching costs into your product to make it more sticky.

Create a brand that attracts others and is different from the competition.

Scale quickly to leave the majority of competitors behind.

Size can provide a decent moat once you have some scale.

Distribution can be a moat to provide more products and more revenue.

Network effects can provide a moat as the network generates additional revenue and decreases costs.

Technology can provide an advantage if the user finds value in it. 

The moat should not be easily duplicated because over time other startups will do so.

Moats should be considered from the getgo as it will increase as the startup grows and scales.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes Kurt Wilkin, CEO of HireBetter, Managing Partner of Bee Cave Capital, and Author of the book  “Who’s Your Mike?”.

For over 25 years, Kurt has advised high-growth, middle-market companies. Through his roles as CEO of HireBetter and a Managing Partner of Bee Cave Capital, he had the opportunity to work with hundreds of entrepreneurs and CEOs—challenging and inspiring them to take their companies to that much-hyped “next-level.”

But before Kurt got to where he is now, he worked in some challenging roles. His goal in writing is to pull back the curtain on the business world and take the reader on the real entrepreneurial journey—bumps and all. No one gets to the top overnight without falling and making mistakes. He hopes to inspire and help others on their path by telling his stories.

Kurt is a  firm believer that business success is all about having the right people. During his career, he has been fortunate to work with hundreds of interesting companies. He hopes his book will inspire, challenge, and entertain you as you chart your course, wherever it may take you.

Kurt shares a bit of everything he had encountered in his business life, the inspiration behind his book, and much more. 

You can visit Kurt at www.beecavecapital.com, hirebetter.com via LinkedIn at www.linkedin.com/in/kurt-wilkin/, www.linkedin.com/company/hirebetter/ via Twitter at www.twitter.com/KurtWilkin, www.twitter.com/hirebetter and via email at kurt.wilkin@hirebetter.com.  

You can purchase his book from his website or from Amazon, at www.amazon.com/Whos-Your-Mike-No-Bullshit-Entrepreneurial/dp/1954020244.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Repeatable Systems

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Repeatable systems are a key element in growing and scaling a business.

Once the business is up and running, the founder should start to build repeatable systems.

Anything you do more than once should be documented.

The key steps should be written down and followed each time you do it.

This saves time and improves quality.

It also generates efficiency and consistency.

In a startup, you are not trying to do a thousand things.

Rather, you are trying to do ten things, one thousand times.

The sales process is a good example of using repeatable systems.

Consider this for your sales process:

Define your lead criteria.

Break the sales process down into stages for execution and forecasting.

Continue the process with customers to turn them into repeat customers.

Analyze the process continually to improve it.

By using repeatable processes you can grow your business more efficiently.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Start With Why

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

A key concept in aligning people’s motives is to start with the Why.

The Why represents the motives behind people’s actions and their purpose.

The How represents the methods or steps to get there.

The What represents the results or outcome to achieve.

To align the team in your startup, start with the Why -- why are we doing this?

The Why gives the team a common purpose and motivation behind it.

The Why helps you recruit new employees.

The Why helps you make decisions along the way.

It keeps you focused on your business and avoids distractions from competitors.

Great companies focus on the why first and then go into the what and how.

In raising funding show the investors your why and then go into the how and the what.

If you don’t have a Why statement, then set aside time to figure it out and then share it with others.

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Social Proof

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Social proof is the idea that people look at others to see what they did and then copy their actions.  

The need for social proof can be found throughout the startup world.

Customers will look to see if others have bought the product before they buy it.

Investors will look to see if other investors have invested before they jump in.

It’s one of the key points of influence. 

In fact, the term "social proof" was coined by Robert Cialdini in his book "Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion."

There are several types of social proof one can use.

Experts:  Look for those who have expertise in a specific field.

Display testimonials from experts on your website.

Users:  Those who are already familiar with the product or the company.

Show testimonials on social media from your current customers.

Certification:  Those who have achieved certification status.

Display the certification such as FDA compliance on your pitch slides to investors.

Close contacts:  Those you know well who have some opinion.

Foster word of mouth with your fundraising to influence others to consider investing in your business.

No investor wants to be the first investor and will look for social proof from others. 

 

Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding.

Let’s go startup something today.

_______________________________________________________

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Category:general -- posted at: 5:00am CDT

Gamification

Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing.

Gamification applies game-design techniques to applications outside of gaming.

Game techniques can make the application more engaging and productive.

Here are some gamification techniques to include in your application:

Establish flow in the software which is a combination of challenging and workable.

Break large tasks down into smaller ones that give the user a sense of accomplishment.

Create different levels with varying degrees of difficulty.

Let the user customize their workspace.

Provide rewards for accomplishing tasks.

Set up competitions so users can challenge themselves and each other.

Foster collaboration by setting up teams.

Use the story format where appropriate.

Unlock resources based on achievement or purchases.

Using these tools can generate more engagement and productivity by the user. 

Consider applying gamification to your software application.

 

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Direct download: Gamification_01.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 5:10am CDT