really great information in terms of your ask and some of the mile stones you ve reached and also the market size, but i probably would have wanted to hear a little bit more about what you re using the money for, and how you re defending yourself against competition. so 7 and 7. great feedback. this is what alicia does for a living. yeah. so i gave your product a 9. and i gave your pitch an 8. on the product side, i have a 4 1/2-year-old daughter who loves arts and crafts, she would be obsessed with this. as a dad, i want my kids to learn how to do well. from a pitch perspective, sometimes when you deal with charity and capitalism, it is a little bit like oil and water. so somehow if you can bridge the gap between the two, and give the investor the context of how to relate that to other businesses that have succeeded there, that would be helpful. so, for example, toms for the shoes and state bags is another example. if you weave that into your pitch, you can kind of bridge the ga
pitch, and a 6 for the product. i think you were great. i think you covered all of the major points, you had enthusiasm. i think maybe you know, if you could speak a bit more about the competition in the pitch that would be helpful. i think on the product side i do see the need for this. i think that there is also a lot of other technology already on the marketplace and so if you could maybe articulate more clearly why it is this is different and safe and not hackable and i think that would go a long way. and those are kind of related, the 8 and the 6. taunia. i gave you an 8 on the product and 9 on the pitch. i ll talk about the product. i agree it sounds like i was there with you, i was like i didn t know i was nervous about that but i am now that you the elme about it. it sounds like something that is necessary and anything which really starts to leverage technology i think has a great runway. i would have liked to have known a little more detail about how you are pulling off th
my husband to send them home this would be good for me. i think i could get you one. let s start. i gave her an eight for the pitch and a six for the product. i think you were great. i think you covered all the major points, you had enthusiasm. i think maybe if you could speak a little bit more about the competition in their pitch that would be helpful. i think on the product side i do see the need for this. i think this there is also a lot of other technology already on the marketplace and so if you could maybe articulate more clearly why it is that this is different and safe and not hackable and i think that would go a long way. perfect. those are related, the eight and the six there. tanya? i gave you an eight on the product and a nine on the pitch. i ll talk about the product. i didn t know i was nervous about it but i am now that you talk about it. anything which starts technology
don t know why you are going low tech instead of high tech wearables. people have their habits. and so i m just not convinced based on what you have here that this is going to actually change the habit of putting on the lotion. there wasn t enough in there for me on the product side, and then the same thing on the pitch side. you talked about the sales, but you didn t tell me what the scope of those sales were. you talked about maybe a patent, but what s the pa tent for, and is it protected. so it s very possible that you could get those numbers way up but based on the information i have, i had to go honestly and say that s where i stood. reeva. i m much more positive. that was sort of obvious. tiny numbers. i think the product is a really smart idea. difference carol lives in chicago, i live in southern california. you are constantly exposed to the sun. i don t think about it. i don t really you know, we have
understand enough about the differentiation. i don t know if it s patented. i don t know why you re going low tech instead of high-tech wearables. you know, people have their habits. and so i m just not convinced based on what you have here that this is going to actually change the habit of putting on the lotion. there just wasn t enough in there for me. on the product side. then the same thing on the pitch side. you talked about the sales, but you didn t tell me what the scope of those sales were. you talked about maybe a patent, but what s the patent for and is it really protected? so it s very possible that you could get those numbers way up, but based on the information i have, i had to go honestly and say that s where i stood. thank you. all right. riva? i m much more positive. we know that. that was sort of obviously, right? teeny tiny numbers. i think it s a good idea. i live in southern california.