How can you differ or understand when you are giving off too much information about your business, your product or your idea. Does it come with experience to gain that "realization trait" or it is something which we should already know?
My experience with the different aspects of confidentiality ranges from military/government, through corporate R&D (at IBM Research) and as an executive in the private sector (as CEO and founder of a tech company).
Of course, if the disclosure of any details could do harm for anyone outside yourself or your organization (as is the case in government applications) - then the information should not be disclosed.
If the information is an idea, my experience has been that people are too worried about sharing ideas. I've had many situations where I disclosed the details of my idea in full, to people who have the resources to compete with it against me if they wanted, and I have never had anyone do that. To make an idea reality you have a thorough mental image in your mind of what the final product would look like, and chances are only you have that image at the necessary level of detail.
Regarding specific product information (when it is not publicly available) or quantitative business data (like forecasts): I have always been very careful with those, and only disclosed after signing an NDA. I also viewed the disclosure as a point of no return in the relationship, and assessed how much I personally trust the person I share the information with.
I'd be glad to chat further and provide more input based on the specifics of your debate.
-- Ran
Answered 11 years ago
If you talk to someone and they leave feeling like they know exactly what to do and how to do it, you gave them too much. To quote The Joker ' If you're good at something, never do it for free'
Even if it takes you 30 minutes to explain, it probably took hours upon hours to figure out. Time is money.
Answered 11 years ago
Presentation is the second step , plan or preparation is the first step. Any person you meet , even for a sudden meeting in next 5 or 10 minutes , take few minutes to answer these 2 questions for yourself,
1. what is this persons background ?
2. what can i expect from him ?
Now you have framed the context and automatically your presentation will fit into it.
All the best !!
t
Answered 11 years ago
Access 20,000+ Startup Experts, 650+ masterclass videos, 1,000+ in-depth guides, and all the software tools you need to launch and grow quickly.
Already a member? Sign in