I’ve met a lot of founders feeling upset about someone not investing in their company. Totally understandable. But look at it this way - investors don’t have to invest in your company. Similar to kids in an ice-cream shop, they don’t have to buy until they find the flavour that's just right and may even walk away. After all they may decide to buy a candy bar, go to a different shop, or wait for another day. How would you feel if an ice-cream shop keeper would get upset with you for not spending your money there? And by the way, there are a lot of shops selling ice-cream, candy and toys to choose from - some investors spend most of their working time going from one to another and comparing. It doesn’t mean that each investor selects the best companies. Many poor investments are made, many great ones are missed (check missed opportunities, aka “anti-portfolios”, first published by Bessemer Venture Partners, https://www.bvp.com/anti-portfolio). But that’s hindsight and in the moment investors try to make their best decisions.
In fact, there are some strong incentives for investors NOT to invest. Fundamentally the same, they differ somewhat for different groups:
Looking at it from another angle - investors don’t have a problem with a company until they invest in it. However, after they invested – it´s a totally different predicament, they will almost certainly have at least some problems.
In short, you have to raise investments for your company, while investors don’t have to invest in any one particular company. Hence, assume that a) the default is that they don’t invest, and b) you need to convince them otherwise. You can’t take offense at that. Even those who don’t understand your company and make little effort to do so are totally within their right to put their money where they want to. Turn them into believers or move on to the next bunch.
I believe this is one of the key dynamics in the psychology of investing.
I asked ChatGPT to write a paragraph on greed vs fear in investing and this is what came out:
“In the wild world of startup investing, it's like there's this epic showdown between two heavyweights: greed and fear. Greed, the risk-taking maverick, whispers sweet promises of big bucks and groundbreaking victories, convincing investors that they're on the brink of the next big thing. On the other side, fear, the cautious protector of wallets, raises a skeptical eyebrow, warning about the wild rollercoaster of markets and the ever-looming threat of financial setbacks. It's a constant tug-of-war, with investors trying not to get too carried away by greed's charisma or paralyzed by fear's ominous warnings. Striking the right balance becomes the ultimate challenge”
Hard to argue. Except I think this is a bit too macro-level when it comes to investors looking at a particular startup. In my view, those two things don’t just fight with each other – at the same time they also work together in the same direction. At first, fear is the fear of making a mistake, making a wrong investment. Which feeds greed – the greed for potential loss of capital. That’s the subconscious starting point of any conversation. If the investment starts looking promising, then the fear turns into FOMO (fear of missing out) and greed turns into craving potential returns. That’s where you want to be.
I loved this comparison – “investors are like 6-year-old soccer players, all clustered up at the ball.” Everyone wants in on the same hot deals. The flip side is that if nobody is interested, chances are that everyone will be very cautious. We totally can blame the industry for this herd mentality and we would be right. Or we can explain why this is the case - human nature makes us uncomfortable alone in the dark trying to predict the future. We are much more comfortable holding hands in this situation.
But what we think about it is irrelevant. This is the fact of life to be conscious about. That means you need to:
Often, once you have a termsheet, you have a tool to turn the greed and fear dynamic in your favour and get others on board. Be shameless about it, use it to the maximum.
By the way, contrary to popular belief, lemmings do not commit mass suicide. They are smarter than that.
Anyone who has been in sales learns to probe for the decision-making dynamics. Actually, make it broader – anyone who ever interacted with a group of people. Why would you expect investors to behave differently? There is often an official decision-making process, an unofficial “power network”, influencers and the whole shebang. You can’t know all the inside details, but you should at least be aware they exist and try to understand them. A couple of example points:
A pretty obvious point. Many investors, angels or funds, specialise in particular areas. Drug development is very different from IT, energy is different from ecommerce, B2B is different from B2C. Moreover, all investors (aka people) have their preferences, likes and dislikes. Ice-cream analogy continues to work. If you know someone hates vanilla, you wouldn’t try to hard-sell it to them, right? So, you are better off figuring out if your proposition fits. Of course, there are some that invest in a very broad set of topics, but even in funds that invest very broadly you often have people who specialise in or like a particular sector, stage, etc. There is no harm in asking “what sector/stage do you mostly invest in? what are your typical criteria for an investment?”.
Small detail - you may want to check if the investor has money to invest. With angels it´s impossible except by asking directly. It’s different for VCs - no institutional investor will tell you they are not actively investing, but you can ask about the vintage of the fund, which tells you where they are in their investment cycle (typical investment period is 5 years). Later in the investment period many funds shift to later stage investing and get more selective since they only have very few “slots” for new investments left. You can also ask how many more new companies they plan to invest in from the current fund. Once the investment period is finished, they can’t invest in new companies until they raise a new fund. So in that situation they will be looking at companies for the future, which can be very soon, in a while or never, depending on their fundraising fortunes.
There is a bunch of other things that you need to know – such as typical ticket size (investment amount), recent investments (when, how big, what kind of companies), etc. Easy to check or ask.
I will do a separate post on innerworkings of venture funds on my blog www.notostartupbs.com
What if you find out that this particular investor doesn’t have the money now or for some other reason would not invest? Do you still talk to them? Yes. Why? Because they can be an investor later. Of course, if they are a total misfit to you and you can’t see them investing in you ever – then probably not. Or if you have 5 solid termsheets already (but in this case let them know that that is the reason, this would allow you to come back in the next round with a good starting position).