Tsh masterclass you've got seed... now what?

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• What does a Series A mean? It is your first round with professional investors, with true financial targets and commitments.• How to get from seed to A: deliver an MVP, build out your team and get customer tractiono MVP: the core of your business to prove the businesso Committed team: working together full-time and covering the key bases of the businesso Product/Market Fit: proving that you have built something that target clients will pay at a commercially viable rate• When do you need Series Ao When you have proved the aboveo 3-6 months before you need the moneyo When you need to get to the next level• Investors mattero Money isn’t money... remember that you will be in a close relationship with these investors for years! They should be a resource to help grow your business. They should be people that you would really like to work with!o They will generally follow-up in subsequent funding rounds and will have influence over your future equity• Start early- start to casually network and pitch 3-6 months ahead of time. Investors will want loads of data, but try not to let it distract you from running your business (consider doing this ahead of time or appointing someone to focus on this)• Build a relationship- have trust for the road ahead & understand their firm (their investment thesis)• When pitching, be UNIQUE and put the vision in context of your competitors• Agree on milestones with your investors early. This is important to align the vision of success and motivate the team. Less direct milestones might be of equal importance. Examples can include: user conversion/engagement rates, team & product development.• You have series A- now what?o Know your runway- how much time do you have before you need to fundraise?o Start investing to grow the businesso Communicate the milestones that you agreed with your investors with your team Set a communication schedule and keep to it Communicate loads!o Think about your own role (will you be the person who will lead the company into series B and beyond, or should you start specializing?) o In your board meetings, use it as a working session to problem solve and automate your data so that you don’t spend too much time generating data just before the meeting• After Series A, B/C is for expansion and team building, C/D/later is growth including expanding to new locales, product lines, etc.

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Ryan Kiskis January 2012

You’ve got seed funding…Now what?

VP Product at BaseKit

Internet entrepreneur from California

(Maybe too) often fundraiser

Who am I?

Fundraising 1.2 times per year, plus many more as advisor

Why am I here?

Series  C   $5M   Apr  ‘04  

Series  D   $5M   Oct  ‘05  

Sale   $102M   Apr  ‘06  

Seed   $50k   Sep  ’07  

Seed  II   $500k   Apr  ‘08  

Series  A   $1.7M   Sep  ‘08  

Series  B   $6.5M   Jun  ‘10  

Series  A   $2.6M   Apr  ‘10  

Series  B   $6.5M   Apr  ‘11  

First round with professional investors

True financial targets and commitments

Relationship that will last years

What will Series A mean?

Minimum Viable Product

Committed team

Product/Market Fit (Traction)

All within your runway

How to get from Seed to A

The core pieces to prove your business

Xfire: an IM that shows me what game my friends are in

Martini: 10 network sites and 2 advertising clients

BaseKit: Massive array of design controls; limited UX

Run this over and over again for each new development

Minimum Viable Product

Worked together, in this full time

Cover the key bases of the businesses

Committed Team

Proven that you have built something

that your target clients will pay for at

commercially viable rate

Product/Market Fit

When you’ve proved the above

When you need money (actually, before)

When you need to get to the next level

So when do you need Series A?

Tempting to think money is money

Exits now are often 5-7 years or more

You interact with investors every week

Investors matter

They’re going to be following up

And they will have influence

Founder  1  

Founder  2  

Seed  

Founder  1  

Founder  2  

Seed  

Investor  1  

Investor  2  

Employee  

After Series C funding, investors collectively own 55% of the company vs founders each having 13%

Timing

Portfolio

Relationship

Story

Milestones

Some things to think about

3-6 months

Lots of networking as much as pitching

Don’t let data swamp you

Start Early

Find a firm who might actually invest

Understand their thesis or theme

Look for competitors!

Portfolio

Have trust for the road ahead

Understand their firm

Fundraise in 48 hours

Build a relationship

VC partners see over 1000 plans a year

Be unique – not just a twist

Put the vision in context

The story

Do it early!

Your success rides on them

Great motivators

Agree on milestones

User counts, revenue, “traction”

User conversion/engagement rates

Team & product development

Agree on milestones

Know your runway

Start investing

Communicate

A – Now what?

Probably need to expand

Emphasize the upcoming goals

Think about your own role(s)

Team Management

Might be first time formally reporting

Set a schedule and keep to it

Communicate, communicate, communicate

Communication

Get to the point concisely

Use it as a working session

Automate your data

Board Meetings

Seed: Provide minimum viable product & market fit A: Prove traction. You have customers beyond those you can touch B/C: Expansion. You’re building a team, facing scaling C/D/later: Growth. You’ve got a good business and may be going to new

locales, opening new product lines

YMMV but…

Ryan Kiskis ryan.kiskis@gmail.com @ryankiskis uk.linkedin.com/in/ryankiskis

Good luck!

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