Startup Funding

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The Importance of Your Story

“Your audience is waiting for your stories. They have memory slots tailor-made to light up and remember you.” ― Steve Woodruff Every business has a story to tell and it is important to tell your story to the best of your ability. Sharing a personal element when it comes to your business is bound to draw people in, capitave, and persuade others to consider the problem you’ve discovered and why it requires a solution only you can produce. In addition to the problem and the solution, it’s also important to talk about the challenges you’ve faced and overcome. Sharing your story offers the chance to draw on a relatable experience giving you the opportunity to connect with those who can help you and your business to reach its full potential. Be sure to explain your current business status and where you see it heading in the future. One of the best ways to tell your story is to make it as concise as possible. This is where understanding the elevator pitch becomes incredibly important. The elevator pitch means being able to tell your story and pitch your business in 60 seconds or less. This type of pitch is ideal when it comes to making the most of your words in a limited amount of time. Another thing to think about is: If you only had 5 words, how would you pitch your business? The best business strategy involves a short and sweet synopsis. Think about 5 well thought out words that sums up your company. Remember you’re on a mission to showcase your startup and catch the investor’s attention. Tell your story and practice the ability to keep it concise.

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Quick Tips for Your Fundraise

1 min read At TEN Capital, we have many startups looking for Quick Tips for their fundraise. One of the biggest questions for any startup is: How do we raise funding? The funding question can be an intimidating one. It’s intimidating because it can be difficult to navigate how to raise funding for your business. Moreover, it can be a challenge keeping track of and evaluating where funding should come from while figuring out where these sources for your raise can be found. The important thing to remember is that funding accelerates what you already have going for your business; you want to ensure you are doing everything you can to propel your success forward. Here are a few quick tips to keep in mind while you consider raising for your business: Find the best funding for your needs. This may be debt financing, self-funding, or bootstrapping. Each method has pros and cons. Pursue the one best suited to your business needs and situation. Choose the right investors for your raise and initiate a conversation. You don’t need to know an investor before approaching for funding. It’s okay to raise funding from family and friends. As a general rule, ask for no more than $5k per person and ask for these funds as a donation. Consider your deal structure and figure out what type of structure works best for you. Usually, convertible notes are a great way for startups to kick off a fundraise. Milestones are important and attractive to investors. When crafting your fundraise story focus on key milestones because these milestones demonstrate that you are making progress. For an in-depth look at raising funding for your startup, check out our guide: https://staging.startupfundingespresso.com/how-to-raise-funding/ 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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Understanding How Much to Raise and Milestones

Considering Your Raise A lot of businesses start with a large number. They begin with the complete raise they anticipate to run. Typically this number ranges between $1M and $10M. It’s good to have the big picture in mind. Some companies consider raising it all at once because they want to get the fundraising out of the way. However, one thing to consider is that raising too much money on a round will cost you equity. This may be equity that you don’t have to give up. Keep in mind that your valuation is low at the beginning. It’s best to raise only the funding you need to reach the next milestone, and no more, no less. As you grow the business, your valuation will go up which means you give away less equity. Think about breaking your fundraise into tranches. It will save time and make each fundraise easier. Your milestones In fundraising are specific goals you need to accomplish. When crafting your fundraise story focus on key milestones including those you just hit and those you are striving for. This demonstrates you are making progress. Here are the 4 types of milestones to consider: Team
 – Make sure you are hiring key people that can help you grow the business. Product – This means bringing the product to a new level of completeness. Sales – Strive for achieving sales traction such as reaching $50K MRR. Fundraise 
- Aim for landing a big investor with a specific commitment or investment. While you may not always hit the milestones you planned, you will most likely find success along the way which demonstrates accomplishment to showcase to potential investors.

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Launching a Series A fundraise

1 min read In funding your company your network only goes so far. When it runs out, where do you go? If your business has developed some key performance indicators, you may consider opting for a Series A fundraise. For any startups not requiring FDA, you will need the following: A product with revenue: preferably, this revenue should be above $500K/year. A growth plan: this plan should be designed to reach $10M annual revenue. A strong team: for the best results, make sure the team has a growth company experience. A credible funding plan: make sure the funding plan aims to maintain growth with reasonable burn rates. Updated financial pro forma: this should show the growth plan and use of funds. Pitch deck: it’s essential that you have a pitch deck showing your growth plan. Keep in mind that if you are aiming for a target valuation, you may have to raise a Seed+ round of $500K to position the company with the proper KPIs and growth rates before pursuing the Series A fundraise. Read more: https://staging.startupfundingespresso.com/company-landing/ 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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Key Startup Tips

If you are a startup raising funding, it’s good to have a few key principles you can rely on. Being an entrepreneur and scaling a business is a hard, but it’s supposed to be. You need a complete team to start a business – someone building it and someone selling it. It isn’t a team if everyone is building it and no one is selling it. You’ve got to be all-in. Part-timers need not apply. But remember that sweat equity is table stakes – not valuation metrics. Startups often assume investors want big revenue, but what investors really want is predictable and repeatable revenue. In an early stage company, the revenue is never large. However, if it’s predictable based on recurring revenue, repeat revenue or known lead generation funnels, then you have a growth story to tell the investor. Build and test your funnel so you know it works. That way you can tell a growth story instead of telling the ‘we’re a unicorn’ story – which nobody believes. Don’t expect funding to solve all your problems. Funding should be an enabler that accelerates what you already have going. You’ve heard the saying- if you build it they will come. But things work differently in the startup world. Sell it first, build it second. If you can’t sell it in the first place, there’s no need to build it in the second place. Many startups over-spend on their tech and then then have trouble finding buyers. A better strategy is to sell it and then build out what the customer wants.

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Product Development: Who Pays?

When you’re a startup and want to expand, it can be a daunting task to figure out which products to develop. Before you dive in and spend, it’s a good idea to ask yourself “who will pay for this?” It’s important to ask yourself these questions to make sure that your overall cost also matches your sources. If you are working with an existing product that needs an upgrade, your current customers are a great source of payment. It’s important to ask yourself these questions to make sure that your overall cost also matches your sources. If you are working with an existing product that needs an upgrade your current customers are a great source of payment. You can even survey your customers about what their needs are. If you decide you’d like to develop a new product, it’s a good idea to find customers who are willing to prepay. If you can’t find those customers you should reconsider. A lot of startups think that pre-selling a product is difficult to do. In reality, it’s about the same amount of work. You can get a lot of benefits when working with your customers in the product development phase. You get a clear idea of problems that need to be solved and what customers are willing to pay for. It can also give you a slight competitive advantage. Matching product development with customer payments keeps you aligned with the market.

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Demonstrating Product and Market Validation

When talking to potential investors for your startup, the first questions you get will invariably involve product validation and market validation. In other words, investors want to know if your product works and if someone will buy it. Investors will need to see evidence of validation before they move into further diligence, so it’s important to be prepared to show product and market validation in your pitch. Beta users are a great way to demonstrate that a product works and has customer interest. In many cases, the product is a website providing some value in the form of data storage or analysis. More than likely, you will get the product up and running—but will someone use it, and more importantly, pay for it? Customers who pre-pay for it check the market validation box. It demonstrates you are solving a real problem. If you don’t have anyone paying for it, then you’ll need to resort to pipeline metrics showing the number of downloads, trials, and pilot programs. While not the same as a paying customer, these metrics can give a leading indicator that customers are likely to buy. It’s also helpful to illustrate the funnel that prospects go through when engaging with your product. This includes lead generation, qualification, closing, trials, pilot tests, and signed customers. Investors will look for a consistent signup percentage on the leads going through your program. While the absolute number of signups may not by high, the repeatability of your model can be compelling to the investor

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Talk the Talk and Walk the Walk

In the startup world, you’ll hear a lot of stories about big ideas and how they are going to happen. So, they’ve created a unicorn that will change the world? That’s great, but you’ve got to find out – are they a unicorn, or just a horse in a headband? A startup should be able to demonstrate why their idea is the next big thing. In other words, talk the talk and walk the walk. If the company has some traction and is making money, then they should absolutely show what’s working behind the scenes to make it grow. But what if they’re not quite there yet and haven’t made a lot of money? If that’s the case, you need to ask questions to get a better idea of what they have in place. How will they generate leads? What does that look like? What is their current sales pitch/angle and how will it work for them? Where are their customers coming from, and how do they make the sale? They might have a great idea, but they’ll need to do more than just lay out a slide deck with goals they hope to achieve. A good startup must be able to back it up with a well thought out plan to accomplish those goals. If they’ve done their homework and have clear answers and processes in place, it shows that they’re the expert — and that shows potential for investment.

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Should you Raise Funding?

1 min read Should you raise funding and if so, how much should you seek? Funding helps accelerate what you already have going into your business. You should have a core process for acquiring customers and providing a service. If you don’t have it then funding at this stage will only hurt your business. It’s best to continue testing your core business model until you know it works. Keep in mind that it’s important to find the best channel for acquiring customers and at the most efficient cost. By stating your core business in numbers, you now know what it costs to grow your business. Then ask yourself, what is the best source of funding for your business? In addition to equity funding, you may consider debt financing, self-funding, or bootstrapping. Debt financing requires you to pay back the loan but after you do so, you own the business outright. You could self-finance, which means you put in your own money, or you could bootstrap it, which is another way of saying ‘find a customer who will pay for your product/service’. I call this customer funding. For this, you may need to offer additional services at a higher price to cover the startup costs but is a great way to grow your business as it keeps you focused on your product and customer. If you decide to raise funding, how much should you raise? Raise enough so that it will take your business to the next level. Think about the position you need to achieve to raise the next round of funding. Your fundraising should take you there and set you up for the next raise. Your valuation in any startup is low at the beginning. Raising too much money at a low valuation will end up giving away too much equity. For those with larger fundraises you may want to break it down into several milestone steps in which case you can raise your valuation for each step as you achieve more revenue. Read more in the TEN Capital eGuide: https://staging.startupfundingespresso.com/how-to-raise-funding/ 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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