Startup Funding

Related Guides

Trending

The most popular articles on Startup Funding in the past day.

Fundraise Challenges

1 min read When beginning your fundraise, you will quickly find that there are fundraise challenges at every stage. That said, the challenge for each round of the raise can be very different. Seed At the seed round, the challenge is to convince the investor you can sell the product. At this stage, investors look for evidence that you can build and sell the product to customers. Customer interactions are important because it demonstrates to investors you are already in discussions learning about the customer’s needs. It’s helpful to have a list of twenty such customers and highlight your interactions with them and show your plan to build the product and close them. Series A At the Series A round, you must convince the investor you can grow the business. At this stage, investors look for evidence that you have systems in place for growing sales and building products. They look for processes that create a repeatable, predictable outcome. For example, your customer acquisition process shows a consistent conversion rate. Series B At the Series B round, you must convince the investor you can scale the business. At this stage, investors look to see you are now working on programs and processes that take your customer acquisition, sales, and product building to a new level. Read more from TEN Capital: 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

The Various Types of Fundraises

1 min read A common misconception among startups is that when they are looking to raise for investment, they have the total raise for the life of the startup in mind. It’s a big picture way of viewing things, when in actuality, it is better to look at the chapters rather than the whole story. Approaching the investment, the startup needs the total sum in mind. In many ways, it is biting off more than you should be chewing at the time. A bit more focus here is vital. The ideal way to approach raising for investment is by breaking the raise into smaller chapters and smaller bites, which means focusing on smaller rounds. By doing this, the founder no longer has to spend an excessive amount of time on the fundraise process. There are some things to consider when breaking the raise down into rounds. Below is a guideline on how to break up a startup fundraise into tranches.  Family and Friends Funding $10k to $100k Pre-seed $250k Seed  $500k to $750k Seed + $500k to $750k Series A $1.5M to $3M Series B  $5M+ When going through these rounds, it’s essential to know that if you raise too much money, too early in the life of your startup, you will find yourself giving away too much equity. To avoid giving up too much equity, stick to raising in stages. 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

Site Map

Scroll to Top