Monica Williams wants to revolutionize the period experience for tweens. With $5 million in sales in just two years, she’s on her way. Now she wants to raise venture to scale her bootstrapped company. Will Monica get to pitch the big vision for RedDrop or will investors write her off from the start? Featuring investors Elizabeth Yin, Charles Hudson, Beck Bamberger, Pascal Unger and Mac Conwell. ... Watch the RedDrop pitch on YouTube @thepitchshow To invest with the VCs on the show, join our investor community at thepitch.fund Founders can apply to pitch at our next recording event in San Francisco this June. No intro required, just go to pitch.show/apply Superfans can join The Pitch UNCUT and get early access to unedited versions of all ten pitches on season 11. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The pitch two.
So we ran the numbers and surprise, surprise, some of the biggest successes from our show so far.
They're not software companies, they're consumer product companies.
Ant Flo, a feminine hygiene company, pitched on our show in 2017.
They recently raised an $8.5 million series.
A fight camp, a consumer hardware company that we met in 2016.
They're worth hundreds of millions now.
And more recently on our show, a little startup called Pepper.
You've probably seen their ads.
They make bras specializing in small cup sizes.
They're doing very well.
So well that we're not allowed to tell you.
And yet, most VC's still don't invest in consumer products.
And I've made it my mission to show them they're wrong.
When we met today's founder Monica Williams, we saw the makings of another consumer success success story.
Now she just has to convince the five VC's on our show.
Will a consumer product made just for tweens become a billion dollar brand?
Or will it stay tweeny tiny, I'm Josh Mucchio.
Welcome to the pitch where real founders pitch real investors for real money.
Let's meet the investors.