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A VC's job isn't just funding a startup; it's building a company that will be attractive to its eventual "buyer": the public markets (IPO) or a strategic acquirer (M&A). This requires understanding Wall Street's valuation metrics from day one, even when the company is just "two people in a PowerPoint."

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In a company seeking its next funding round or acquisition, the CPO's strategic focus must shift. The primary "customer" to satisfy is not the end user, but the next investor or acquirer. This means building a business and product story that appeals directly to them.

The VC model thrives by creating liquidity events (M&A, IPO) for high-growth companies valued on forward revenue multiples, long before they can be assessed on free cash flow. This strategy is a rational bet on finding the next trillion-dollar winner, justifying the high failure rate of other portfolio companies.

Founders must understand that taking venture capital means their startup is now a financial instrument for the VC's fund. The VC's return expectations become the startup's required trajectory, a critical alignment in an AI era where investors expect astronomical outcomes.

Venture capitalist Bruce Booth explains that bankers, lawyers, audit firms, and VCs all have strong financial incentives for a company to go public. This creates systemic pressure that may not align with the company's best long-term interests.

The traditional VC model of waiting for an IPO or acquisition is obsolete. With companies staying private for 20+ years, firms must develop the skill of actively selling positions in secondary transactions to provide necessary liquidity for their LPs.

The abundance of private capital means the most successful companies no longer need to go public for growth funding. This disrupts the traditional VC model, where IPOs are a primary exit path, forcing firms to re-evaluate how and when they achieve liquidity for their limited partners, even for their best assets.

Venture capitalists often have portfolio companies that are profitable and growing but will never achieve the breakout public offering VCs need. These companies can become a distraction for the VC and can be acquired by PE investors who see them as attractive, stable assets.

Secondary markets have grown to record volumes, representing a significant portion of venture activity. For VCs and employees, selling shares in these markets is becoming as common an exit strategy as traditional IPOs or acquisitions, providing crucial liquidity.

With trillion-dollar IPOs likely, the old model where early VCs win by having later-stage VCs "mark up" their deals is obsolete. The new math dictates that significant ownership in a category winner is immensely valuable at any stage, fundamentally changing investment strategy for the entire industry.

Traditional valuation doesn't apply to early-stage startups. A VC investment is functionally an out-of-the-money call option. VCs pay a premium for a small percentage, betting that the company's future value will grow so massively that their option expires 'in the money.' This model explains high valuations for pre-revenue companies with huge potential.

Venture Capitalists Create Products for Wall Street to Buy via IPOs | RiffOn