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I share what I learn each day about entrepreneurship—from a biography or my own experience. Always a 2-min read or less.
Setting Your Valuation Could Work Against You
Founders who decide to raise venture capital sometimes do things unwittingly that could cause a venture fund to opt out prematurely. The most common is setting the valuation before chatting with VCs. Founders decide the amount of capital they want to raise, pick a valuation, and put all that info in their pitch deck. This can be OK in raising from angels, friends, or family, but it’s not advisable when you’re seeking to raise a round of capital from venture funds.
Founders usually don’t have as good a grasp of valuations in venture markets as venture funds do. Funds usually see a constant flow of deals, which helps them keep a finger on the pulse of market valuation for companies at a particular stage. Founders are usually relying on conversations with other founders or data they find online. While helpful, these sources of information may not reflect current market conditions or may not give founders enough data points to really understand market conditions. A fund could be interested but decline to meet the company because the valuation is unrealistic.
Another variable founders should be aware of is a venture fund’s portfolio construction. I won’t get into the details of it, but when a fund is raised, the general partner(s) communicate to limited partners how many companies the fund will invest in, the average check size of each investment, and how much of each company the fund plans to own. These and other factors help create the hypothetical portfolio of companies the fund will own and the hypothetical portfolio return (i.e., how the fund will return a profit to limited partners). If a venture fund receives a pitch deck with a valuation that’s too far high, they’ll be more inclined to pass on the company. A high valuation can mean a lower share of ownership in a company, which can throw off the portfolio construction. If general partners deviate too much from the portfolio construction they communicated to limited partners, they have to explain why. These kinds of conversations can cause some limited partners to decline to invest in future funds. Of course, founders usually don’t know a fund’s portfolio construction, so they’re at an information disadvantage when they set a valuation.
So, what can founders do when they’re raising a round of venture capital? Simple: leave the valuation out of your deck. Include the amount of capital you’re raising and figure out the valuation as you chat with venture funds. These questions can help you figure out the right valuation and evaluate funds:
- Ask VCs what the current market valuation is for companies at your stage. If you talk to enough funds, you’ll have your finger on the pulse of the market.
- Ask VCs what their average initial check size is and if they have an ownership target. If a fund says they write $1 million initial checks and aim for 10% ownership, you know they’re likely in the $10 million post-valuation range.
Figuring out valuation for an early-stage company is part art, part science, and part negotiation. I hope this will help founders go into their fund raises better prepared.
Too Much Leverage?
Over the last year or so, I’ve shared with friends a hypothesis that leverage is causing extreme fluctuations in asset prices. I believe it was a material factor in the 2020–2021 runup and that it’s played a significant role in the declines in 2022. Leverage enables an investor to multiply the potential return on an investment. It can involve using borrowed money to amplify bets or other means to allow an investor to have exposure to an asset without fully owning it. Leverage amplifies movement in both directions, which can cause havoc in markets when things move to the downside.
History doesn’t always repeat itself; sometimes it rhymes. I started looking into the past to understand the present. Specifically, periods when interest rates were increased and financial markets experienced high volatility. I’m still early into this, but I’m looking into the mid 1990s now. It was a period of rate hikes and bond volatility that the Fed couldn’t explain at the time. Rate increases kicked off a sequence of events. We now know that volatility was caused by excessive leverage that most were unaware of at the time. Because the leverage wasn’t public knowledge, the volatility was hard to understand or explain. It’s early, and I still have more reading to do about other periods that fit my criteria, but what I’ve learned so far has been interesting.
I’m no economist, but my gut tells me we have more leverage in financial markets than we’re aware of. It may be amplifying market movements to the downside now.
Outsiders and Innovation
Outsiders are people who aren’t working in an industry and (usually) don’t have relationships in that industry. They’re on the outside looking in, wondering what it’s like to be on the other side. They don’t understand how the industry works, but they work to fill their knowledge and relationship gaps. Successful outsiders can penetrate the industry through hustle and a bit of luck.
The experience of being an outsider who makes it inside an industry puts these people in a unique position. They’re different from insiders. They’re engaged enough to see and understand the mechanics of how the industry works, but they’re detached enough to question the status quo. They see things from outside and inside the industry simultaneously. This perspective can help them identify a gap that others have ignored and understand the potential in exploiting it. Further, they’re uniquely qualified to come up with the right plan to exploit the gap in a way insiders and those still outside the industry can’t.
I’m a fan of backing outsiders. They’re driven enough to hustle their way in. They’ve likely got a chip on their shoulder from wanting to prove others wrong. And they usually have strong conviction. All these are great founder traits.
While some think outsiders are “out of place,” I view them as scrappy people who can be catalysts for innovation.
Thankfulness
Yesterday was Thanksgiving, a holiday I enjoy because I get to spend quality time with family and friends. We’re a few years removed from the beginning of the pandemic, and I’m more intentional about this holiday than I was pre-pandemic. This year I made a point of thinking about and sharing with others all the things I’m thankful for. The year hasn’t gone according to my plan or other people’s plans. At times it’s been frustrating and felt like a stream of bad news. But even with all of 2022’s curveballs, I was able to come up with a long list of people, memories, and things I’m extremely thankful for.
What are you thankful for?
Happy Thanksgiving!
Happy Thanksgiving!
I hope everyone had a safe and healthy holiday!
Learning by Doing
I connected with an investor who shared how he evolved from a start-up founder to venture capital investor. He had an idea of what it meant to be a venture investor, but he learned that the reality is quite different. His first year was one of not knowing. He didn’t know what a good company looked like, so everything looked good to him. He didn’t know what his approach to finding great companies was, so he tried a bunch of stuff. The list of what he didn’t know is long. But the big takeaway from his first year was that he could learn by doing. There’s only so much that people can tell you about the craft; you have to get your hands dirty to learn and get better.
Having always been a practical learner, I agree with the learn-by-doing mantra. Action produces information. You learn from the information, improving your decision-making and actions. This was true for me as a founder, and it’s true for me as an investor. Some of my learning has been painful and expensive, but I’m comfortable with that. Instead of being unhappy about the money, time, or energy lost, I consider them the tuition I paid for knowledge.
If I want to learn how to do something, I now think about ways to do it so I can learn (and maybe pay some tuition too).
So Much for a Calm Week
Thanksgiving week has historically been calm for me. This week, though, hasn’t been as calm as I expected, and the rest of the week will likely be more of the same. I wasn’t sure if it was just me, so I asked a friend who does deal-related work. He’s experiencing something similar: lots of deals and other things he’s trying to get over the finish line. I also know a few founders trying to close rounds, friends trying to close real estate transactions, company leaders navigating layoffs, etc. All anecdotal, sure, but there appears to be more activity on a variety of fronts.
I’ll make sure I spend quality time with friends and family this week, but otherwise, no lounging around for me. The rest of the time, I’ll be working on finishing various projects.
Keep Growing, or Optimize for an Acquisition?
I caught up with a founder thinking through the next steps for his start-up. It grew rapidly during the pandemic and raised venture capital but hasn’t been able to sustain that growth rate. A decent percentage of its customer base was venture-backed companies, so the recent tech layoffs have caused customers to churn.
The founder could stay the course and raise more venture capital. The challenge with that strategy is that the market likely isn’t growing as quickly and competition has increased because the problem is obvious to other companies and founders. This company’s solution is much better from a technical standpoint than competing offerings, but it will need to invest heavily in sales and marketing to attract more customers. That will be a costly effort given the slowing growth rate of the space and influx of competitors.
The other option is to position the company to be acquired by a larger company looking to enter this market. Big companies are trying to play catch-up in this market. They’re evaluating whether they should spend one to two years building a solution from scratch or buy a proven solution. The larger companies are also likely thinking they’ll be able to grow the solution quickly once their existing sales and marketing muscle is applied to this product.
This founder is at a crossroads. I suspect he’ll go the acquisition path and be ready to start another company in two to four years. He isn’t alone. I think 2023 will be bring more acquisitions of small players by larger players looking for quick growth or trying to fill the gaps in their existing solutions.
Automating Feedback Collection Too Early Can Cost You
I’m a huge fan of automation. My start-up was able to scale because we cracked the code of creating repeatable processes and automating them to gain massive efficiency. I’ve chatted with a few founders recently who also embrace automation—but too early. These companies are still trying to find product–market fit, but they’re automating some or all interactions with the customer. When I hear this, it’s a huge red flag.
In the early stage of a company’s life cycle, you’ve identified a problem and built a solution to it. You don’t really know how good a job you’re doing solving the problem (unless paying user growth is skyrocketing). You usually need to let users play with the solution and get feedback. The feedback usually leads to product improvements. This cycle repeats until your solution is so great you’ve reached product–market fit.
Getting feedback from the customer is a key part of the cycle. Sometimes a customer will casually write something that, when double-clicked on, leads to a eureka moment and critical product improvement. If you automate feedback collection in the early days, you run the risk of missing the opportunity to double-click on seemingly small pieces of feedback. Said differently, you run the risk of missing your eureka moment that leads to product–market fit.
If you’re early in your founder journey, consider deferring automatic feedback collection until later and making time to talk with customers/users. One conversation with a customer/user could change the trajectory of your company!
To Understand a Founder, Find Out What Fuels Their Grit
One of the traits I look for in founders is grit. Building something from scratch is hard. Lots of doors will be closed in your face, and you’ll hear “no” a lot (or nothing at all). Founders need to be able to power through all that and move the needle forward. When things look bleak, that’s when founders separate themselves from others by pushing through and finding a way.
What matters just as much as grit? The why behind it. Founders may have to run through walls. What’s fueling them so they can do it? Where is their passion coming from? When you understand this, you’ve really begun to understand the founder. You understand how they’re wired and why they’re doing what they’re doing.
When I spend time getting to know founders, I learn the why behind their grit when I hear the childhood memories forever etched in their brains. The insecurities (we all have them), fears, and other factors that drive them.
Grit is required, and understanding what’s fueling a founder’s grit is important too.