Mastering Your Pitch: A Guide for Regulation D Syndication Sponsors - podcast episode cover

Mastering Your Pitch: A Guide for Regulation D Syndication Sponsors

Mar 18, 202415 minEp. 111
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Episode description

Raising funds for a Regulation D security can be a nerve-wracking process, however, with the right approach and mindset, it can be manageable. Start with a thorough understanding of your offering. Familiarize yourself with all relevant marketing materials, operating agreements, and underwriting. Avoid looking unprepared; if you don't know something, admit it and promise to find the relevant information. The Founder Investment Theory (FIT) is your primary sales tool. It's your story and your reason for talking to potential investors. If they buy into your FIT and trust you, they're likely to invest. Be aware of what your investor is looking for. Are they cash flow or appreciation driven? Be transparent and honest. Prepare materials such as slide decks to show your professionalism. Practice your pitch and understand the basic framework of securities rules. Showcase your team, follow up promptly, and be ready for rejection. Above all, embrace excitement over anxiety; it can greatly aid your performance and experience.

Read more about raising capital - Finding Investors for Real Estate Syndication and Private Equity Funds: https://www.moschettilaw.com/finding-investors-for-real-estate-syndication-and-private-equity-funds/

Read more about PPMs - What Is In A Private Placement Memorandum?: https://www.moschettilaw.com/private-placement-memorandum-attorney/

Moschetti Syndication Law Group is a boutique syndication law firm, serving small and growth-bound syndicators, as well as private equity firms. Our attorney, Tilden Moschetti, is determined to keep the firm’s ‘boutique’ size so we can tailor the services to each client’s unique needs without turning the firm into a faceless factory churning out private placement memorandums or passing unnecessary overhead expenses onto our clients. (As our client, you’ll only pay a fixed fee, so no surprises.) As for the client experience, we give real-time answers with Tilden Moschetti without making you book an official appointment or get passed along to associates or paralegals. We’ll work with your ambitions and overall vision to help you close the current deal and fill in that ‘missing’ piece – whatever you need – to keep adding more syndications to your portfolio. We keep syndicators syndicating (TM).

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#Syndication #PrivatePlacementMemorandum #PPM


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Also, please note, this video and any content from Moschetti Syndication Law Group, Tilden, or anyone affiliated with either or both, does not, and is not intended to, constitute legal advice; instead, all information, content, and materials available on this site are for general informational purposes only.  Information from these online sources may not constitute the most up-to-date legal or other information.

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Transcript

Your palms are sweaty, knees weak, arms heavy, what are you doing? You are about to make a pitch to an investor. And you're a little bit nervous. Well, these are some tips that should help you make that process of selling your Regulation D security a little bit easier I've been right there with you. I've been in your shoes about 10 years ago, I did my first deal. And I sat across from my first prospect to invest in my deal. Now what happened to that? He

didn't invest. That's not the point. I got back up on my feet pitched another person, and they invested a lot. So there you go. So these tips are here to help you hopefully, get over not only that anxiety, but kind of put it in context. How are you selling, because at the end of the day, we want to do a, we want to be a syndicator, or we want to be a fund manager. But a lot of the job also does involve selling no matter what you think about

selling and seller salespeople. You're still selling people. Yeah, there's a fear of rejection, there's this thing that happens in our guts. I don't know why. But somehow we get nervous by it. So let's go through some tips to make it the process a little bit easier. And my last tip is probably going to be for me, it's the most useful, it's like, wow, that's a big aha moment. And I hope it will be for you, too. But let's get started with with all these tips. So that first tip is know,

your offering. Gotta know your offering, because that's what's making you nervous, you're making you're nervous, you're gonna say something really ridiculous, like, No, you're never gonna get your money back. Or no, it says that you've got all this and that's you find out you didn't and then suddenly you look like a like a complete idiot. You got to know your

offering. So what does that mean? Read all the marketing material you've got because you don't want to be caught off guard, read the BBM read the operating agreement, you don't have to know every little legal nuance in there. But you got to know what it's doing. You got to know about the underwriting. I had a partner long ago, who every single time they would

pitch somebody, my phone would ring. And it was a question that was so obvious, if they had just spent a single time like looking at something they would have known the answer to, I didn't work with that person again. So don't do that. You got to know the offering. You gotta be or you just look like a complete idiot in front of everybody. So just know it. Little mistakes, fine. Just know it. And if you do make a mistake, or if you don't know something, just say it, just say, Oh, I made a

mistake there or oh, you know, I don't know that. Let me find out. And I'll check with you. And I'll get right back to, you know, something like that. Nobody, that's totally legitimate thing to do. So you'll feel a lot better. If you just know, you can make a little mistakes, you can make things just don't like, think you have to know everything, but try to

know everything. And if you don't admit it. Number two, highlight your fat founder investment theory is the most critical thing, it's the most critical sales tool that you have. This is your reason for talking to this person. You want them to buy into the story of your founder investment theory for them to invest. If they buy into the story, and they trust you, they will invest. If they don't invest, there's a mismatch between what they're looking for and your founder investment

theory. That's just not it's just, it's just not the right fit to use the same word, right? So it's not the same thing. And it's okay, if that happens, but highlight your fit. That is your crutch that is your best tool for selling. Plus, it's easier to remember, right? So it's easy to remember what your founders investment theory is your reason for doing it. The story behind it, it's harder to remember like new numbers. Number three, understand your investor. You got to know what they're looking

for. Are they driven by cash flow? Are they driven by appreciation? Do they want some crazy exciting thing? Or do they want something very safe and simple? Understand what they are? Find out what they've done before find out what they're investing in. Right? Find out what those things are. If there's somebody well known, then there's probably media about what they like and what they're you know, do Get to know that person before you get to know that person as much as you

can visit their LinkedIn page at the very least, why not? All right, next one is similar to what we're talking about. Be transparent. Be honest, tell people what the truth is, you know, little lies, they show up real quick, big lies, they show up even worse. So just be transparent. If you don't know something, say you don't know it. And then that you'll find

out and get right back to them. If there's a problem in your in your offering, if there's some big hairy problem with it, let people know what friend this is what it is, and fine and explain why it's still a good investment. Explain why it fits into your founder investment theory. Be transparent. Prepare materials. Materials are a great crutch. So if you got a slide deck, great, that's a great crutch is a great thing to weigh to remember where you're at. It's, it's one of the ways to

really be prepared and show up like a professional. I've talked about that a lot on these videos, is showing up like a professional shows the them that you are to be trusted. It shows your your prospect hey, look, I know what I'm doing here, I'm a pro, you're in safe hands. This is why it's good for you want to come along for the ride. You're welcome to practice. Practice pitching, gets it get your spouse, your, your dog, your

anybody and just practice pitching it to them. The more you repeat it, the more the words that are a little bit complicated, not the words that that you have a problem pronouncing and like kind of thing, but how they all fit together in the story, it comes together in a more natural way. So practice it is just practice it five, six times, practice it in the car, hey, what am I what bla bla bla bla bla bla, right.

So practice. Next, discuss the framework you need to know a little bit about securities rules, you need to know if it's a 506 b offering or a 506 C offering if it's under Regulation D if you can have only accredited investors and if they're accredited that they need to be verified or not. Whatever those things are, you need to know what those are. You don't need to know the nuances of it. You don't need to know the intricacies and what went wrong in 1935. And how we don't

need to know those things. But you need to know the basic framework that allows you to do this. So that way, if it comes up great, or if there's any, any reason for you not to be confident in talking to them, you need to know what those are, so you can feel comfortable. Next, this is a biggie. Showcase your team. Highlight all the people that are working for you. They're the people that you're also leaning on. You're leaning

on your experience on your fit, but also your team. So why your team is the best people to earn the trust of your investors money. It's absolutely critical. external parties are common to us too. So property managers, a lot of people include me when they hire me in their materials as well. It's fine with me. You know, as long as they don't say Tilden Moschetti said, this is an amazing deal. And you have to invest it, which I don't say. So

showcase your team. Follow up promptly. And often. So let people know that you'll be following up and then do follow up. It shows that you're a professional. But it also makes sure you stay top of mind and are right there. Be prepared for rejection my first pitch rejection, there's other videos about that. It's actually the development of the federal investment theory was came a lot from that first rejection. So good things happen out of out of rejection. And you know what, it wasn't really a

rejection. It was very nice. You didn't say you're a jerk get out of here. It just says that's just not for me. Which is what 99.999% Of the people that you're talking to are and the ones that are the ones that are real jerks to you. You don't want them in your investment anyway, so who cares about that? All right, and now the big important one that I want to talk about. So we're gonna switch back to full screen mode here. Here's the big lesson too. So as listening to a podcast

with Dr. Ian Robertson. So Dr. Ian Robertson is a neuro neuroscientist. He is a clinical psychologist. And what he does is he studies the brain. And really his memory of interest is where that brain that structural piece meets with the emotional part, or the mind part, right where that that crosses the line. And he was talking about a very interesting study by Alison Brooks out of Pittsburgh University, and Alison Brooks

had an idea. So it's been known for quite a while that the emotions of fear, anger, anxiety, and excitement and happiness, extreme happiness, all have exactly the same physiological mechanisms. So you can look at like an EKG, you can look at brainwave patterns, and they'll look exactly identical, whether they're angry, or they're happy, whether they're excited, or they're anxious, right, there's two those

different things. So what Allison Brooks did is she did a study where she created and this sounds like a torture study to me. But in this study, she puts people up on stage. And she gives them a very, very hard math problem that they have to solve in their heads in the audience, is very critical group of people. So they're actually the researchers, but they're trained to be very, very kind of mean and critical. Like, you know, making mistakes is not allowed, all those sorts of

things. Now, that certainly makes people will make somebody anxious, because you don't want to look like an idiot in front of all these people. You know, they wanted to put it make it even worse, put the girlfriend in the audience too. And so now they really have to do it, oh, my God, they're gonna be so nervous. Now, to make it worse, right behind them displayed is their EKG. So their heart rate is being displayed to the whole

audience to make it just like the stato fear thing, right. So what they did is they had the people come up, they would give them the math problem. And then they would the, the participant would say, either, I'm very anxious about this, and then start working on solving the problem. Or they'd say, I'm very excited about this. Turns out the people who say that they're very excited, solved it much, much, much faster, and had a much more pleasurable time than the people that said, I'm very

anxious about it. Now, nothing else was different. The math problems were the same, the level of scary stuff out there was exactly the same. The only difference was how they labeled it vocally to themselves. So when you are about to do your

presentation, be excited. It's an exciting time. I mean, when you have a prospect now in front of you, who you're either going to learn from, you're either going to learn about how to pitch from right, that's just like my first mistake, my first pitch, I learned a lot from it, I developed a whole theory of investing out of it. That's what comes out of failure. Not something really bad. So be excited, because you're either gonna walk away with money, or you're gonna walk away with a

great lesson. Now, my name is Tilden, Moschetti. I am a syndication attorney with the Moschetti syndication Law Group. What we do is we help syndicators, investment funds, things like that, to raise money by helping them with their legal

documents. So we do the PPM the operating agreements, subscription agreement questionnaire, but beyond that, I'm also there as a consultant, I need my clients to be successful, I really, really want them to be successful, not only because they keep hiring me, but I think that's how I can add good and value to this world. So it's very important me that they're successful. And if I can do that, by contributing

to their success, that's fantastic. I love when my clients call me and say, we just closed, we just finalized this deal. We raised these investors, you know, are they we've closed our deal out, it's been fun, we return their money, and we made them more than than we thought we would. I love those stories. It's great. It fills me up. So that's why we make sure that we give the advice. If you take it fantastic. If you don't take it, that's great too. It's up to you. But what we do is make sure

that you have that information. So again Tilden Moschetti Moschetti syndication Law Group, visit our webpage if we think there's a chance we can help you just give us a call setting up an appointment, and we'll go through what you're working on.

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