OMAHA, Nebraska (July 1, 2024)—On Thursday, June 27, in the Wigton Heritage Center at UNMC, UNeMed hosted a panel discussion that focused on the ins and outs of creating a successful fund-raising round for an early-stage startup company.
Co-sponsored by IDEA -CTR, the event featured four experts with experience in starting companies, raising capital for or investing in startup companies.
The panel was composed of James Young, a serial entrepreneur; Scott Henderson of NMotion; Charlie Cuddy of MOVE Venture Capital; and Evan Luxon of Centese.
During the hour-long discussion, panelists talked about the importance of proving the innovation or technology at the center of a startup can actually work; knowing who are the potential customers; and simplifying the pitch so that it can be easily understood and repeated.
“If you already have a super complicated pitch deck, put it aside and start over,” Young said. “[An investment pitch] is not an educational seminar, it’s a sales pitch. Keep it simple.”
Henderson added: “The goal of the pitch is to get to the next conversation. Investment is a series of conversations.”
The panel also provided advice on milestones that founders should reach before they attempt to seek investors and financing; the critical elements of a good pitch; and additional advice about what to do after meeting with potential investors and partners.
Luxon is CEO and co-founder of Centese, Inc., a medical startup built around an improved chest drainage system that could improve patient outcomes following surgeries. In November, Centese announced the successful close of a $15 million Series B funding round.
Young is a serial entrepreneur and a co-founder of University Medical Devices, a startup built on the UNMC innovation, MicroWash. MicroWash is a solution to the uncomfortable and sometimes painful nasal swabs that gained notoriety during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Henderson is Managing Principal at NMotion, a Nebraska-based accelerator that invests in high-growth startup companies.
Cuddy co-founded MOVE, a pre-seed and seed venture capital firm focused on investing in Nebraska technology startup companies.
The panel was co-sponsored by the Great Plains IDeA-CTR, which provided lunch for attendees. Based at UNMC, the Great Plains IDeA-CTR—short for Institutional Development Award for Clinical and Translational Research—is a UNMC-based collaborative for nine major research organizations in Nebraska, Kansas, North Dakota and South Dakota.