SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  25
How to Raise Your First Round of Capital
Jeffrey Bussgang
Flybridge Capital Partners, General Partner
Harvard Business School, Senior Lecturer
January 2020
 General Partner at Flybridge Capital Partners, early-
stage VC firm based in Boston and NYC
$700m raised across 5 funds & 2 pre-seed funds over 18 years
100+ portfolio companies (e.g., MongoDB, Codecademy, Splice)
 Senior Lecturer at HBS – Launching Tech Ventures, RVP
 Former entrepreneur
Cofounder Upromise (acq’d by SallieMae),
Exec team at Open Market (IPO ‘96)
 Author: Mastering the VC Game
 Author: Entering StartUpLand
 Blog: SeeingBothSides.com
Context For My Perspective
3
Fundraising Patterns and Players
• $250-500k pre-seed
• Convertible note / SAFE @ $2-4m cap
• If your friends, family and ex-colleagues
won’t back you – why should I?
• $1-3m seed @ $4-8m pre-money
• Either note, SAFE/SAFT or priced round
• Micro-seed funds, seed funds, super angels
• $5-10m Series A @ $10-20m pre-money
• Priced round, board, control structure
• Seed funds, Series A funds, Series B funds
• $20-40m Series B @ $40-100m pre-money
• Priced round, board, control structure
• Series B funds, growth funds, crossover PE
VCs vs. Angels
 Will want some control (voting,
board, veto)
 Will want to own 10-20%
 Very actively engaged (they
get paid to do this), leveraging
the power of the firm’s network
 Can add tremendous value
and be great business partners
 Can be total disasters
 Typically rational actors,
commercially-driven, but if
inexperienced can do great
harm
 Will want no control (“send me
an annual email”)
 Will want to own 1-10%
 Maybe engaged or not (often a
hobby, sometimes a personal
mission)
 Can add tremendous value and
be great business partners
 Can be total disasters
 Typically rational, but if
unsophisticated: naïve
irrational, emotional
VC Is Not The Only Option!
5
Source: Founder Collective
6
Ridiculously large returns (> 10x)
are very, very rare (4%) – but are always the goal
A Game of Outliers
7
VC Fund Math 101
To achieve target of 3x the fund, need to see
multiple big exits (10x+) after years 9-12
Prototypical, $100M Early Stage Fund
Source: Industry Ventures
 Most VCs and Angels have ADD – operate on
“BLINK” instincts
 Want to SEE everything, but actually INVEST in
very, very few deals
 Make their decision within the first 10-15 minutes
 Typical VC and Angel will invest in one out of every
300-500 deals they see
 Long odds – you need to really stand out
 Like college applicants – triage quickly
Investor Decision Making
 Never too early to build a relationship
(and get advice) – especially when
you’re not asking for money.
 That said, there is no such thing as a
casual meeting – every meeting with
an investor is a pitch / presentation
 Leave them with your next
milestones…and achieve them!
 Only when you’ve established a
relationship and operational credibility
should you ask for money
9
“Ask for money, get advice.
Ask for advice, get money twice.”
When Do You Talk To Investors?
9
 Scope out the firm –
size matters, as does
the individual
 Arrange for a warm
introduction
 Prepare, be brief
(VCs Blink)
 Don’t downplay risk
 Mutual due diligence
is fair play
9
Find the Sweet Spot
11
Kiss Many Frogs
Source: Docsend
VC Introduction Algorithm
1. Entrepreneurs who have made them money
2. Entrepreneurs in their portfolio
3. Entrepreneurs they respect
4. Customers/Partners they respect
5. Service providers they respect
6. Existing investors
…
 Cold emails/social networks
…
 Investors who are not investing
12
13
Investor’s Decision Tree
Elements of the Pitch
 Intro  who are you, why are you here and why are you special?
 Problem  what is the customer pain?
 Solution  what’s your disruptive, breakthrough compelling
solution? Is the “Gain vs. Pain” ratio 10x?
 Opportunity / market size  top down and bottoms up
 Competitive advantage  what is your unique differentiation?
what’s your “competitive moat”?
 Go to market plan  how are you going to reach the customer?
 Business model  how are you going to make money?
 Financials  what’s the bottom line, what are your key
assumptions? How are you going to make ME money?
 The ask  how much do you want, how long will it last you and how
much will you achieve?
14
Top 3 Things To Do
 Set context
 Tell your narrative to prove founder-market fit – i.e., why you?
 Tell industry context to prove why now?
 Be crisp and on point
 Personal intro should take < 5 minutes
 Team introduction < 5 minutes
 Make it relevant – don’t go off on tangents
 If you can’t show good summarization skills,
how will you handle a board room?
 Know your stuff
 Know competition, show domain expertise
 They will push you to test you
 John Doerr/Upromise case study
Top 3 Things To Avoid
 Do not exaggerate
 Assume everything you say will be verified in due diligence
 Assume the listener is a cynic and a professional BS detector
 There’s no “I” in team
 If you are self-aggrandizing, investors will assume you can’t build
teams, attract great talent
 Do not name drop
 No one is going to be impressed
with who you know unless
the relationships are both real
and relevant.
 Assume everyone does their
due diligence
Typical Investment Criteria
 Tangible things investors like to see:
 Very big market (> $500M? $1B? – support $100+M revenue)
 Unfair advantage (why you? why now?)
 Attractive business model (recurring, high margins, network effects)
 Unique technology or business model approach
 Intangible things investors like to see:
 “Pied Piper” – an ability to recruit and retain a great team, partners
 Interpersonal chemistry
 Movie, not a snapshot
 X-Factor / Super power
So You’ve Had a Good Meeting…
Then What?
 Treat fundraising like a sales process – build a pipeline,
work people through the pipeline, build up to crescendo
 VCs get distracted – typically only pursue 2-3 high
priority new investment opportunities at any given time
 Stay connected, top of mind, build a sense of momentum
 Need to sell the individual “champion”, then the help
them sell the partnership
 Address objections with specific data
 Make the investment case for them
 Give them tools/materials to share with their partners
 Create a sense of urgency (run a competitive process)
18
Then, Expect More Due Diligence
 Customers / partners
 Team
 Technology
 Business model
 Market size / analysts
As you would do in a sales process, package up the
information, make it easy on the VC – provide reference
list, financial models, detailed market size analysis – all
in readable, compelling, digestible form
19
Partners Meeting
 Ask your champion for the main
objections in advance
 Customize your pitch to address
them
 Command the room
 Be open about risks – and your
plan to mitigate
20
 Ask your champion where they’re at (strong positive? slight
positive? still questioning?)
The Vote
21
Partner A Partner B Partner C Partner D Average
Market 4 4 4 4 4.0
Team 4 4 3 5 4.0
Product/Tech 2 4 4 2 3.0
Business Model 5 5 3 3 4.0
Competition 4 3 3 4 3.5
Deal/Cap Markets 4 4 3 3 3.5
Disruption 4 4 4 4 4.0
Network Effects 2 3 4 4 3.3
Total 29 31 28 29 29.3
Two most
important critera
Debate and disparity can be a good thing
Term Sheet Time - FAQs
 Should I include VCs in my seed round or just angels?
 Should I do a convertible note/SAFE with a cap, no cap
or a priced round?
 How big should the option pool be?
 How much do I set aside for team, advisors, board?
 How should I think about valuation?
 “Promote” definition
 How should I think about control?
22
Expectations and Milestones
 Have well-documented milestones that represent what
you expect to achieve during the initial funding period
 Team building
 Technical progress/product development
 Customers, revenue
 Budget
 Talk to the investor about the next round before you
close this round
 Expectations, amount, price
 What experiments are you going to run and what results
do you expect from those experiments?
23
Who’s Ready to Raise Money?
Mastering the VC Game:
How to Raise Your First Round of Capital
Jeffrey Bussgang
Flybridge Capital Partners, General Partner
Harvard Business School, Senior Lecturer
jeff@flybridge.com @bussgang
January 2020

Contenu connexe

Tendances

SaaS Metrics - Bulletproof your SaaS Growth
SaaS Metrics - Bulletproof your SaaS GrowthSaaS Metrics - Bulletproof your SaaS Growth
SaaS Metrics - Bulletproof your SaaS GrowthAnadi Raj Tiwari
 
How to VC: Creating a VC fund portfolio model
How to VC: Creating a VC fund portfolio modelHow to VC: Creating a VC fund portfolio model
How to VC: Creating a VC fund portfolio modelDave McClure
 
NYU 5-Day Lean Launchpad Syllabus
NYU 5-Day Lean Launchpad SyllabusNYU 5-Day Lean Launchpad Syllabus
NYU 5-Day Lean Launchpad SyllabusNew York University
 
Hooks and Upsell: Bottoms-Up Product and GTM Strategy
Hooks and Upsell: Bottoms-Up Product and GTM StrategyHooks and Upsell: Bottoms-Up Product and GTM Strategy
Hooks and Upsell: Bottoms-Up Product and GTM StrategyVivek Saraswat
 
How to choose an idea for your startup Dalton Caldwell Y Combinator
How to choose an idea for your startup  Dalton Caldwell Y CombinatorHow to choose an idea for your startup  Dalton Caldwell Y Combinator
How to choose an idea for your startup Dalton Caldwell Y CombinatorWebrazzi
 
Venture Builder / Start-up Factory Model One-slider Infographic
Venture Builder / Start-up Factory Model One-slider Infographic Venture Builder / Start-up Factory Model One-slider Infographic
Venture Builder / Start-up Factory Model One-slider Infographic Floyd DCosta
 
Venture Capital Term Sheets: The Good, The Bad & The Ugly
Venture Capital Term Sheets:  The Good, The Bad & The UglyVenture Capital Term Sheets:  The Good, The Bad & The Ugly
Venture Capital Term Sheets: The Good, The Bad & The UglyTim Dick
 
Gorilla Labs - Venture Builder
Gorilla Labs - Venture BuilderGorilla Labs - Venture Builder
Gorilla Labs - Venture BuilderNikhil Jacob
 
Avention 12 tipsfinal
Avention 12 tipsfinalAvention 12 tipsfinal
Avention 12 tipsfinalAvention
 
Startup Factory Presentation Jan 2016
Startup Factory Presentation Jan 2016Startup Factory Presentation Jan 2016
Startup Factory Presentation Jan 2016Startup Factory
 
Startup Studio Playbook
Startup Studio PlaybookStartup Studio Playbook
Startup Studio PlaybookAttila Szigeti
 
Startup studio fundraising fundamentals
Startup studio fundraising fundamentalsStartup studio fundraising fundamentals
Startup studio fundraising fundamentalsAttila Szigeti
 
Customer Development Past Present Future Steve Blank 111909
Customer Development Past Present Future Steve Blank 111909Customer Development Past Present Future Steve Blank 111909
Customer Development Past Present Future Steve Blank 111909Stanford University
 
How to find product market fit
How to find product market fitHow to find product market fit
How to find product market fitJustin Wilcox
 
Business Model Archetypes
Business Model ArchetypesBusiness Model Archetypes
Business Model ArchetypesNeal Cabage
 
Why Uberflip
Why UberflipWhy Uberflip
Why UberflipUberflip
 
Mint.com Pre-Launch Pitch Deck
Mint.com Pre-Launch Pitch DeckMint.com Pre-Launch Pitch Deck
Mint.com Pre-Launch Pitch DeckHiten Shah
 
Customer Acquisition & Monetization - Keys to your Business Model
Customer Acquisition & Monetization -  Keys to your Business ModelCustomer Acquisition & Monetization -  Keys to your Business Model
Customer Acquisition & Monetization - Keys to your Business ModelDavid Skok
 

Tendances (20)

SaaS Metrics - Bulletproof your SaaS Growth
SaaS Metrics - Bulletproof your SaaS GrowthSaaS Metrics - Bulletproof your SaaS Growth
SaaS Metrics - Bulletproof your SaaS Growth
 
How to VC: Creating a VC fund portfolio model
How to VC: Creating a VC fund portfolio modelHow to VC: Creating a VC fund portfolio model
How to VC: Creating a VC fund portfolio model
 
Company Builder
Company BuilderCompany Builder
Company Builder
 
NYU 5-Day Lean Launchpad Syllabus
NYU 5-Day Lean Launchpad SyllabusNYU 5-Day Lean Launchpad Syllabus
NYU 5-Day Lean Launchpad Syllabus
 
Hooks and Upsell: Bottoms-Up Product and GTM Strategy
Hooks and Upsell: Bottoms-Up Product and GTM StrategyHooks and Upsell: Bottoms-Up Product and GTM Strategy
Hooks and Upsell: Bottoms-Up Product and GTM Strategy
 
How to choose an idea for your startup Dalton Caldwell Y Combinator
How to choose an idea for your startup  Dalton Caldwell Y CombinatorHow to choose an idea for your startup  Dalton Caldwell Y Combinator
How to choose an idea for your startup Dalton Caldwell Y Combinator
 
Venture Builder / Start-up Factory Model One-slider Infographic
Venture Builder / Start-up Factory Model One-slider Infographic Venture Builder / Start-up Factory Model One-slider Infographic
Venture Builder / Start-up Factory Model One-slider Infographic
 
Venture Capital Term Sheets: The Good, The Bad & The Ugly
Venture Capital Term Sheets:  The Good, The Bad & The UglyVenture Capital Term Sheets:  The Good, The Bad & The Ugly
Venture Capital Term Sheets: The Good, The Bad & The Ugly
 
Gorilla Labs - Venture Builder
Gorilla Labs - Venture BuilderGorilla Labs - Venture Builder
Gorilla Labs - Venture Builder
 
The startup owners manual sxsw
The startup owners manual sxswThe startup owners manual sxsw
The startup owners manual sxsw
 
Avention 12 tipsfinal
Avention 12 tipsfinalAvention 12 tipsfinal
Avention 12 tipsfinal
 
Startup Factory Presentation Jan 2016
Startup Factory Presentation Jan 2016Startup Factory Presentation Jan 2016
Startup Factory Presentation Jan 2016
 
Startup Studio Playbook
Startup Studio PlaybookStartup Studio Playbook
Startup Studio Playbook
 
Startup studio fundraising fundamentals
Startup studio fundraising fundamentalsStartup studio fundraising fundamentals
Startup studio fundraising fundamentals
 
Customer Development Past Present Future Steve Blank 111909
Customer Development Past Present Future Steve Blank 111909Customer Development Past Present Future Steve Blank 111909
Customer Development Past Present Future Steve Blank 111909
 
How to find product market fit
How to find product market fitHow to find product market fit
How to find product market fit
 
Business Model Archetypes
Business Model ArchetypesBusiness Model Archetypes
Business Model Archetypes
 
Why Uberflip
Why UberflipWhy Uberflip
Why Uberflip
 
Mint.com Pre-Launch Pitch Deck
Mint.com Pre-Launch Pitch DeckMint.com Pre-Launch Pitch Deck
Mint.com Pre-Launch Pitch Deck
 
Customer Acquisition & Monetization - Keys to your Business Model
Customer Acquisition & Monetization -  Keys to your Business ModelCustomer Acquisition & Monetization -  Keys to your Business Model
Customer Acquisition & Monetization - Keys to your Business Model
 

Similaire à How to Raise Your First Round of Capital - January 2020

How To Raise Capital - Harvard Business School lecture
How To Raise Capital - Harvard Business School lectureHow To Raise Capital - Harvard Business School lecture
How To Raise Capital - Harvard Business School lectureJeffrey Bussgang
 
How to raise your first round of capital - February 2017
How to raise your first round of capital - February 2017How to raise your first round of capital - February 2017
How to raise your first round of capital - February 2017Jeffrey Bussgang
 
Tel Aviv Startups Event October 1st, 2013
Tel Aviv Startups Event October 1st, 2013Tel Aviv Startups Event October 1st, 2013
Tel Aviv Startups Event October 1st, 2013Jeffrey Bussgang
 
How To Raise Your First Round of Capital
How To Raise Your First Round of CapitalHow To Raise Your First Round of Capital
How To Raise Your First Round of CapitalJeffrey Bussgang
 
The art of the pitch: Pitching angels, corporate venture, VC's for investment
The art of the pitch:  Pitching angels, corporate venture,  VC's for investment The art of the pitch:  Pitching angels, corporate venture,  VC's for investment
The art of the pitch: Pitching angels, corporate venture, VC's for investment Gregory Phipps
 
MassChallenge 2011 Bootcamp Day 5: Finance
MassChallenge 2011 Bootcamp Day 5: FinanceMassChallenge 2011 Bootcamp Day 5: Finance
MassChallenge 2011 Bootcamp Day 5: FinanceBrendan O'Neil
 
MassChallenge Bootcamp
MassChallenge Bootcamp MassChallenge Bootcamp
MassChallenge Bootcamp Brendan O'Neil
 
MassChallenge Bootcamp Day 5: Finance
MassChallenge Bootcamp Day 5: FinanceMassChallenge Bootcamp Day 5: Finance
MassChallenge Bootcamp Day 5: FinanceBrendan O'Neil
 
Vc 101 1.0 rev3
Vc 101 1.0 rev3Vc 101 1.0 rev3
Vc 101 1.0 rev3mitsjohnso
 
Fundraising vs bootstrapping
Fundraising vs bootstrappingFundraising vs bootstrapping
Fundraising vs bootstrappingDeepanshu Saini
 
Financing Your Invention
Financing Your InventionFinancing Your Invention
Financing Your InventionCurtis Palmer
 
All About Funding
All About FundingAll About Funding
All About Fundingdeeturnbull
 
Venture investing & business plan
Venture investing & business  planVenture investing & business  plan
Venture investing & business planDigbijoy Shukla
 
VC 101 How to Pitch to VCs - Dave McClure Asher Siddiqui
VC 101 How to Pitch to VCs - Dave McClure Asher SiddiquiVC 101 How to Pitch to VCs - Dave McClure Asher Siddiqui
VC 101 How to Pitch to VCs - Dave McClure Asher SiddiquiAsher Siddiqui
 
VC 101 - How to Pitch to Investors - DMC + Asher - FAST
VC 101 - How to Pitch to Investors - DMC + Asher - FASTVC 101 - How to Pitch to Investors - DMC + Asher - FAST
VC 101 - How to Pitch to Investors - DMC + Asher - FASTAsher Siddiqui
 
VC - what founders need to know
VC  - what founders need to knowVC  - what founders need to know
VC - what founders need to knowArun Raghavan
 
How To Raise Your First Round of Capital
How To Raise Your First Round of CapitalHow To Raise Your First Round of Capital
How To Raise Your First Round of CapitalJeffrey Bussgang
 
New Ventures BC Dialling for Dollars 20080528
New Ventures BC Dialling for Dollars 20080528New Ventures BC Dialling for Dollars 20080528
New Ventures BC Dialling for Dollars 20080528David Shore
 
Sales Operations for Early Stage Companies
Sales Operations for Early Stage CompaniesSales Operations for Early Stage Companies
Sales Operations for Early Stage CompaniesStephen Sweeney
 

Similaire à How to Raise Your First Round of Capital - January 2020 (20)

How To Raise Capital - Harvard Business School lecture
How To Raise Capital - Harvard Business School lectureHow To Raise Capital - Harvard Business School lecture
How To Raise Capital - Harvard Business School lecture
 
How to raise your first round of capital - February 2017
How to raise your first round of capital - February 2017How to raise your first round of capital - February 2017
How to raise your first round of capital - February 2017
 
Tel Aviv Startups Event October 1st, 2013
Tel Aviv Startups Event October 1st, 2013Tel Aviv Startups Event October 1st, 2013
Tel Aviv Startups Event October 1st, 2013
 
How To Raise Your First Round of Capital
How To Raise Your First Round of CapitalHow To Raise Your First Round of Capital
How To Raise Your First Round of Capital
 
The art of the pitch: Pitching angels, corporate venture, VC's for investment
The art of the pitch:  Pitching angels, corporate venture,  VC's for investment The art of the pitch:  Pitching angels, corporate venture,  VC's for investment
The art of the pitch: Pitching angels, corporate venture, VC's for investment
 
MassChallenge 2011 Bootcamp Day 5: Finance
MassChallenge 2011 Bootcamp Day 5: FinanceMassChallenge 2011 Bootcamp Day 5: Finance
MassChallenge 2011 Bootcamp Day 5: Finance
 
MassChallenge Bootcamp
MassChallenge Bootcamp MassChallenge Bootcamp
MassChallenge Bootcamp
 
MassChallenge Bootcamp Day 5: Finance
MassChallenge Bootcamp Day 5: FinanceMassChallenge Bootcamp Day 5: Finance
MassChallenge Bootcamp Day 5: Finance
 
Vc 101 1.0 rev3
Vc 101 1.0 rev3Vc 101 1.0 rev3
Vc 101 1.0 rev3
 
Fundraising vs bootstrapping
Fundraising vs bootstrappingFundraising vs bootstrapping
Fundraising vs bootstrapping
 
Ideas To Deals 8 27
Ideas To Deals 8 27Ideas To Deals 8 27
Ideas To Deals 8 27
 
Financing Your Invention
Financing Your InventionFinancing Your Invention
Financing Your Invention
 
All About Funding
All About FundingAll About Funding
All About Funding
 
Venture investing & business plan
Venture investing & business  planVenture investing & business  plan
Venture investing & business plan
 
VC 101 How to Pitch to VCs - Dave McClure Asher Siddiqui
VC 101 How to Pitch to VCs - Dave McClure Asher SiddiquiVC 101 How to Pitch to VCs - Dave McClure Asher Siddiqui
VC 101 How to Pitch to VCs - Dave McClure Asher Siddiqui
 
VC 101 - How to Pitch to Investors - DMC + Asher - FAST
VC 101 - How to Pitch to Investors - DMC + Asher - FASTVC 101 - How to Pitch to Investors - DMC + Asher - FAST
VC 101 - How to Pitch to Investors - DMC + Asher - FAST
 
VC - what founders need to know
VC  - what founders need to knowVC  - what founders need to know
VC - what founders need to know
 
How To Raise Your First Round of Capital
How To Raise Your First Round of CapitalHow To Raise Your First Round of Capital
How To Raise Your First Round of Capital
 
New Ventures BC Dialling for Dollars 20080528
New Ventures BC Dialling for Dollars 20080528New Ventures BC Dialling for Dollars 20080528
New Ventures BC Dialling for Dollars 20080528
 
Sales Operations for Early Stage Companies
Sales Operations for Early Stage CompaniesSales Operations for Early Stage Companies
Sales Operations for Early Stage Companies
 

Plus de Jeffrey Bussgang

Product Market Fit Presentation - May 2023 - Jeff Bussgang
Product Market Fit Presentation - May 2023 - Jeff BussgangProduct Market Fit Presentation - May 2023 - Jeff Bussgang
Product Market Fit Presentation - May 2023 - Jeff BussgangJeffrey Bussgang
 
What Makes the Boston Startup Scene Special?
What Makes the Boston Startup Scene Special?What Makes the Boston Startup Scene Special?
What Makes the Boston Startup Scene Special?Jeffrey Bussgang
 
Product Market Fit - Harvard Business School
Product Market Fit - Harvard Business SchoolProduct Market Fit - Harvard Business School
Product Market Fit - Harvard Business SchoolJeffrey Bussgang
 
The Community Playbook for Founders (from Flybridge)
The Community Playbook for Founders (from Flybridge)The Community Playbook for Founders (from Flybridge)
The Community Playbook for Founders (from Flybridge)Jeffrey Bussgang
 
The Search for Product-Market Fit
The Search for Product-Market FitThe Search for Product-Market Fit
The Search for Product-Market FitJeffrey Bussgang
 
Civic Entrepreneurship - A Theory of Change
Civic Entrepreneurship - A Theory of ChangeCivic Entrepreneurship - A Theory of Change
Civic Entrepreneurship - A Theory of ChangeJeffrey Bussgang
 
The Search for Product-Market Fit
The Search for Product-Market FitThe Search for Product-Market Fit
The Search for Product-Market FitJeffrey Bussgang
 
Entering StartUpLand presentation
Entering StartUpLand presentationEntering StartUpLand presentation
Entering StartUpLand presentationJeffrey Bussgang
 
What Makes Boston's Startup Scene Special - fall 2017
What Makes Boston's Startup Scene Special - fall 2017What Makes Boston's Startup Scene Special - fall 2017
What Makes Boston's Startup Scene Special - fall 2017Jeffrey Bussgang
 
What Makes the Boston Startup Scene Special?
What Makes the Boston Startup Scene Special?What Makes the Boston Startup Scene Special?
What Makes the Boston Startup Scene Special?Jeffrey Bussgang
 
Boston startup scene fall 2016 (final)
Boston startup scene fall 2016 (final)Boston startup scene fall 2016 (final)
Boston startup scene fall 2016 (final)Jeffrey Bussgang
 
Fgvn 3 31-2016 search for pmf
Fgvn 3 31-2016 search for pmfFgvn 3 31-2016 search for pmf
Fgvn 3 31-2016 search for pmfJeffrey Bussgang
 
Boston Startup Scene - Fall 2015
Boston Startup Scene - Fall 2015Boston Startup Scene - Fall 2015
Boston Startup Scene - Fall 2015Jeffrey Bussgang
 
Mattermark Case Study - Inbound 2015
Mattermark Case Study - Inbound 2015Mattermark Case Study - Inbound 2015
Mattermark Case Study - Inbound 2015Jeffrey Bussgang
 
Mastering the VC Game - Quebec City Conference Presentation
Mastering the VC Game - Quebec City Conference PresentationMastering the VC Game - Quebec City Conference Presentation
Mastering the VC Game - Quebec City Conference PresentationJeffrey Bussgang
 
Boston Startup Scene Presentation fall 2014 final
Boston Startup Scene Presentation   fall 2014 finalBoston Startup Scene Presentation   fall 2014 final
Boston Startup Scene Presentation fall 2014 finalJeffrey Bussgang
 
MIT Class on Product Management 10-22-2013
MIT Class on Product Management 10-22-2013MIT Class on Product Management 10-22-2013
MIT Class on Product Management 10-22-2013Jeffrey Bussgang
 
Boston startup scene presentation fall 2013
Boston startup scene presentation   fall 2013Boston startup scene presentation   fall 2013
Boston startup scene presentation fall 2013Jeffrey Bussgang
 
Boston Startup Scene Guide - Fall 2013
Boston Startup Scene Guide - Fall 2013Boston Startup Scene Guide - Fall 2013
Boston Startup Scene Guide - Fall 2013Jeffrey Bussgang
 

Plus de Jeffrey Bussgang (20)

Product Market Fit Presentation - May 2023 - Jeff Bussgang
Product Market Fit Presentation - May 2023 - Jeff BussgangProduct Market Fit Presentation - May 2023 - Jeff Bussgang
Product Market Fit Presentation - May 2023 - Jeff Bussgang
 
What Makes the Boston Startup Scene Special?
What Makes the Boston Startup Scene Special?What Makes the Boston Startup Scene Special?
What Makes the Boston Startup Scene Special?
 
Product Market Fit - Harvard Business School
Product Market Fit - Harvard Business SchoolProduct Market Fit - Harvard Business School
Product Market Fit - Harvard Business School
 
The Community Playbook for Founders (from Flybridge)
The Community Playbook for Founders (from Flybridge)The Community Playbook for Founders (from Flybridge)
The Community Playbook for Founders (from Flybridge)
 
The Search for Product-Market Fit
The Search for Product-Market FitThe Search for Product-Market Fit
The Search for Product-Market Fit
 
Civic Entrepreneurship - A Theory of Change
Civic Entrepreneurship - A Theory of ChangeCivic Entrepreneurship - A Theory of Change
Civic Entrepreneurship - A Theory of Change
 
The Search for Product-Market Fit
The Search for Product-Market FitThe Search for Product-Market Fit
The Search for Product-Market Fit
 
Entering StartUpLand presentation
Entering StartUpLand presentationEntering StartUpLand presentation
Entering StartUpLand presentation
 
What Makes Boston's Startup Scene Special - fall 2017
What Makes Boston's Startup Scene Special - fall 2017What Makes Boston's Startup Scene Special - fall 2017
What Makes Boston's Startup Scene Special - fall 2017
 
What Makes the Boston Startup Scene Special?
What Makes the Boston Startup Scene Special?What Makes the Boston Startup Scene Special?
What Makes the Boston Startup Scene Special?
 
Boston startup scene fall 2016 (final)
Boston startup scene fall 2016 (final)Boston startup scene fall 2016 (final)
Boston startup scene fall 2016 (final)
 
Fgvn 3 31-2016 search for pmf
Fgvn 3 31-2016 search for pmfFgvn 3 31-2016 search for pmf
Fgvn 3 31-2016 search for pmf
 
Boston Startup Scene - Fall 2015
Boston Startup Scene - Fall 2015Boston Startup Scene - Fall 2015
Boston Startup Scene - Fall 2015
 
Mattermark Case Study - Inbound 2015
Mattermark Case Study - Inbound 2015Mattermark Case Study - Inbound 2015
Mattermark Case Study - Inbound 2015
 
Fgvn 3 25-2015
Fgvn 3 25-2015Fgvn 3 25-2015
Fgvn 3 25-2015
 
Mastering the VC Game - Quebec City Conference Presentation
Mastering the VC Game - Quebec City Conference PresentationMastering the VC Game - Quebec City Conference Presentation
Mastering the VC Game - Quebec City Conference Presentation
 
Boston Startup Scene Presentation fall 2014 final
Boston Startup Scene Presentation   fall 2014 finalBoston Startup Scene Presentation   fall 2014 final
Boston Startup Scene Presentation fall 2014 final
 
MIT Class on Product Management 10-22-2013
MIT Class on Product Management 10-22-2013MIT Class on Product Management 10-22-2013
MIT Class on Product Management 10-22-2013
 
Boston startup scene presentation fall 2013
Boston startup scene presentation   fall 2013Boston startup scene presentation   fall 2013
Boston startup scene presentation fall 2013
 
Boston Startup Scene Guide - Fall 2013
Boston Startup Scene Guide - Fall 2013Boston Startup Scene Guide - Fall 2013
Boston Startup Scene Guide - Fall 2013
 

Dernier

Call Girls in DELHI Cantt, ( Call Me )-8377877756-Female Escort- In Delhi / Ncr
Call Girls in DELHI Cantt, ( Call Me )-8377877756-Female Escort- In Delhi / NcrCall Girls in DELHI Cantt, ( Call Me )-8377877756-Female Escort- In Delhi / Ncr
Call Girls in DELHI Cantt, ( Call Me )-8377877756-Female Escort- In Delhi / Ncrdollysharma2066
 
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607dollysharma2066
 
Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptx
Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptxContemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptx
Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptxMarkAnthonyAurellano
 
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample Report
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample ReportIndia Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample Report
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample ReportMintel Group
 
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 Edition
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 EditionMarket Sizes Sample Report - 2024 Edition
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 EditionMintel Group
 
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdf
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdfDigital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdf
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdfJos Voskuil
 
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdfAPRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdfRbc Rbcua
 
Ten Organizational Design Models to align structure and operations to busines...
Ten Organizational Design Models to align structure and operations to busines...Ten Organizational Design Models to align structure and operations to busines...
Ten Organizational Design Models to align structure and operations to busines...Seta Wicaksana
 
Intro to BCG's Carbon Emissions Benchmark_vF.pdf
Intro to BCG's Carbon Emissions Benchmark_vF.pdfIntro to BCG's Carbon Emissions Benchmark_vF.pdf
Intro to BCG's Carbon Emissions Benchmark_vF.pdfpollardmorgan
 
Global Scenario On Sustainable and Resilient Coconut Industry by Dr. Jelfina...
Global Scenario On Sustainable  and Resilient Coconut Industry by Dr. Jelfina...Global Scenario On Sustainable  and Resilient Coconut Industry by Dr. Jelfina...
Global Scenario On Sustainable and Resilient Coconut Industry by Dr. Jelfina...ictsugar
 
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Uttam Nagar Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Uttam Nagar Delhi NCR8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Uttam Nagar Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Uttam Nagar Delhi NCRashishs7044
 
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737Riya Pathan
 
Kenya’s Coconut Value Chain by Gatsby Africa
Kenya’s Coconut Value Chain by Gatsby AfricaKenya’s Coconut Value Chain by Gatsby Africa
Kenya’s Coconut Value Chain by Gatsby Africaictsugar
 
Call US-88OO1O2216 Call Girls In Mahipalpur Female Escort Service
Call US-88OO1O2216 Call Girls In Mahipalpur Female Escort ServiceCall US-88OO1O2216 Call Girls In Mahipalpur Female Escort Service
Call US-88OO1O2216 Call Girls In Mahipalpur Female Escort Servicecallgirls2057
 
Traction part 2 - EOS Model JAX Bridges.
Traction part 2 - EOS Model JAX Bridges.Traction part 2 - EOS Model JAX Bridges.
Traction part 2 - EOS Model JAX Bridges.Anamaria Contreras
 
Innovation Conference 5th March 2024.pdf
Innovation Conference 5th March 2024.pdfInnovation Conference 5th March 2024.pdf
Innovation Conference 5th March 2024.pdfrichard876048
 
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy CheruiyotInvestment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyotictsugar
 
International Business Environments and Operations 16th Global Edition test b...
International Business Environments and Operations 16th Global Edition test b...International Business Environments and Operations 16th Global Edition test b...
International Business Environments and Operations 16th Global Edition test b...ssuserf63bd7
 

Dernier (20)

Call Girls in DELHI Cantt, ( Call Me )-8377877756-Female Escort- In Delhi / Ncr
Call Girls in DELHI Cantt, ( Call Me )-8377877756-Female Escort- In Delhi / NcrCall Girls in DELHI Cantt, ( Call Me )-8377877756-Female Escort- In Delhi / Ncr
Call Girls in DELHI Cantt, ( Call Me )-8377877756-Female Escort- In Delhi / Ncr
 
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
 
Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptx
Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptxContemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptx
Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptx
 
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample Report
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample ReportIndia Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample Report
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample Report
 
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 Edition
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 EditionMarket Sizes Sample Report - 2024 Edition
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 Edition
 
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdf
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdfDigital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdf
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdf
 
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdfAPRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
 
Ten Organizational Design Models to align structure and operations to busines...
Ten Organizational Design Models to align structure and operations to busines...Ten Organizational Design Models to align structure and operations to busines...
Ten Organizational Design Models to align structure and operations to busines...
 
Intro to BCG's Carbon Emissions Benchmark_vF.pdf
Intro to BCG's Carbon Emissions Benchmark_vF.pdfIntro to BCG's Carbon Emissions Benchmark_vF.pdf
Intro to BCG's Carbon Emissions Benchmark_vF.pdf
 
Global Scenario On Sustainable and Resilient Coconut Industry by Dr. Jelfina...
Global Scenario On Sustainable  and Resilient Coconut Industry by Dr. Jelfina...Global Scenario On Sustainable  and Resilient Coconut Industry by Dr. Jelfina...
Global Scenario On Sustainable and Resilient Coconut Industry by Dr. Jelfina...
 
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Uttam Nagar Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Uttam Nagar Delhi NCR8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Uttam Nagar Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Uttam Nagar Delhi NCR
 
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737
 
Kenya’s Coconut Value Chain by Gatsby Africa
Kenya’s Coconut Value Chain by Gatsby AfricaKenya’s Coconut Value Chain by Gatsby Africa
Kenya’s Coconut Value Chain by Gatsby Africa
 
Call US-88OO1O2216 Call Girls In Mahipalpur Female Escort Service
Call US-88OO1O2216 Call Girls In Mahipalpur Female Escort ServiceCall US-88OO1O2216 Call Girls In Mahipalpur Female Escort Service
Call US-88OO1O2216 Call Girls In Mahipalpur Female Escort Service
 
Corporate Profile 47Billion Information Technology
Corporate Profile 47Billion Information TechnologyCorporate Profile 47Billion Information Technology
Corporate Profile 47Billion Information Technology
 
Enjoy ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Sector 18 Noida Escorts Delhi NCR
Enjoy ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Sector 18 Noida Escorts Delhi NCREnjoy ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Sector 18 Noida Escorts Delhi NCR
Enjoy ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Sector 18 Noida Escorts Delhi NCR
 
Traction part 2 - EOS Model JAX Bridges.
Traction part 2 - EOS Model JAX Bridges.Traction part 2 - EOS Model JAX Bridges.
Traction part 2 - EOS Model JAX Bridges.
 
Innovation Conference 5th March 2024.pdf
Innovation Conference 5th March 2024.pdfInnovation Conference 5th March 2024.pdf
Innovation Conference 5th March 2024.pdf
 
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy CheruiyotInvestment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
 
International Business Environments and Operations 16th Global Edition test b...
International Business Environments and Operations 16th Global Edition test b...International Business Environments and Operations 16th Global Edition test b...
International Business Environments and Operations 16th Global Edition test b...
 

How to Raise Your First Round of Capital - January 2020

  • 1. How to Raise Your First Round of Capital Jeffrey Bussgang Flybridge Capital Partners, General Partner Harvard Business School, Senior Lecturer January 2020
  • 2.  General Partner at Flybridge Capital Partners, early- stage VC firm based in Boston and NYC $700m raised across 5 funds & 2 pre-seed funds over 18 years 100+ portfolio companies (e.g., MongoDB, Codecademy, Splice)  Senior Lecturer at HBS – Launching Tech Ventures, RVP  Former entrepreneur Cofounder Upromise (acq’d by SallieMae), Exec team at Open Market (IPO ‘96)  Author: Mastering the VC Game  Author: Entering StartUpLand  Blog: SeeingBothSides.com Context For My Perspective
  • 3. 3 Fundraising Patterns and Players • $250-500k pre-seed • Convertible note / SAFE @ $2-4m cap • If your friends, family and ex-colleagues won’t back you – why should I? • $1-3m seed @ $4-8m pre-money • Either note, SAFE/SAFT or priced round • Micro-seed funds, seed funds, super angels • $5-10m Series A @ $10-20m pre-money • Priced round, board, control structure • Seed funds, Series A funds, Series B funds • $20-40m Series B @ $40-100m pre-money • Priced round, board, control structure • Series B funds, growth funds, crossover PE
  • 4. VCs vs. Angels  Will want some control (voting, board, veto)  Will want to own 10-20%  Very actively engaged (they get paid to do this), leveraging the power of the firm’s network  Can add tremendous value and be great business partners  Can be total disasters  Typically rational actors, commercially-driven, but if inexperienced can do great harm  Will want no control (“send me an annual email”)  Will want to own 1-10%  Maybe engaged or not (often a hobby, sometimes a personal mission)  Can add tremendous value and be great business partners  Can be total disasters  Typically rational, but if unsophisticated: naïve irrational, emotional
  • 5. VC Is Not The Only Option! 5 Source: Founder Collective
  • 6. 6 Ridiculously large returns (> 10x) are very, very rare (4%) – but are always the goal A Game of Outliers
  • 7. 7 VC Fund Math 101 To achieve target of 3x the fund, need to see multiple big exits (10x+) after years 9-12 Prototypical, $100M Early Stage Fund Source: Industry Ventures
  • 8.  Most VCs and Angels have ADD – operate on “BLINK” instincts  Want to SEE everything, but actually INVEST in very, very few deals  Make their decision within the first 10-15 minutes  Typical VC and Angel will invest in one out of every 300-500 deals they see  Long odds – you need to really stand out  Like college applicants – triage quickly Investor Decision Making
  • 9.  Never too early to build a relationship (and get advice) – especially when you’re not asking for money.  That said, there is no such thing as a casual meeting – every meeting with an investor is a pitch / presentation  Leave them with your next milestones…and achieve them!  Only when you’ve established a relationship and operational credibility should you ask for money 9 “Ask for money, get advice. Ask for advice, get money twice.” When Do You Talk To Investors?
  • 10. 9  Scope out the firm – size matters, as does the individual  Arrange for a warm introduction  Prepare, be brief (VCs Blink)  Don’t downplay risk  Mutual due diligence is fair play 9 Find the Sweet Spot
  • 12. VC Introduction Algorithm 1. Entrepreneurs who have made them money 2. Entrepreneurs in their portfolio 3. Entrepreneurs they respect 4. Customers/Partners they respect 5. Service providers they respect 6. Existing investors …  Cold emails/social networks …  Investors who are not investing 12
  • 14. Elements of the Pitch  Intro  who are you, why are you here and why are you special?  Problem  what is the customer pain?  Solution  what’s your disruptive, breakthrough compelling solution? Is the “Gain vs. Pain” ratio 10x?  Opportunity / market size  top down and bottoms up  Competitive advantage  what is your unique differentiation? what’s your “competitive moat”?  Go to market plan  how are you going to reach the customer?  Business model  how are you going to make money?  Financials  what’s the bottom line, what are your key assumptions? How are you going to make ME money?  The ask  how much do you want, how long will it last you and how much will you achieve? 14
  • 15. Top 3 Things To Do  Set context  Tell your narrative to prove founder-market fit – i.e., why you?  Tell industry context to prove why now?  Be crisp and on point  Personal intro should take < 5 minutes  Team introduction < 5 minutes  Make it relevant – don’t go off on tangents  If you can’t show good summarization skills, how will you handle a board room?  Know your stuff  Know competition, show domain expertise  They will push you to test you  John Doerr/Upromise case study
  • 16. Top 3 Things To Avoid  Do not exaggerate  Assume everything you say will be verified in due diligence  Assume the listener is a cynic and a professional BS detector  There’s no “I” in team  If you are self-aggrandizing, investors will assume you can’t build teams, attract great talent  Do not name drop  No one is going to be impressed with who you know unless the relationships are both real and relevant.  Assume everyone does their due diligence
  • 17. Typical Investment Criteria  Tangible things investors like to see:  Very big market (> $500M? $1B? – support $100+M revenue)  Unfair advantage (why you? why now?)  Attractive business model (recurring, high margins, network effects)  Unique technology or business model approach  Intangible things investors like to see:  “Pied Piper” – an ability to recruit and retain a great team, partners  Interpersonal chemistry  Movie, not a snapshot  X-Factor / Super power
  • 18. So You’ve Had a Good Meeting… Then What?  Treat fundraising like a sales process – build a pipeline, work people through the pipeline, build up to crescendo  VCs get distracted – typically only pursue 2-3 high priority new investment opportunities at any given time  Stay connected, top of mind, build a sense of momentum  Need to sell the individual “champion”, then the help them sell the partnership  Address objections with specific data  Make the investment case for them  Give them tools/materials to share with their partners  Create a sense of urgency (run a competitive process) 18
  • 19. Then, Expect More Due Diligence  Customers / partners  Team  Technology  Business model  Market size / analysts As you would do in a sales process, package up the information, make it easy on the VC – provide reference list, financial models, detailed market size analysis – all in readable, compelling, digestible form 19
  • 20. Partners Meeting  Ask your champion for the main objections in advance  Customize your pitch to address them  Command the room  Be open about risks – and your plan to mitigate 20  Ask your champion where they’re at (strong positive? slight positive? still questioning?)
  • 21. The Vote 21 Partner A Partner B Partner C Partner D Average Market 4 4 4 4 4.0 Team 4 4 3 5 4.0 Product/Tech 2 4 4 2 3.0 Business Model 5 5 3 3 4.0 Competition 4 3 3 4 3.5 Deal/Cap Markets 4 4 3 3 3.5 Disruption 4 4 4 4 4.0 Network Effects 2 3 4 4 3.3 Total 29 31 28 29 29.3 Two most important critera Debate and disparity can be a good thing
  • 22. Term Sheet Time - FAQs  Should I include VCs in my seed round or just angels?  Should I do a convertible note/SAFE with a cap, no cap or a priced round?  How big should the option pool be?  How much do I set aside for team, advisors, board?  How should I think about valuation?  “Promote” definition  How should I think about control? 22
  • 23. Expectations and Milestones  Have well-documented milestones that represent what you expect to achieve during the initial funding period  Team building  Technical progress/product development  Customers, revenue  Budget  Talk to the investor about the next round before you close this round  Expectations, amount, price  What experiments are you going to run and what results do you expect from those experiments? 23
  • 24. Who’s Ready to Raise Money?
  • 25. Mastering the VC Game: How to Raise Your First Round of Capital Jeffrey Bussgang Flybridge Capital Partners, General Partner Harvard Business School, Senior Lecturer jeff@flybridge.com @bussgang January 2020

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. -- Whether their returns will be superior in the long run to a firm that makes more concentrated bets is irrelevant to the entrepreneur. Finding the right fit for their particular fundraising needs is what really matters to the entrepreneur (58). --Know the underlying drivers of the financials very well (tell the Kleiner Perkins story about the first time you pitched) (67).-- --Smart entrepreneurs take a strategic approach, assessing the general kind of VC firm they should select to pitch --If you are an entrepreneur looking to raise $3-6 million, then a firm with roughly $50 million in capital per general partner is the right fit for you Different visual, why do we want to raise money from a VC/within the chapter