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Method Security's seed round from a16z closed in just a few days, but this speed was deceptive. One co-founder had spent over a year methodically building relationships with target investors and leveraging the Palantir alumni network. The groundwork, not the pitch, is what enables a fast close.
A massive valuation for a "seed" round can be misleading. Often, insiders have participated in several unannounced, cheaper tranches. The headline number is just the final, most expensive tier, used to create FOMO and set a high watermark for new investors.
The Method Security co-founders spent nearly a decade sharing ideas and trying to poach each other for various ventures. By the time the right idea and technological moment arrived, the team was already a cohesive unit with proven chemistry, eliminating the major risk of founder breakups.
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.
In a challenging fundraising climate, formal processes are insufficient. SpliceBio's CEO secured their lead Series B investor by starting informal conversations a full year before the official round. This long-term relationship-building establishes trust and allows investors to track execution over time, which is critical when capital is tight.
Fundraising isn't a single transaction. A top Japanese VC prefers to invest in founders he's known for over two years, valuing trust built through long-term relationships over a polished fundraising pitch.
To win highly sought-after deals, growth investors must build relationships years in advance. This involves providing tangible help with hiring, customer introductions, and strategic advice, effectively acting as an investor long before deploying capital.
The YC fundraising process for top companies is a blitz. The best investors don't wait for scheduled meetings; they proactively ask to move them up, creating a frenzy where rounds can fully close in 36-48 hours. Juxta's founder took 16 meetings and received 16 investment offers, closing the round before most meetings occurred.
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.
The most effective fundraising strategy isn't a rigid, time-boxed "process." Instead, elite founders build genuine relationships with target VCs over months. When it's time to raise, the groundwork is laid, turning the fundraise into a quick, casual commitment rather than a competitive, game-driven event.