Chris and I had a fantastic time at the Pitch @ Palace event last night, hosted by HRH The Duke of York. It was a huge opportunity to present what we do, and the response from the guests, and the other entrepreneurs was brilliant.
The setting was decidedly fancy, and we were pleasantly surprised to discover that photography was allowed, so we took the odd selfie, of course.
After soundcheck for our pitch, we had time to chat about our model of Tower Bridge, with guests to the event. The enthusiasm and interest around what we had made was very heartening – when you work with 3D printing every day, it’s easy to forget what an incredible technology it is.
Then it was time for the pitches. The entrepreneurs were ushered into the throne room (yes, with an actual, real-life throne in it), to watch the stream from the main room. After a quick, live Skype call to Princess Eugenie, where the guests sang happy birthday, it was onto business. We’d be lying if we said we weren’t nervous by this point, despite having pitched to the likes of Richard Branson (and indeed the Duke of York, in the Pitch @ Palace heats). Everyone was also conscious of the danger of overrunning our three-minute time limit, as there was a trumpeter from the Scots Guards on standby to drown you out if you went over.
Before we knew it, Chris was mic’d up, and going onstage to give the pitch. I was set to walk on towards the end, carrying our Tower Bridge model. You may all think Chris had the harder job, memorising a 3-minute pitch, to be delivered to distinguished guests, but he didn’t have to walk onto a stage and not drop a moving model of a bridge. Suffice to say, I smashed it (that is to say, I did well – I didn’t smash the bridge).
After the pitch, we were quizzed by David Rowan of Wired Magazine. He asked an interesting question, about whether it’s possible to build a global brand, when you don’t make your own hardware. We think it is. It’s vital our content works on as many 3D printers as possible – film studios don’t build their own cinemas, Minecraft runs on just about any computer, and record labels don’t need to develop their own hardware. It’s all about the content.
Relieved the pitch was done, we retired to an adjoining room, to catch up on our exploding Twitter feed. It just so happened that the Duke himself was passing through, so we took the opportunity to present him with the 3D-printed version of the Pitch @ Palace logo we’d brought along. HRH seemed delighted, and there then followed a discussion about whether you could make a cookie cutter from it, and how you pronounce Nice biscuits. If this hadn’t already been one of the most surreal days at work of my career, it was now.
So, despite the fact we didn’t win, we left the palace with a huge sense of excitement and pride, at everything that had transpired. Thanks to HRH’s support team for organising an excellent event, and congratulations to Jukedeck, Grabble and OpenDesk for winning.