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Investors often try to engage founders before a formal fundraising process begins to "get to know you." However, Jack Altman advises that unless an investor presents a concrete term sheet, these early conversations are merely attempts to control the process on their timeline. A true preemption is an offer, not a meeting.
Founders can accurately gauge an investor's future helpfulness by their actions during the pre-investment courtship phase. If an investor is unwilling to provide value when they are most motivated to win the deal, they are unlikely to be a helpful partner later on.
To win the best pre-seed deals, investors should engage high-potential talent during their 'founder curious' phase, long before a formal fundraise. The real competition is guiding them toward conviction on their own timeline, not battling other VCs for a term sheet later.
The best time to raise capital is when you don't need it. Approach early conversations with investors not to ask for money, but to listen, learn, and improve your strategy. Genuinely excited investors will offer to invest without being explicitly asked.
Founders often feel fundraising is a marketplace with weak signals. The reality is that it's a sales process. The founder's job is to qualify leads by researching an investor's portfolio, check size, and investment thesis to find a genuine fit, rather than hoping for a match.
When a VC reaches out before you're fundraising, don't take the meeting. State that you're busy building and suggest a meeting in a future quarter. This scarcity tactic, or 'negging,' signals confidence and makes your startup more desirable to the investor.
Instead of running a competitive fundraising process, Morton favors preemptive offers from investors. He believes this approach selects for partners with the highest conviction in his vision, which is more valuable long-term than simply maximizing valuation in a bidding war.
Investors can be non-committal. To cut through ambiguity, founders must create a forcing function by directly asking for the term sheet. If the investor stalls or deflects, it's a negative signal, and the founder should move on.
Venture capitalists are experts at their own game; you won't beat them. Instead of trying, create your own by setting the terms. For instance, define a compressed two-week fundraising period to create scarcity and prevent them from dragging out the process, shifting the power dynamic in your favor.
Prepared's founder rejected running a formal fundraising process. Instead, he had infrequent 'coffee chats' with investors to share progress. This built relationships and momentum, leading to preemptive term sheets and much faster closes without the distraction of a full-time fundraise.
Instead of a formal roadshow, founders should let future lead investors invest small amounts months in advance. Providing them with regular updates and hitting stated milestones builds immense trust, making the actual fundraise a quick, targeted process that optimizes for partner over price.