时间:2024-11-22 00:23:00 来源:网络整理编辑:探索
You’ve likely heard of an elevator pitch, but have you heard of an ice hole pitch? SEE ALSO:Ev
You’ve likely heard of an elevator pitch, but have you heard of an ice hole pitch?
SEE ALSO:Everything you need to understand the Uber-Waymo legal battlePolar Bear Pitching, as it’s called, is perhaps the most extreme form of startup pitch competitions. Participants withstand snow, ice, and sub-zero temperatures for an opportunity to win €10,000, among other prizes. There is no time limit, but there is one catch: Entrepreneurs must stand waist-deep in the Baltic Sea for the duration of their pitches. Talk about motivation to keep it short.
Russian entrepreneurs from Tusion keep it professional in the ice hole.Credit: henri luomaInvestor panellsts showcase emoji cards as quick reactions to the startup pitches.Credit: henri luomaThis week, entrepreneurs from eight countries made their way to Oulu, Finland, home of Polar Bear Pitching. For those unable to bundle up and watch IRL, the event was broadcast locally and livestreamedworldwide.
Thirty participating teams hailed from Estonia, Finland, France, Ireland, Latvia, Norway, Russia, and Vietnam. Each went through an application process, wherein six teams were shortlisted as finalists by an investor jury. All other teams that did not make the shortlist pitched in semi-finals on February 6.
Polar Bear Pitching Founder Mia Kemppaalasays the idea came to her at the end of 2013, after Finland witnessed the rapid downfallof its largest employer and technology giant, Nokia, once the largest smartphone manufacturer in the world. The company cut thousands of jobs, eventually selling its mobile businessto Microsoft for $7.2 billion, only to see that division shut downin 2014.
Co-host Jason Brower as "J-Bear" keeps the show exciting.Credit: HENRI LUOMAThe event was projected on the Oulu City Theater.Credit: HENRI LUOMANokia’s plight put a damper on Finnish morale. “We were in an ice hole,” says Kemppaala. What made it worse was that local engineers, though hungry to innovate, had an issue cutting out technical jargon and explaining their ideas to average consumers. Seeing the economic impact in Oulu — where one of three Finnish Nokia factories was hit hard — inspired Kemppaala to think of a way to help entrepreneurs market themselves and attract investment, all with local flair.
That’s when the concept of Polar Bear Pitching blossomed. “What if we put startup founders in an ice hole?” Kemppaala thought at the time. “They would become better presenters and be forced to get to the point!”
The idea is remarkably local in concept. Finland is the birthplace of ice swimming, a hobby popular among those looking for a post-swim energy boost. Finland, too, is one of the coldest countriesin the world — a winter wonderland in February, when the now annual Polar Bear Pitching event takes place.
The record for longest pitch is four minutes, 53 seconds. Most of the pitches this year were under two minutes in length. Try getting consistent concision like that on a warm, inviting stage!
This year pitches were judged by a panel of Finnish and international investors from DFJ Dragon Fund, 01 Ventures, and Icebreaker VC, among others. Three teams prevailed as winners, all with clearly defined problem statements, promising solutions, market potential, and early traction:
Artisun: An Estonia-based greenhouse optimization startup that offers an LED-based, software-powered system to optimize plant yield and decrease costs and energy consumption
Cast Print: A Latvian company that produces lightweight, 3D-printed, and waterproof medical casts to replace the itchy, bulky plaster casts currently used for healing broken bones
Cotio: A Finnish return service for restricted baggage items confiscated at airport security checkpoints — such as valuable pocket knives, bottles of wine, or sharp/bulky media equipment
Grand prize winner Tatsiana Zaretskaya, co-founder and CEO of Artisun, says she diligently prepared her pitch leading up to the competition, but did not prepare for the mind-shivering physical challenge of standing in ice water.
“Semi-finals was my first time to go into the ice water,” Zaretskaya says. “I thought it would be much worse. Yesterday [at semi-finals] it went very easily, but today [at finals], I was very stressed. My heart rate was reading 170 beats per minute.”
Zaretskaya was presented with a €10,000 cheque, and she — as well as winners from Cast Print and Cotio — also won a trip to Nanjing, billed as the “Silicon Valley of China,” and a serving plate by Finnish home goods brand Nikama. Zaretskaya was also awarded a Finnish-crafted longboard by Jalla Board.
The ice hole was created by sawing through multiple feet of ice atop the frozen Baltic Sea.Credit: henri luomaBetween semi-finals and finals, accumulated ice had to be removed from the hole, as it had frozen over again.Credit: HENRI LUOMATo date, Artisun has indexed data for optimally growing three types of plants. Zaretskaya plans to use the €10,000 prize money to research optimal conditions for more plants. In the coming year, the company will also invest in creating personal kits and testing with large U.S.-based greenhouses.
Far from being a gimmick, participants, investors, and organizers alike agree that Polar Bear Pitching is a great place to start a snowball effect towards investment.
“It’s very democratic,” says investor and entrepreneur Riku Asikainen— one of the co-founders of the Finnish Business Angel Network, which invested €53 million in 324 startups in 2016. He has been a returning judge with Polar Bear Pitching since year one. “Any business conference would benefit from having people talking from an ice hole only,” he laughs. “It keeps the discussions concise and honest. I love the concept.”
Markus “Black Raven” Vainionpää the first Air Guitar World Champion performs in the opening ceremony.Credit: HENRI LUOMAFinnish Minister of the Interior Kai Mykkänen walks the red carpet in insulated boots to take the plunge at Polar Bear Pitching.Credit: HENRI LUOMAAs for the investment potential of the startups presented? “No investor is going to write a cheque right away, but a good pitch is the first step," Asikainen says. "All of the investors liked the winning startup [Artisun] today, for example. That’s the best thing you can do at a pitching event: Get me excited and make me want to hear more.”
The first Polar Bear Pitching event took place in February 2014 with 30 startups — the winning pitch was delivered by co-founder, then-CEO, and present-day board member Tommi Uhariof Finnish-based global connectivity company Uros. Founded in 2011, the company now boasts eight international offices and its mobile services are available in more than 100 countries. In 2016, it increased revenues from €3.5 million to €43 million. Not bad for pitching in an ice hole just two years prior.
Pain tracking startup Kipuwex takes the stage in the ice hole.Credit: HENRI LUOMAThe entrepreneur behind Cotio daringly submerges himself to the shoulders.Credit: HENRI LUOMANext year’s Polar Bear Pitching event is scheduled for February 27-28, 2019. Until then, Finland has one more crazy pitch competition idea coming up: Ski Lift Pitch, where founders pitch their ideas to investors in a ski lift. Also home of the Air Guitar World Championship, who knows what crazy competition this country will come up with next?
Photos courtesy of Henri Luoma Photography; videos courtesy of Saha Prod, Kuulu, and VisitFinland
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