What makes an investible start-up? Do you dream of creating a successful start-up? Are you thinking about investing in a start-up? Both are increasingly popular endeavors. Lots of businesses provide a good income for the founder, but what defines a start-up business that attracts investors?
Jonathan Friedman of LionBird, a digital health investor, wrote in VentureBeat about these six factors which dissuade him from making an investment:
If you want to attract investors like a magnet follow these expert tips on raising capital.
A healthy management team is typically individuals with experience bringing a product to market or some previous form of successful start-up experience. Venture capitalists take a big risk when investing in a start-up, but a successful track record can ease their minds and open their pockets.
Your company should have a serious board of directors, says Craig Everett, Ph.D., assistant professor at Pepperdine University’s Graziadio School of Business and Management. He explains that investors like to see a board of outsiders who have invested capital into the business. Investors are more comfortable if they are not the first to write a check – the founders have attracted expert outsiders.
Is there a need for your product or service? Does it solve a problem? Can you provide evidence of its effectiveness with user testing? If your product doesn’t have a market it won’t attract investors.
Investors are open to risk-taking if a product proposes major changes to an industry. A University of California, Riverside, and Rotterdam School of Management study found that investors like to invest in disruptive products. The odds of start-ups receiving first-round funding increased by 22% as disruptive messaging increased. Still, disruptive products or technologies may promise huge returns, but investors may hold off until later stage funding rather than jump in on an unproven product.
Every product doesn’t have to be disruptive, but it should fix, improve, advance, or transform some aspect of a customer’s life.
Before you pitch to specific venture capitalists, you should make sure your company and its product fit their investment portfolio. Are they comfortable in your niche? If they want a managing stake in the company, is that acceptable to you, and are they near enough to take a hands-on role? If you’re looking for a social impact investor it’s important that the portfolio demonstrates an interest that aligns with your goals.
Scalability implies growth potential and your ability to handle that growth – major factors for successful start-ups. Investors with experience and knowledge put high stock in an entrepreneur’s growth readiness.
Martin Zwilling of start-up Professionals has tips for making your start-up scalable.
Investors want to make money. Entrepreneurs want to attract investors and become successful. That requires positioning your business for growth and proving to investors that customers are interested in what you have to offer.
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[Editors’ Note: To learn more about this and related topics, you may want to attend the following on-demand webinars (which you can listen to at your leisure and each includes a comprehensive customer PowerPoint about the topic):
This is an updated version of an article originally published on October 31, 2019. It has been updated by Maryan Pelland]
©?2022. DailyDACTM, LLC d/b/a/ Financial PoiseTM. This article is subject to the disclaimers found here.
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