Don’t be passive about your submission. Follow up with the VC to check the status of your proposal and to find out if there’s additional information you could be providing that might help the VC with its decision. If you are asked for further information, respond quickly and effectively. If possible, always try to get a face-to-face meeting with the VC.
Keep in mind that most VCs receive an average of 200 business plans each month. Of those, less than five percent will be invited to meet with the VC’s partners. Just two percent will reach the due diligence phase, and less than one percent will be offered a term sheet. Some 0.3 percent of those submitting a business plan will ultimately obtain VC funding.
**The overwhelming majority of successful proposals come from a trusted referral of the VC, such as a limited partner, another VC, a known attorney or accountant, or other professional. If you can get your business plan referred by such a contact, you dramatically increase your odds of succeeding in getting VC funding.
Step 2: Introductory Conversation/Meeting If your firm has the potential to fit with the VC’s investment preferences, you will be contacted in order to discuss your business in more depth. If, after this phone conversation, a mutual fit is still seen, you’ll be asked to visit with the VC for a one- to-two hour meeting to discuss the opportunity in more detail. After this meeting, the VC will determine whether or not to move forward to the due diligence stage of the process.
Step 3: Due Diligence The due diligence phase will vary depending upon the nature of your business proposal. The process may last from three weeks to three months, and you should expect multiple phone calls, emails, management interviews, customer references, product and business strategy evaluations and other such exchanges of information during this time period.
Step 4: Term Sheets and Funding If the due diligence phase is satisfactory, the VC will offer you a term sheet. This is a non-binding document that spells out the basic terms and conditions of the investment agreement. The term sheet is generally negotiable and must be agreed upon by all parties, after which you should expect a wait of roughly three to four weeks for completion of legal documents and legal due diligence before funds are made available.
III. TYPES OF FUNDING
The first professional investor to a deal at the start-up stage is referred to as the Series A investor. This investment is followed by middle and later stage funding – the Series B, C, and D rounds. The final rounds include mezzanine, late stage and pre-IPO funding. A VC may specialize in provide just one of these series of funding, or may offer funding for all stages of the business life cycle. It’s important to know the preferences of the VC you’re approaching, and to clearly articulate what type of funding you’re seeking:
1. Seed Capital. If you’re just starting out and have no product or organized company yet, you would be seeking seed capital. Few VCs fund at this stage and the amount invested would probably be small. Investment capital may be used to create a sample product, fund market research, or cover administrative set-up costs. 2. Startup Capital. At this stage, your company would have a sample product available with at least one principal working full-time. Funding at this stage is also rare. It tends to cover recruitment of other key management, additional market research, and finalizing of the product or service for introduction to the marketplace.
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