The price of success is hard work, dedication to the job at hand, and the determination that whether we win or lose, we have applied the best of ourselves to the task at hand. — Vince Lombardi

I recently served as a judge on Culture Shift 3, a hackathon by Co-Creation Hub in collaboration with The British Council. The hackathon pairs existing creative companies with IT geeks to produce new products that leverage technology. (You can read an excellent write-up about the competition here).

british council cchub culture shift

It was interesting to be on the other side of the table for a change having been on the winning team at Nigeria’s first Startup Weekend. I identified with the incredible talent, work, sacrifice and trepidation of the participants.

I found the model of this particular hackathon (Culture Shift 3) to be very intriguing. The competition focused on existing businesses who would continue to operate whether or not they won the top prizes of N800,000, N500,000 and N300,000. The 6 finalists who battled for the top 3 slots were:

Mainframe Film and Television Productions
Chocolate City
Taé 
Parresia Publishers
Nigerian Film Corporation and
Fetch Strategic Insight & Co.

The three winners were:

Mainframe Film and Television Productions
Parresia Publishers and
Fetch Strategic Insight & Co.

During the competition, I made a couple of observations about an enterprise’s ability to attract funding and do well at hackathons. I will share them here.

10 Ways to Win a Hackathon

1. Maturity matters: Venture funders don’t care if you’re 19 or 50 years old. What they do care about is that you are mature, responsible and can be trusted with money. Never come off as naive, unserious and a waste of time and money. This becomes clear in the seriousness and quality of your pitch presentation.

2. Commitment matters: Funders are impressed when you’ve spent years building your idea or enterprise and have invested your own resources. You must demonstrate track record and your prototype should have finesse. Remember, there’s a reason entrepreneurs begin in school. After (if) they graduate, they already have years of experience tucked under their belts. Volunteering/internship is another great way to gain invaluable experience doing what you love.

3. Passion matters: Be in love with your product. If you don’t love it, you can’t sell it convincingly.

4. Know your competition: You come off as someone who’s building pies in the sky when you are unaware of obvious competitors and have no strategies to beat them.

5. Do your research: Data is invaluable. There’s always a context to every product. Are you aware of industry trends, customer needs and the potential for growth of your product?

6. Tell stories: The best pitches are personal, illustrative, inspiring and entertaining. Instead of relying solely on a PowerPoint deck, tell a story.

7. Show me the money: Be very clear about how your product will make money and from where. Remember many funders don’t speak “technicalese”. They think in terms of numbers. Focus on the customer experience and the business case, not on the finer points of technology.

8. Branding matters: No matter how brilliant your product idea is, if it’s ugly and poorly presented, few will want to buy it or fund it. Your grasp of branding assures funders that you have what it takes to gain advantage in a highly competitive world and possess that indefinable ingredient ‘x’ of the world’s greatest products.

9. Team dynamics are important: Ensure you have the best people on your team and make it clear what each person’s specialisation is. It may be in your interest to have the most charismatic person pitch your idea while the technical people answer questions. Also ensure that at least one person is committed to driving the enterprise (and possibly quitting his/her day job to do so) should your team win the hackathon.

10. You matter: Ultimately, the greatest risk in an enterprise is the entrepreneur himself/herself. You must inspire confidence in your abilities and staying power. The only way to do this is with your words and presentation.

I’m very impressed with the collaboration between Co-Creation Hub and The British Council as well as the fledgling enterprise development ecosystem in Nigeria. I look forward to great things to come.

This piece originally appeared on Subomi’s blog.

Photo Credit: HighEdWeb via Compfight cc

Subomi Plumptre Author

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