Quote from Moneyball:
It's pretty simple, actually. Step 1: Raise the money Step 2: retain the money. Step 1 is all about sales, and you're going to have to be one hell of a salesman to convince people to give you their money based on backtesting. Step 2 is about performance and customer service.
I appreciate that and sense you've been through the drill before. I know it won't be easy, ie step 1, and that's why I was leaning towards an incubator fund initially.
My system is quite simple and is not based on results that are arbitrary. I.e., for instance, I have a list of equities that have done very well over the past 10 years. But I'd be a complete idiot to assume that they'll do just as well in the future and I couldn't convince anyone otherwise. So I'm not planning on using that list and my model isn't about that anyway.
My model is based on a very simple methodology that I believe will be just as successful in the future as in the past, unless the entire world-economy shits the bed. Its not about individual stocks or bonds but more about how to keep that mixture in balance to achieve conservative, above average returns. And I believe my back-testing is a reasonable comparison to other results.
I appreciate you stressing the importance of selling this system...you can see I'm only in the early stages of doing that and I'll have to spend as much time developing my plan as my model.