Gestures increase entrepreneurs’ likelihood of securing investment

Hand gestures

Entrepreneurs who use skilled hand gestures when pitching to investors are more likely to secure funding than those who don’t, according to new research.

Start-up founders who use ideational gestures when pitching can trigger mental imagery in the minds of potential investors about how their product or service is used, making the venture more concrete and easier to understand.

This can increase the likelihood of an investor backing their business by an average of 12 per cent, according to the study.

Researchers examined what makes a successful business pitch and what types of language and gestures could be adopted by entrepreneurs to convince investors to support their ventures.

They found that an entrepreneur’s ability to paint mental imagery in the minds of potential investors plays a key role in guaranteeing investment. Combining complex gestures about the product or business with simpler ‘beat’ gestures that emphasise key parts of a pitch was found to be a highly effective strategy.

The researchers first studied entrepreneurs as they pitched to seasoned investors at a regional technology investment forum in the North of England. Technology entrepreneurs are more likely to face challenges when communicating their ideas to investors due to the complexity of their businesses.

They observed significant variation in how entrepreneurs used speech and gestures.  They found that entrepreneurs used four main strategies when pitching: a ‘literal’ approach, a technical description that involves little figurative speech and little use of gestures; a ‘rhetorical’ approach, using considerable figurative speech to explain the venture but with little gesturing; a ‘demonstrative’ approach, which involves little  figurative speech but relies on an animated delivery through the repetitive use of gestures; and an ‘integrative’ approach, which features a high level of both figurative speech and gestures.

In a subsequent experiment using video pitches with 124 experienced investors, the researchers found that entrepreneurs who combined ideational gestures that symbolise parts of their business, for example its growth, and product, such as how it works, with beat gestures that signify certain aspects of speech were better able to convey investment rationale to potential investors.

Dr Mark Healey, senior lecturer in strategic management at Alliance Manchester Business School and a member of the research team, said: “Entrepreneurs pitching their businesses typically have only between five and 10 minutes to impress and convince investors why they deserve financial backing.

“This short timeframe makes it even more important to ensure they’ve persuaded and communicated clearly what makes their business deserving of investment. The prevailing view is that the words and stories entrepreneurs choose matter and that body language helps them communicate their passion. We found that skilled gesturing not only matters more than we thought, but that it does much more than make entrepreneurs seem passionate – it also helps them communicate important ideas about how their products and businesses work.

“This is the first study of its kind that really delves into the impact of using certain gestures during a pitch. A 12 per cent increase in the likelihood of securing an investment is significant and underlines why entrepreneurs should focus on their presenting skills as well as their verbal messaging.”

The research was conducted by Alliance Manchester Business School in partnership with Emlyon Business School in France and Erasmus University in the Netherlands.