Startup Funding

December 21, 2020

How to Show Traction When You Are Pre-Revenue

2 min read: We know that investors are looking for traction, but how to show traction when you are pre-revenue? Contrary to popular belief, even if you are pre-revenue, you can still show traction with your startup. Traction can be represented by any activity with customers, even without revenue. You can show customer engagement at all phases, even before you have a product. You should have customers coaching you on what product to build. First, when communicating with investors, always include customers in your discussions. Never engage an investor meeting, email, or conference call without new info about your customer and always mention it. If you are pre-revenue, you can still talk about the prospective customers you are working with to build your product and what they are saying. The customer problem is the most important thing because it shows you are close to the revenue source, and you are working towards obtaining it. Be able to name the customers, both the company and your contact. Never talk about the customers as a general group with vague and fuzzy references. Talk specifically about the problem they want to solve and how much it costs them. Next, show how you’re building your product to solve the customer’s problem. Discuss pilots, beta tests, MVP usage, and how the customers are engaging. Once you have a few customers closed, you have enough information to start building the Unit Economics story. Show the cost of acquiring those customers, qualifying them, closing them, and how it’s a profitable business. Place those customers in a sales funnel to show prospects moving through the funnel. Place upcoming prospects at the top of the funnel to show more are on their way. You now have a repeatable, predictable process. The secret here is that most investors don’t look for big revenue; they look for repeatable revenue. In your investor updates, show additional customers coming into the funnel and moving through it. Highlight that the cost and timeframes are the same, emphasizing it’s a repeatable process, and you’re just “turning the crank.” If you’ve decided you’re not going to talk with customers until the product is complete, then you may want to rethink that strategy. Involve customers from the start and get their help on it, and ALWAYS be talking about those interactions with your investors. Read more: https://staging.startupfundingespresso.com/education/ Hall T. Martin is the founder and CEO of the TEN Capital Network.TEN Capital has been connecting startups with investors for over ten years. You can connect with Hall about fundraising, business growth, and emerging technologies via LinkedIn or email: hallmartin@tencapital.group

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How to Keep Your Investors Happy

2 min read  How do you keep your investors happy? Keep them informed. I remember my first angel investment back in the 1990s. This was before I knew you were supposed to set up an agreement with the entrepreneur on how, how often, and what they would communicate to the investors. After several months of hearing nothing, I finally called the President of the company and asked for a written update, including financials. A week later he sent me a short two-paragraph email along with a spreadsheet attached showing the financials. And so came the red flags. There are several items to point out here: The two paragraphs by no means filled in the details of the business. To this date, there are holes in their explanation of what went on in the business. The financials of any company should not be in an Excel spreadsheet. They should be in Quick Books. Excel has no audit trails, no security or validation. Anyone can change the formulas. In fact, several of the columns of financial data didn’t add up in the bottom row. I only received this after I demanded it and I never received another one. After that experience, the entrepreneur wanted to discuss over the phone and found excuses to not send out the financials again. These are all red flags indicating that things are not going well. Later the company went bust. It is crucial for the entrepreneur should send regular, informational updates to the investors. Be transparent about the results and share both bad news as well as good news. Stick to facts about the current state of the business and not just forecasts and plans. Provide short status updates about major initiatives, milestones missed or hit, and major customers or partnership opportunities. Share the status of product development including test results, beta tests, and setbacks or breakthroughs. Cover the key financial metrics, including actual versus forecasted revenues, cash on hand, current burn rate, and monthly and year-to-date revenues. If additional fundraising rounds are underway, provide the status of fundraising goals. Share details about new employees, finding a great co-founder, or securing an experienced advisor. Detail key customers landed, important opportunities, and major marketing initiatives. Keeping your investors informed also maintains the relationship, leaving the opportunity open to ask for follow-on funding later. Read more: https://staging.startupfundingespresso.com/education/ Hall T. Martin is the founder and CEO of the TEN Capital Network.TEN Capital has been connecting startups with investors for over ten years. You can connect with Hall about fundraising, business growth, and emerging technologies via LinkedIn or email: hallmartin@tencapital.group

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