Startup Valuations May Vary, Here’s Why and What You Need to Know
Businesses?are valued based on a multiple of earnings and profit. The variation stems from a few things associated with what that multiple might be (since earnings and profit are evident)
Hopefully, you can see how?established?company financials might determine you are a $10MM company but when we then set a valuation for the sake of investment, which is based on FUTURE potential, we’re adding what we think that future holds.
Based on considerations such as these, I might feel comfortable that your business is worth 4x that while another investor might have concerns or lack information that has their assessment at 3x.
Startups?don’t work at all the same way because startups, by definition, don’t have a clear business model, can’t genuinely use?whatever earnings?might exist as a valid predictor, and?shouldn’t be profiting?(since they should be reinvesting their own revenue before taking on your capital).
So, by what measure do we assess??
In reality, don’t let any investor tell you otherwise because frankly, they’re telling you what you want to hear or what they want you to hear, it’s wildly inaccurate. There is NO certain way of accurately valuing a startup.
One thing?we advise?founders to NEVER do, when fundraising or talking to investors, is state what they think is their valuation. Because trust me, if experienced investors, banks, advisors, and incubators can’t do it, how the hell could you, just because you work the startup?
The fact is a startup is a?temporary venture in search of a business model?— you don’t have relevant earnings, you have no model you can follow to forecast earnings, and you have no consistent costs by which to even consider some sort of profit.
Businesses do! “Startups” don’t — that’s what a startup is.
So, if an investor expects you to state or be able to determine your valuation, or you set a number, you are both WRONG (and the investor is being an ass).
If you’re a business, you’d better be able to do it! But as a startup?? The appropriate answer to anyone asking for your valuation, pre-funding, is, “how would I know that? If you’ve figured out the mystic science of determining the value for a startup, please, tell us what it is and fund us relative to that.”
Read that reply again because it might sound snarky, and I mean it to be, because if an investor *knows* your valuation,?they would fund you.
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They would fund you because they could be certain that that’s what you’re worth, which is dependent on what you will be worth… therefore they can offer terms and a check because they’ll want a piece of that.
So put it back on them.
This is why if they ask or expect, they’re being an ass (or they’re an idiot).
When fundraising,?investors set the terms. They determine the value with which they’re comfortable! You sit quietly and answer questions to help them work out what works for them; you don’t worry about your valuation AT ALL.
And yet still, we have this question,?how?is it valued??? And indeed, as a founder, you do want to have an assessment so that you can choose to be comfortable with what an investor offers (or so that you can say no to them).
Make some sense??Can you see how we can’t KNOW the valuation of an unfunded startup? No one knows.
We have an assessment, and then investors (as they do with businesses) factor in a multiple which is similarly dependent on my bullet points for businesses — that, with only an assessment, are you then a multiple of 7x or 15x? That’s up to what people think — not what you say, or math proves.
Footnote: do notice that I used *unfunded* a couple of times in the context of my perspective about startups. That’s because once you are funded, a valuation is clearer because that value has once already been established — a valuation was established when you were funded. What are you worth now? Same fudgy calculation but it’s based now on an existing established value.
This is why as a pre-funded startup, the only valid answer to your valuation is “it depends” while we can sort of arrive at a reasonable range, not an actual valuation.
Cofounder | CEO | The Pathway Club
1 年Paul O'Brien insightful. I have noticed with our own business a reluctance among investors to grapple with fundamentals. The first principle of valuation is “what someone will pay for it”. That way tautology lies… A better approach is to sit with the founder and go through the hard work of evaluation: the scale of opportunity, the industry, competition, speed of competitive reaction (eg, patent protection), margin compression, management and most importantly the investor’s ability to change the facts on the ground by, you know, investing! None of this comes through in the 12 page deck early stage investors regard as a touchstone. If you make only 20-30 investments per fund, patient, thoughtful reflection is the key to agreeing realistic projections and hence realistic exit expectations and (working backwards) a sensible understanding of the right level of investment and dilution. Valuation is the output of careful thought not an input…
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1 年Super useful article!!
Product, Operation, & Technology leader; keynote speaker, entrepreneur 2X exit, investor, C-suite advisor
1 年Yup beauty is in the eye of the beholder. The same way valuation is in the eye of the investor. That said, fund raising still should be a mutual win win process. It is indeed a negotiation. I would never advise a startup founder to shut up and take whatever valuation investors want to provide. As an investor myself, that would be a crony practice. It is a mutual value addition business process, not a favor or a hand out. I have seen a noticeable number of investors act like they are doing philanthropy.
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1 年Love this.