Seed Fundraising — 4 Investor Gotcha Questions

Ash Rust
3 min readSep 14, 2017

Investor meetings can be a nerve racking experience for founders. In addition to pitching well, you also have to be wary of giving answers that could hurt your chances of an investment. Here’s how to answer the most common gotcha questions:

1. Who else are you talking to?

Correct Answer: “We feel privileged to have a number of investors interested but we’re only concerned with finding the right partner. When we find that person, we imagine they will want to make an independent decision.”

How it Hurts: Given investors turn down 99% of the startups they meet, any name you mention is likely to be a ‘no’. Thus anyone you mention is essentially providing the current investor a negative reference. If you feel you have to give name, only provide existing investors rather than those currently in process.

2. What stage are you at in the process?

Correct Answer: “We don’t need money now, so not concerned about timing. We’re focused on finding the right partner to help build the business over the long term.”

How it Hurts: Fundraising almost always takes longer than you expect. If you provide a specific deadline and you’re still raising after it passes, investors may interpret this as a negative signal.

3. How much are you raising, at what valuation?

Correct Answer: For Angels and Seed Funds provide your target and cap: “We’re raising $750k on a SAFE capped at $6M”. For Larger VCs ($200M+ fund size), don’t mention valuation: “If we find the right partner, we have a growth plan which leverages $2.5–3M over the next 2 years”.

How it Hurts: If you tell a large VC you’re raising $750k, they are likely to think it’s too early for them to invest and say no. If you tell an Angel or Seed Fund you’re raising $2.5M+, they will assume it’s too late for them and pass.

4. Can I talk to a customer?

Correct Answer: For checks of $100k or less, only provide general customer quotes. For larger checks: “We want to be respectful of our customers’ time, so we’d ask that you do the customer reference as your last diligence item. In that situation, we’d expect a positive customer reference to result in an investment offer from you”.

How it Hurts: Your customers simply don’t have enough time to talk to all your prospective investors. If you use your best customer references on small checks or investors who aren’t really interested, you risk being unable to provide a good reference to a better prospect.

Answering these kind of questions in real-time is tough, especially when your fundraising round is on the line. Take the opportunity to prepare for the hard questions, control the message and give yourself the best chance of raising the round you need to keep building.

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