Seed Fundraising:  When To Raise Money

Loading...
Loading...

This article was originally featured on Hackernoon.

The timing of your fundraising can have a big impact on the outcome. Here’s how you know if it’s the right time to raise your seed round.

Revenue Growth

Great Situation — You’ve been growing at 20%/month on revenue (or a comparable metric) for 6 months.

Okay Situation — Your startup has been growing at 15%/month on revenue (or a comparable metric) for 3 months.

Loading...
Loading...

<>Bad Situation — If your company’s revenue numbers (or comparable metrics) are trending down, you should wait to raise. Most investors will focus their attention on growing companies.

Tech Breakthrough

Great Situation — You have clear evidence your technology beats existing offerings by an order of magnitude. For example, when Skype launched in 2003, they made expensive international calls free.

Okay Situation — It appears you have technology that will beat the market but the evidence is limited, e.g. you have an impressive demo but it’s not live with a customer yet.

Bad Situation — You have research and prototypes indicating a potential market advantage but you are yet to run your own end-to-end tests.

Potential Revenue

Great Situation — You have signed contracts with customers who are already live. The contracts are worth $500k+/year and the payments will start within 60 days.

Okay Situation — You have live trials with potential customers who are happy with the product. The contracts would be worth $250k+/year but terms are not finalized.

Bad Situation — You have no live trials, customers are interested but financial terms have not been discussed.

Team Resumes

Great Situation — You have a team with globally recognized skills, applicable to a massive market. E.g. you’re a drone company and the founders recently won the International Aerial Robotics Competition.

Okay Situation — Your team has academic and/or industry expertise relevant to a big market, with a strong history of performance. For example, you’re building a fintech company after working at Goldman Sachs for a decade.

Bad Situation — If your team’s expertise is from an industry different to your startup and you’re not a serial entrepreneur, you should expect to demonstrate traction or a tech breakthrough before being fundable.

Use these guidelines to talk to investors at the best time for your company, not just when they approach you or when you’re tight on money. Good timing can make all the difference.

This article is part of a series on Seed Fundraising:
1. How to Get a Meeting
2. How to Build a Deck
3. How to Handle an Angel Investor Meeting
4. VCs vs Seed Funds vs Angels

Loading...
Loading...
Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs
Posted In: EducationEntrepreneurshipFinancingManagementStartupsGeneralcontributor
Benzinga simplifies the market for smarter investing

Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.

Join Now: Free!

Loading...