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Instead of seeking venture capital, David Burke used the capital from each company sale to fund the next. This self-funding approach allowed him to retain full equity and control, bypass the time-consuming fundraising process, and reinvest profits into growth on his own terms.
Selling 100% of a company isn't the only exit. Founders can take "multiple bites of the apple" by selling a majority stake but retaining significant shares. This allows them to benefit from future sales or an IPO under new ownership.
As a highly profitable business, Malwarebytes didn't need capital for operations. Instead, its three major funding rounds (VC, crossover, PE) were used entirely for secondary transactions, providing liquidity to early founders and investors without diluting the company or adding cash to the balance sheet.
After seeing his first company's value explode post-acquisition, this founder now prioritizes partial exits (recaps with equity roll) over all-cash deals. This strategy allows him to de-risk while retaining significant upside for future growth, a stark lesson from his first exit.
A unique "Double and Keep It" model helps business owners double their company's value by using external capital from family offices to acquire other companies. This creates a larger, more attractive group for a future sale, increasing the owner's payout without them taking equity dilution or adding debt to their original business.
While first-time founders often optimize for the highest valuation, experienced entrepreneurs know this is a trap. They deliberately raise at a reasonable price, even if a higher one is available. This preserves strategic flexibility, makes future fundraising less perilous, and keeps options open—which is more valuable than a vanity valuation.
By structuring deals as asset-only sales, David Burke sold his customer lists and technicians while keeping his core sales organization and management. This strategy allowed him to retain his primary intellectual property and team, enabling a rapid relaunch and scaling of his subsequent businesses.
To maintain product focus and avoid the 'raising money game,' the founders of Cues established a separate trading company. They used the profits from this successful venture to self-fund their AI startup, enabling them to build patiently without being beholden to VC timelines or expectations.
Despite a $50 million exit from their previous company, the Everflow founders intentionally limited their initial investment to a few hundred thousand dollars and didn't take salaries for two years. They believed capital scarcity forces focus and efficiency, preventing wasteful spending while they were still figuring out the product.
Venture capital can create a "treadmill" of raising rounds based on specific metrics, not building a sustainable business. Avoiding VC funding allowed Donald Spann to maintain control, focus on long-term viability, and build a company he could sustain without external pressures or risks.
Using his PE background, Mark Abbott deliberately bootstrapped Ninety to a $100M valuation before taking outside capital. This strategic patience allowed him to raise a $20M Series A with only 17% dilution, thereby maintaining majority ownership even after a second, larger round.