Traditional Capital Is Drying Up. As A Startup In 2022, What Should You Do?
Which would you prefer: a handful of big-check investors or an army of small-check investors?
Depending on your circumstances, you may not have a choice. In Q1 2022, venture funding dropped 19% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ), its first QoQ decline since early 2020. The looming threat of recession has made VCs tighten their belts, meaning reduced valuations and fewer big checks to go around.
It’s not all bad news though. Not every company needs a big check, and given the control and equity you give up when you get one, you may not actually want a big check.
Even better, there are now more credible small-check funding options than ever.
The three main options are crowdfunding, pitching angel investors, and using Roll Up Vehicles (RUVs). Crowdfunding lets you accept funds from anyone and everyone (within certain limits). Pitching angel investors gives you 1:1 meetings with powerful, experienced people in your niche. RUVs accept investments only from accredited investors. There are pros and cons to all approaches, but before we dive into the nuances, let’s look into what makes small-check investing so powerful.
Why small checks?
The difference between big-check and small-check investors starts with why each invests.?
For a big-check investor (think giant VC firm), your company is one of dozens in their portfolio. Most VCs take a fairly hands-off approach, occasionally giving advice and passively waiting for a return. They invest in you because of numbers, at a valuation they control.
On the other hand, small-check investors are raving fans. They’re the people who’ve been following your company’s growth, challenges, gambles, and successes. When a funding round opens, they’re excited to jump in. They’ll hustle for you, helping with referrals, intros, recruiting, marketing, sales, and more. They’re utility players, Swiss Army knives: people with a vested interest in your success and the resources to fuel it.
I’ve seen it firsthand. LawTrades has small-check investors from Amazon, Meta, Google, and Netflix (among others). Having them expands our network and influence in ways we’d never get from a small group of big-check VCs.
So, which should you choose: crowdfunding, angel investors, or an RUV?
1. Crowdfunding
Pros:
Cons:
Best for: Consumer products/B2C businesses whose public following has a direct impact on their success.
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2. Pitching angel investors
Pros:?
Cons:
Best for: B2B, SaaS, and tech companies whose main hurdle is funding early building and marketing experiments for their products.
3. RUVs
Pros:
Cons:
Best for: Assembling a tight community of value-add investors in B2B, SaaS, tech, and beyond.
I’m a little biased because our RUV worked out well, but I think RUVs strike a really powerful balance between the reach of crowdfunding and the influence of angel investing. A successful RUV lets you create your own leverage: build in public, be transparent about your financials, give consistent updates, and let your cap table’s natural influence do the rest.
There is no shortage of options for companies looking to raise in a shaky market climate. You just have to think bigger than only the traditional routes.