Barbara Corcoran is a star investor on ABC's hit show Shark Tank with a $5 billion real estate business. As a "Shark" she has invested in twenty-two companies and shepherded them to success, including Mr. Tod's Pie Factory. Founded in 2002 by African American chef Tod Wilson, the New Jersey-based company, with locations in Somerset and New Brunswick, specializes in making personal size pies and other baked goods. Now the real estate mogul and legendary investor is giving thousands of aspiring and early-stage entrepreneurs from around the world the opportunity to work with her to perfect their pitch. "Throughout my many years of running businesses, I have been fortunate to experience success both as an entrepreneur and investor. I've learned that some people are well suited to be entrepreneurs, and others aren't. Unfortunately, in most cases, it takes a lot of time, energy, and money to find out on which side of that coin you fall,†Corcoran explains as to what inspired her to offer an online course through the global learning community Skillshare. Entitled The Fundamentals of Entrepreneurship: Pitching Your Business and Yourself, it includes eight video lessons. The class is designed for aspiring and existing entrepreneurs. Corcoran wants to help entrepreneurs to better position their businesses for success. "By the end of the eight-class series "there should be no doubt in anyone's head about whether or not they will make a good entrepreneur,†Corcoran says on the course's website landing page. In addition to a lifetime of business insights for just $19, the class includes the opportunity for students to submit a one-minute business pitch as their final project. Out of the 20 most upvoted video pitches submitted before May 14, Corcoran will select her favorite and give the winner personalized advice in a 30-minute, one-on-one video mentoring session, as well as share the pitch throughout her social media networks for worldwide exposure. When it comes to Shark Tank, it is research and marketing facts and figures that attract the sharks and determine whether they bite. Corcoran shared with BLACK ENTERPRISE some of her tips on hooking investors. RELATED: Shark Tank Open Casting Call at the 2014 Black Enterprise You Need Passion. "My whole focus is on trying to seize up the entrepreneur,†she says. "I am looking at how much wild enthusiasm do they genuinely have for their product. You can't fake passion.†She adds, "does this person have the personality to sell the products and the endurance to weather insults and rejections?†Look The Part. How you look, the way you speak, and what information you leave out during a pitch can sink the deal. Beyond the obvious, which is you should be well groomed, professionally dressed, and make direct eye contact. Be careful not to wring your hands or place them in your pockets. "A certain level of nervousness is expected but if you constantly shift on your feet this sends a signal that maybe you are hiding something,†Corcoran explains. Please Don't Ramble. The language you use to convey your concept ought to be concise. "Communicate clearly here's my idea, this is my market, here's what distinguishes me from my competition, this is why it will be a financial success, and here's why you should invest in it," Corcoran adds. Rambling on about their technology or business rather than the financial opportunity is a huge and common mistake. Know Your Industry. Be prepared to answer questions about actual sales or anticipated orders, revenues, profitability and margins for your industry, advises Corcoran. If you have a working prototype, show it to investors so they can see how it could actually work. If you can demonstrate your product or hand out product samples that's a plus. Don't Overvalue Company. A big mistake that budding entrepreneurs make is that their valuation is too high. "You can't price your business on potential," says Corcoran. "You might believe in it, but it's having actual orders that make investors believe in it. No sales equals no value to an investor." Some other common mistakes or reasons that cause investors to reject a deal are the management team is too thin or inexperienced, insufficient growth potential, and indebtedness–the entrepreneur owes a lot of money. Provide Exit Strategy. Investors are not lifetime partners. "Two thirds of all the people that have ever pitched to me don't show me how I am going to make money,†says Corcoran. If you say sales revenues, you have put yourself out of the game. "What do you think we do with the profits; we put them back into the business to meet greater demand,†she adds. On average, most angel investments take seven to eight years to reach an exit point where the businesses are sold to another company or go public. Seal The Deal. Getting an offer isn't the same as sealing the deal. Negotiating the terms of a deal will always be tricky, and disagreements about operations can be difficult to hammer out. "About 66% of angel investments fail to return any money at all. Investors constantly have potential deals on their plate," says Corcoran, so, the longer days are spent in closing the deal the less likely it will get done. ABC's Shark Tank is holding an Open Call at the 2014 Black Enterprise Entrepreneurs Conference + Expo hosted by Nationwide Insurance on May 16th at the Hyatt Regency Columbus, Ohio. Entrepreneurs will be given the opportunity to do a 1-minute pitch of their business/product/idea to a member of the Casting Team–just like they would as if they were on the show. RELATED: How Swimming in the Shark Tank Helped This Entrepreneur Land Financing Fundamentals of Entrepreneurship: Pitching Your Business and Yourself An Online Skillshare Class by Barbara Corcoran