134x Filetype PPTX File size 0.75 MB Source: iotpractitioner.com
#1 • Not doing their homework: • Know who you are pitching (the fund and the partner) • Is there a fit between the amount being raised and the size of the fund (Don’t pitch a $1B fund for a $500k raise, or a $50M fund for a $25M raise) • Remember: you can divorce your spouse, but you cannot divorce your investor, so do your homework and choose wisely 2 #2 • Not thinking big enough: • VCs are in the business of outsized returns. They want to invest $10M and get $100M out • For that type of return, a company has to believe that it can be a $500M-$1B Enterprise Value company. Early stage VC may start with a 20-25% stake which may dilute to 10-15% by the time of an exit. For 10% ownership to yield $100M, the company has to be valued at $1B • Often the psychological threshold that VCs look for is a line of sight to $100M revenue possibility (with believable metrics) within a multi-billion dollar market • A lifestyle business is fine, but not venture fundable 3 #3 • Wanting control: • Entrepreneurs need to understand that as soon as they take other people’s money (OPM), they are indeed relinquishing control • Investors will take board seats and guide the company forward with certain rights, often veto rights. • Giving a hint to a VC that you are looking to retain control post investment will likely deter the investor from proceeding further 4 #4 • Vitamin vs. Cancer Drug: • This is connected to the “thinking big” bullet point. • Investors like “monumental” rather than “incremental” • 10% improvement does not make a difference. A 10x improvement does. • Go after a real pain point for which customers will trip over each other to buy, and they themselves become ambassadors of the product or service. 5 #5 • Not understanding the competitive landscape: • Never say that you have no competition. That means either that the market is insignificant or that you are naïve and don’t really understand your market • There is always competition (direct or indirect) • Use a table of features/functionality or a 2x2 matrix to clearly identify your differentiation vs. others in the market 6
no reviews yet
Please Login to review.