- The founders of sock company Bombas appeared on "Shark Tank" in 2014.
- They landed a deal with Daymond John and, in 2017, Bombas brought in nearly $50 million in revenue.
- To prepare, the founders rehearsed their answers to all potential questions — and follow-up questions — that the Sharks might ask.
"If you over-prepare, you're going to do fine."
So said Randy Goldberg, cofounder of sock company Bombas.
In 2014, Goldberg and his cofounder, David Heath, appeared on "Shark Tank," ultimately landing a deal with Daymond John: $200,000 in exchange for 17.5% of their company, plus the financing of the inventory.
Goldberg and Heath told Business Insider that they prepared for their appearance by compiling a spreadsheet with close to 300 questions that the Sharks had asked entrepreneurs on previous episodes. Over and over again, Goldberg and Heath rehearsed their answers to these questions.
But they didn't stop there — they also figured out which follow-up questions the Sharks might ask, and simulated how those conversations would play out.
"We would say, 'Well, OK. This response leaves this question open,'" Heath said. "So you want to then be on the defensive if they come back and ask it this way."
Heath added that "a big part of our strategy was trying to control the narrative, and control which line and direction the questioning would take based on our responses."
To ensure that their time in the tank went smoothly, the founders also broke down exactly which types of questions each person would answer.
All that preparation helped them stay calm when Kevin O'Leary (a.k.a. "Mr. Wonderful") called them "sock cockroaches," when Lori Greiner said she didn't like that they planned to use their investment money to hire more people, and when Mark Cuban said their sales shouldn't be plateauing.
Today, Bombas is one of the biggest "Shark Tank" successes: Heath told Business Insider's Richard Feloni that the company had been profitable since 2016 and brought in "just under $50 million" in revenue in 2017.
John told Feloni that Bombas was his best investment, largely because the company's social mission — donating socks to homeless shelters — is also good for business.
Bombas might not have landed the deal with John in the first place if they hadn't been so well-rehearsed.
"Even if you're talking about questions that you didn't specifically work on," Goldberg said, "the fact that you prepared so many other things gives you the confidence to feel like you can answer anything."
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