Venture Capital Overview
Venture Capital Overview
Venture Capital Overview
Meeting - 12 Reasons
Table of Contents
1. Team – How do we know your team is excellent?
4. Business model – How do you make money? Who pays? What are the margins?
8. Traction – What are the traction metrics that show what you have achieved so far?
10. Fundraising History – Who have you raised from, how much, and when?
11. Fit – What about this particular investor (or firm) makes you interested in meeting with
them?
12. Referrer – Who introduced you to the VC?
Ann Miura-Ko of Floodgate, on the other hand, emphasizes the importance of having someone
on the founding team who is rigorous and competent not only with overseeing product, but also
with product marketing.
For enterprise startups in particular, you really have to know not only what a customer wants to
buy, but also what the appropriate pricing strategy is and how your product integrates with
others. Therefore it’s necessary for at least one member of the founding team to rigorously
understand product and go-to-market strategy.
James Currier, Managing Partner at NFX, advises Founders that there’s an important difference
between what you communicate to VCs about your team in writing and what you say in person.
In writing, he urges Founders to stick to the facts about where you worked, what your roles were,
what awards and press you’ve gotten, where you went to school — the things you’ve actually
done. Even side projects like how far you’ve gotten with playing chess, or with being a DJ. These
facts show the quality of who you are. Also be sure to send information about how long your
founding team has worked together.
Then when you meet in person, that’s when you want to communicate your passion,
commitment, tenacity, and why you’re doing what you’re doing out of all the things you could
have chosen — anything about who you are as a person.
2. Company – Describe what your company does in
one sentence
Nailing your short pitch or one-liner is an important part of the fundraising process because it
will become the foundation of the story you tell — to investors, but also internally to employees
and also to customers. As we’ve previously written about, language is at the core of your
company even before product, and your one-liner will be central to how you talk about your
company.
A “cocktail party pitch” might be a better way to frame it than the classic “elevator pitch” model.
When you’re at a cocktail party, just like when you’re pitching an investor, you have about a
minute to capture their attention before they get bored. In that minute you have to be exciting,
energetic, and concise.
At a cocktail party, you can imagine that if someone starts going on and on about what they do,
your brain will start to shut down and look for an exit to the conversation. Same thing for an
investor when you’re pitching them. So think about the business version of how you’d capture
attention in a cocktail party conversation, and then practice that 25 times until it’s seamless.
Trae Vassallo, Managing Director at Defy, observes that the best startup one-liners are
emotional, not literal. Engineering-centric founding teams in particular tend to be very literal in
conveying what their company does, and this isn’t always the most effective strategy.
When the iPod first launched, the pitch was “a thousand songs in your pocket”, not a description
of its memory space, hardware, or even what the device looks like. “A thousand songs in your
pocket” is an emotional construct that makes you think “yeah, that’s a need I have, and I want
that.” For startups one-liners, eliciting a response like that is really important and can’t be
achieved with a literal description of what you’re building.
Hunter Walk of Homebrew Capital says that you should make a statement or ask a question
with your one-liner — don’t just try to summarize your business. Many people think an elevator
pitch needs to take the entirety of your idea and condense it down to 10 words or 30 seconds.
That’s not the purpose. The purpose is to say enough to get the investor to want to look through
your entire deck or take a meeting with you. It should say something insightful, or be intriguing
to the investor so that they are drawn in and want to know more.
Reid Hoffman believes the challenge of a one-line startup description is that while on the one
hand you can anchor it in something that’s proven to create value and take it in a different
direction — for example, “it’s like Airbnb, but for workplaces” or “it’s like LinkedIn, but for
doctors” — on the other hand, startups with the potential to become really large tend to do
something truly unique.
To come up with a truly compelling one-liner, you can try to anchor it in something of proven
value, but also be sure to get at your uniqueness and the potential for a large market instead of
a more narrow version of what someone else has already done.
On the other hand, if you’re planning to expand an existing market or create an entirely new one,
that will signal a real market opportunity for investors. Moreover, evaluating the potential size of
a market often comes from looking at markets adjacent to your startup— are they big enough
that you could potentially expand into them? That’s where bigger opportunities typically start
opening up.
Mike Vernal of Sequoia thinks that the market is often the most important variable to consider
when thinking about a startup. One of the traps he sees very talented entrepreneurs fall into all
the time is to try to solve a problem they have with their company, without critically thinking
about a) how many other people have that same problem, b) how much they are going to be
willing to pay for the solution, and c) how addressable that market is.
Not every problem is equally able to capture consumer spend, and the more customers you have
to convert over to your product in the market you enter, the more difficult it will be.
Gigi Levy-Weiss, Managing Partner at NFX, says that one of the biggest things he looks at, other
than the size of the market, is what he calls the speed of the market. Does the market have any
encumbering factors — such as regulation — that would prevent a startup that enters it from
moving at startup speed? If so, it tends to be less exciting for investors.
Another thing to consider is how much of an advantage existing assets provide for incumbents
in that market. For example, the hotel industry’s lead over Airbnb in terms of assets were not
much of an advantage because Airbnb was built on an asset-light marketplace model.
What you should explain, to the extent that you can, is how you monetize or charge for your
product. What’s the cost of acquiring a customer, and what do you think that customer will be
worth over time with the small sample size of data that you have? Finally, you can talk about
how you think your business model might change and evolve over time as you scale.
Pete Flint, Managing Partner of NFX, says that when he looks at a business model, he doesn’t
just consider how it looks today but also how the business might look in the next five or ten
years. What do the unit economics look like at scale, as competition enters the market and as
defensibility may kick in?
The other important thing is really understanding whether it’s the type of business that looks to
increase prices as they scale (e.g. Facebook, Google increasing their cost per click) or
companies like Uber and Amazon that are looking to decrease prices as they scale. An
amazingly few startups have a clear answer as to how their business and pricing will evolve as
their company expands.
Saar Gur of CRV says that for some startups the business model is more clear than for others,
but the Founders that are most impressive are those who are students of their industry. Even if
there are many unknowns, entrepreneurs who are familiar with the history of their industry
reliably have good insights into how their business might look. As they say, “history doesn’t
repeat but it rhymes.”
Further, VCs want to know if your team is distributed or not. Some VCs have a bias against
distributed teams, while others see it as a reasonable way to keep costs low and attract the best
talent.
Geography matters when talking to VCs, but almost no Founder puts their geographic
information in their deck or their intro email. If you are in the right location for a particular VC,
they are more likely to take the meeting.
Number of employees also gives VCs a rough idea of your monthly expenses.
It also lets them set expectations about your progress and sophistication before a meeting. If
you have only 4 employees and some aspect of the business isn’t buttoned up, they will be more
understanding than if you have 30 employees.
Regardless, knowing your number of teammates can be helpful to VCs to decide if you are in the
sweet spot of their target zone.
If something seems like a good idea and it seems like the world should work a certain way —
and that was true 3 years ago — then there are two possibilities: either no one has ever thought
of the idea before (unlikely), or someone else thought of it and tried it, but it didn’t work for some
reason (more likely). Unless there’s some clear macro trend to indicate that the timing is better
now, there’s no reason to expect a different outcome.
Charles Hudson of Precursor Ventures says he’s usually looking for markets where there has
been a recent inflection point. That inflection point can be driven by a shift in consumer
behavior, a new technological advance, a regulatory change, or the disappearance of a previous
competitor or incumbent. What’s the market opportunity and why now?
Pete Flint has written before about how startup timing is everything, and says that there are
three things he looks for in evaluating startup timing. 1) what is the economic impetus for this
product today? 2) what is the technological catalyst that is enabling the new product
experience? 3) what is the cultural acceptance of this phenomenon? Is society in a position to
accept and embrace your product?
8. Traction – What are the traction metrics that show
what you have achieved so far?
Traction can be many different things, depending on the stage of your company, as we’ve laid
out before in The Ladder of Proof. Traction is one of the main reasons VCs will take meetings,
so if you’re clear and succinct in describing the traction you have, it lets the VC quickly figure out
if it’s worth the meeting today, next week or next month.
When you’re describing traction, it should be relevant to the business fundamentals. Avoid
metrics that look like hockey stick growth but turn out not to matter, because that will come up
in due diligence anyway. If your story is around traction, make sure that it’s true traction.
For Gigi Levy-Weiss, the best way that Founders can show traction is through the company
numbers. It’s especially helpful to get those numbers from a company’s KPI dashboard because
in addition to the numbers, it also gives investors a feel for how you track and analyze the
numbers internally.
With early-stage startups that don’t have much quantitative metrics yet, like a B2B company with
early sales that don’t show significant statistics, qualitative metrics like customer testimonials,
initial sales targets, or anything else that tells a story can be an acceptable surrogate to show
traction.
Sarah Tavel, who invests in Series As and Bs, says that when a Founder tells her about traction,
there are three things she wants to understand:
Is the startup growing? You need growth to create energy for your product and your team and
whatever community you’re going after.
Do users love the product? More often than not, you can tell this through retention metrics.
Is the product self-perpetuating its growth? Either current customers are generating enough
cash flow for you to reinvest in acquiring new users, or there’s really great word of mouth to
perpetuate growth.
Financing is your chance to build fundamental partnerships that can make your company much
more successful. It’s part of why selecting the right investing partners and networks that help
your company is really important. I recommend taking more money than you think you need,
because that way there’s always some slack you then have for unexpected needs.
For Charles Hudson, he always prefers to have a specific number as opposed to a range for a
Founder’s fundraising target. If you’re thinking you want to raise $4M – $6M, there’s actually a
big (50%) difference between $4M and $6M. It’s better to pick a specific number — if the number
is $5M, say 5.
The investor will want to know how much thought has gone into figuring out the number, and
they’ll really want to understand where the money is going to go. The default assumption is that
50% – 70% of what a company raises will go towards headcount and salary, but investors will
look to see if Founders have really thought through how the funds will be allocated.
Trae Vassallo says that the thing to understand about figuring out how much money to raise is
that a lot of investors are really being driven by their own interests. A lot of investors would want
to put $10M to work when really you only need $5M.
So it’s up to you as a Founder to really understand the key milestones you have to hit before you
go out to raise money again, and how much money is that going to take (obviously with a buffer
built in). It’s also worth considering that capital constraints at the early stages before
product-market fit can be helpful in that they force difficult product decisions, sales decisions,
and prioritization that helps build a stronger and more durable business in the future.
10. Fundraising History – Who have you raised from,
how much, and when?
The details of your fundraising history will be of interest to investors because they’re a form of
social proof, an indication of your speed, and a signal of how effectively you’ve been able to
make use of your past funding.
The details of your fundraising history will also let the VC appraise your execution speed
because it shows how much you’ve been able to accomplish with the cash you’ve had over a
particular time frame. The more you’ve been able to accomplish with less money in less time,
the bigger the reason they have to meet with you even if other attributes of your pitch are less
appealing.
Sometimes Founders are slow to give this information out, but it’s better to be up front with this
information because the VC will ask you right at the beginning of their process of getting to
know you anyway. Best to get past it and move on to the more valuable part of the discussion.
Ann Miura-Ko says that early-stage investors are basically “co-conspirators” with their Founders,
so if the investor feels no passion or love for the startup idea, then it’s hard to become engaged
enough to be a true co-conspirator. How an investor feels about the space you’re in is often
linked to how big they think your market can become, and it’s always easiest for investors to feel
passionate about Founders who are authentic about the problem they want to solve.
You must, however, make sure that the email or phone call introducing you hits on all the key
points the VC wants to know to get them excited. You must arm your referrer with the right
information.
Most Founders fail to do this well. And most referrers don’t refer well. Be very careful at this step
to manage the exact wording and timing.
Building a Company Brief, giving the private Brief URL to your referrer and letting them send it to
the VC dramatically improves your chances of getting the meeting.