Highlights of episode four in the latest series of Dragons' Den.
Quote of the Episode: “You're a Dragon, I trust you” Layla Bennett, Hawksdrift Falconry
Idea 1:
Product: Hawksdrift Falconry - Falconry experience business.
Investment sought: £50,000 for 25 per cent
Handling: Her pitch was succinct and told the Dragons all they needed to know. Honest about need for advice in marketing.
Outcome: A small business that the Dragons felt they could not scale but Duncan saw an opportunity and made an offer to reach the required investment.
Verdict: Good pitch and solid business run by someone who has given their all, reaped the small rewards and now earned an offer from Duncan.
Idea 2
Product: Rotaball - Football on a rotating poll, recreational equipment.
Investment sought: £150,000 for 10 per cent
Handling: His children that performed the demonstration looked to be there under duress and the product seemed weak. Duncan was critical and Theo scathing, “Explain to me how company a selling a ball on a stick can be worth £1.5million.”
Outcome: Weak product and very little to back up his pitch with no written order confirmations. Peter Jones said he should get a “Reality check”
Verdict: Pitch poor, product poor
Idea 3
Product: Blooming High - a stackable plant pot product.
Investment sought: £50,000 for 15 per cent
Handling: A classic example of a hobbyist with a true passion and spotting a gap in a very niche market. The product needed to be less fussy and the business plan was leaky. Initial stock order was huge and now surplus stock needs selling. No distributors taking it on.
Outcome: No investment but some sound business advice from Duncan to help them push on the business (and shift all that existing stock!).
Verdict: Need a business partner to bring some focus to what is a useful niche product that has a patent. Catalogues and shopping channels are a likely source of custom.
Idea 4
Product: Lumacoustics and their ‘Your Wall’ - Indoor graffiti technology
Investment sought: £50,000 for 10 per cent
Handling: The product split the Dragons. Some could not see any potential. The inventors nearly talked themselves out of a deal but got there in the end.
Outcome: After playing hard to get they managed to secure a matched investment of £50,000 for 40 per cent between Deborah Meaden and Peter Jones.
Verdict: A great product that will do well unless the inventors talk themselves into trouble.
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Comments
I thought the Falconry business was really good! Not sure what the Rotaball designer was thinking when he came up with the idea and he should have also hired some actors because his children seemed to be very bored when they were demonstrating the invention. Also i don’t see the point in it as you could not play competitively like you could in Swingball.
Sean @ http://www.frontlinecom.co.uk/
Thought the programme was bit like 'a game of two halves'. I simply loved the falconry pitch. I could have sat and watched that young lady all night. The highlight for me was when in response to Duncan - "Are you going to accept my offer", she looked at him with those 'smoky' eyes, and softly said "Of course I am Duncan".
Then as if it couldn't get any better we had Yr Wall. This is an amazing product, and as i run an event management business, I was simply 'drooling' by the end. Have emailed those guys already this morning, to explore further.
Then I found the DD Extra by pressing my red button - takes me a while to catch-up!!
All in all a good night!
Thank you for your comment imageandprofile. This Series is offering up some gems. The art of pitching is something that our Falcon friend had nailed. Cool, calm and collected throughout.
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